Tom Wallace
Tom Wallace (1874-1961) received the Pugsley Silver Medal "for his services in saving Cumberland Falls in Eastern Kentucky." He was born in Hurricane, Kentucky, and studied at Weaver's Business College in Louisville and at Randolph-Macon College, in Ashland, Virginia. In his early years, he worked in Richmond, Virginia, as a bookkeeper; with an ice-company in Shelbyville and in a tooth-power factory in New York City. Wallace first joined the Louisville Times in 1900 as an unpaid police reporter because he "hated all kind of business." After six weeks, he was offered a salaried position, and he subsequently worked at the Evening Post, The Louisville Herald and The St. Louis Republic before returning to the Times as its Frankfort and Washington correspondent. In 1923 he became chief of the editorial staff at the Louisville Times and was its editor from 1930 to 1948. Wallace attained national and international prominence both for his advocacy for the betterment of relations between the US and Latin America, and for his outspoken advocacy for conservation.
He conducted a vigorous editorial crusade to save Cumberland Falls from being destroyed by the Samuel Insull electric power company, which proposed to develop the Falls for waterpower. The following statement is a sample from among the hundreds of thousands of words that Wallace wrote and spoke against Insull and those who supported the company's proposal:
Cumberland Falls should be saved, not only because it belongs to the people of Kentucky and Eastern America, but also because its revenues to Kentucky (as a tourist attraction) would be greater annually, in the near future, than revenues accruing to Kentucky from building the proposed power plant. In Kentucky we have an Anti-State Park Commission, headed by an Anti-Park Governor, which is under agreement to aid a power company to destroy Cumberland Falls as a natural cataract.Wallace considered his role to be analogous to that of an alarm clock. "A few of us who are not seeking political office, are not obliged to consider what this or that corporation might think about what we say, insist upon speaking aloud on behalf of this generation and future generations, on certain aspects and assets of Kentucky. By so doing, we hope to perform the function of an alarm clock."