---Jason Duchow Photography
Kasey Mueller, photographer and friendly face at The Flower Farm.
💙💚💜💙
Thursday Throwbacks: enjoy the random photos of yesteryear.
Chewin' the fat.
Mutterings of a country hick.
Kasey Mueller, photographer and friendly face at The Flower Farm.
💙💚💜💙
Thursday Throwbacks: enjoy the random photos of yesteryear.
Chewin' the fat.
Dear WHW Committee Members:
Since the inception of the Women of Wisdom program nearly 20
years ago, my dear friend Helen Newton not only served on the original WHW board
but has also spent year after year suggesting and supporting numerous
nominees/recipients for the honor. Therefore, I would say it’s past time to
turn the tables and choose Helen as one of this year’s recipients. She is as deserving as they come for this
honor, not only with an impressive resume of longtime professional and
community service but also as an all-around wonderful and beloved human being.
Before going any further, I will disclose that she is
probably my closest friend and confidante. She reads my “Slight Detour” blog every
morning and sends me a quick note with specifics if corrections are needed. We also discuss and commiserate several times
weekly on a wide array of subjects, including local, regional and national
politics, community happenings, family news and just plain fun topics. Both of us love anything humorous, and I can
tell you that we do a lot of laughing while visiting over the phone.
That brings me to what I consider Helen’s most redeeming
quality. In all the decades I’ve known
her, I have seldom seen her without a smile, except for at the many funerals
she faithfully attends. She is a
positive, upbeat person, endowed with an abundance of genuine and comforting
warmth, along with an infectious zest for life.
Add to that the fact that she is a caring, loyal friend to many. From
what I have observed over the years, countless people in this community or
around the world would enthusiastically agree with me. Helen’s friends mean everything to her, and,
as a friend, she continually demonstrates every meaning of the word, always
caring about their well being.
When we talk about a WOW nominee’s nuts-and-bolts resume,
Helen certainly has earned a list of impressive credentials which have
contributed toward her abundance of wisdom, common sense and positive
leadership. Over her lifetime, and she
has worked at a funeral home, she has submitted stories as a correspondent for
a regional newspaper, the Spokane
Chronicle. She served several mayors
as Sandpoint’s City Clerk, always watching out for their best interests. Later,
as a member of the City Council, she watched out for the best interests of
residents served by the City. She is
also a familiar face to hundreds of voters at Community Hall while serving on
the county election board.
Helen is a devoted wife, mother of two daughters, grandmother
and great-grandmother. I would say that
the longtime team of high school sweethearts, Helen and Skip Newton, has not
only been blessed and but have also provided a blessing to this community. Both are perennial selfless givers to the nth
degree, and I’m guessing that they seek nothing in return. That humanitarian ethic simply stems from
their basic fabric as solid, caring citizens and generous human beings. No doubt, it has also been enhanced by a
lifetime devoted to the Methodist faith, which began for Helen as a child
growing up on a Selle Valley dairy farm.
Her roots in this community run deep, and again her loyalty
and total enjoyment of all the people who have played a part in her life is
always clearly evident. Last year, Helen
served as the general chair for the ALL-‘50s class reunion. It was a huge job, lasting for several months,
but it was obvious she loved every minute of working with and connecting with
hundreds of Sandpoint High graduates.
With her meticulous attention to detail, the weekend event went off
without a hitch, except maybe for the unseasonable hot weather. Even that problem did not deter Helen. She and her crew found a way to provide some
last-minute cooling equipment for the fairgrounds main exhibit building.
These days, we often use the phrase “have your back.” I think just about anyone who knows Helen
Newton would be able to share an instance where she’s had their back. She cares deeply about others, especially the
underdogs or those individuals thrust into circumstances where they cannot help
themselves. I personally have been a
recipient of her caring nature and have seen her on many occasions extend a
helping hand to others through encouragement or tangible help.
Have I mentioned civic activities? Helen works hard as a PEO member, often
spending hours preparing special informative programs for the meetings, in
addition to other responsibilities such as fundraising for scholarships. She has supported the local museum for a
number of years, most recently, helping over the past several months to select
and compile the “50 and 100-year history notes” column for the Daily Bee. She has also served on the hospital board.
Her keen interest in what happens in this community is
ongoing and apparent through guest commentaries submitted to local papers, her
attendance at meetings or forums which she deems important for gaining a good
understanding of issues and her lobbying for causes close to her heart. Helen’s intelligence, quick thinking and her
constant quest to research and parse important facts, numbers and key details
is truly incredible. The same is true
about her constant thirst for knowledge and regarding the extensive sources she
employs to fully comprehend world, national, regional and local happenings.
For fun, Helen quilts, plays bridge and goes to lunch with
friends. It is obvious to me after
seeing the high-quality of her completed quilting projects and while listening
to her stories about the people she meets and enjoys through bridge, that these two activities are very dear to
her. She also enjoys spending time
working alongside Skip on projects at their forested acreage southeast of
Sandpoint.
In short, as well as I know Helen Newton, I’m sure that there may be many more
dimensions to this remarkable lady that I may have overlooked, but these are
the observations that have sealed for me a long, treasured friendship and a
deep admiration for Helen. I truly love
our friendship, which is built on common interests, trust, loyalty and huge
mutual respect. A friend like that is a
friend, indeed, and what’s neat about Helen is that so many others can probably
express similar observations.
As I said at the beginning, it’s time to select Helen as one
of your honorees this year. And, one
more thing: from my own WOW experience
and, knowing Helen as I do, I can predict that it’s possible that she may balk
if chosen for this recognition. If that appears to be the case, please tell her
that I said that if Marianne had to accept and embrace the WOW honor, so should
Helen!
Thank you so much for considering her nomination. She’s, indeed, a priceless treasure here in
Sandpoint whose recognition of service and wisdom is long overdue.
Marianne Love
Sandpoint