:R. Scudder Smith, editor and publisher of Antiques and The
Arts Weekly and its sister publication, The Newtown
Bee, has been named the recipient of the 2006 Award of Merit,
presented annually by the Antique Dealers Association of America.
Smith will be honored at a dinner hosted by the ADA on Saturday,
April 8, at the Philadelphia Antiques Show. Past award winners
include Albert Sack, Elinor Gordon, Wendell Garrett and Betty
Ring.
"This was an easy decision. Scudder is very deserving of this
award, which acknowledges individuals who have made a major
contribution to our field," said ADA president Skip Chalfant.
"In his understated and thoroughly professional way, Scudder has
been an enormously positive influence in the antiques business.
Antiques and The Arts Weekly supports the common interests
of dealers, collectors, curators, museums, historical societies,
auctioneers and show promoters," said Arthur Liverant, vice
president of the ADA and an organizer of the awards dinner.
Board member John Keith Russell added, "We honor Scudder as one
of our own. With his wife, Helen, he has counseled many of us in
the antiques field, provided fair and supportive coverage of our
activities, and encouraged the ADA from its earliest days."
R. Scudder Smith joined The Newtown Bee, a newspaper
founded in 1877 and acquired by his grandfather and two
great-uncles in 1881, in 1961. With its roots in the farming
communities of western Connecticut, The Newtown Bee had
long carried notices of estate auctions and house sales, along
with small notices for flea markets and fairs. As a young
newspaperman who began collecting antiques while still a student
at Union College in Schenectady, N.Y., Smith recognized the media
potential of an increasingly popular pastime.
Working for his father, Paul S. Smith, The Newtown Bee's
editor from 1934 to 1973, Scudder Smith developed the newspaper's
antiques content, selling advertising to dealers and auctioneers
throughout New England and soliciting stories from authorities
such as the late Woodbury, Conn., dealer Kenneth Hammitt.
Smith increased The Newtown Bee's antiques coverage to
four pages a week by 1963. Circulation, about 7,000 subscribers
in the early 1960s, quadrupled over the years, and readership
became international. In 1969, antiques accounted for an entire
tabloid section of The Newtown Bee. Antiques and The Arts
Weekly was launched as an independent, self-sustaining
publication in 1976. Scudder Smith has managed both newspapers
since 1973, when his father retired.
Organizers promise that the ADA dinner will be a lively affair,
complete with celebratory toasts and probably bow ties. For
tickets and further details, www.adadealers.com.