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(This biography of Evelyn Birkby is taken from the Iowa Women's
Archives' finding aid.)
Evelyn Corrie Birkby, wife, mother,
homemaker, newspaper columnist, author, and radio personality, is a
journalist with a passion for rural history. She became one of a group of
area women known as radio homemakers. An Iowa native, Evelyn Corrie was born
July 31, 1919 to Methodist minister Carl Corrie and his wife Mae Corrie.
Evelyn Corrie attended Simpson College in Indianola, Iowa for two years and
then taught third grade for four years. Later, she completed her education at
the University of Chicago and served as director of youth activities at the
First Methodist Church of Chicago (Chicago Temple). Evelyn Corrie returned to
Iowa in 1946 to marry her Sidney High School classmate Robert Birkby. The
Birkbys had four children, Dulcie Jean, who died in 1953 at the age of five
and a half; Bob, born in ; Jeff, born in 1954; and Craig, born in 1955.
In 1949 the Shenandoah Evening Sentinel advertised for a farm woman to
write a weekly newspaper column. Encouraged by her husband, Birkby applied
and was accepted. In speaking of her "Up a Country Lane" column,
Evelyn Birkby said it was "a forum to share my observations about my own
experiences and those of my neighbors." In the summer of 1950, the
Birkbys moved seventeen miles southwest of Shenandoah to a 120-acre farm
which they named "Cottonwood." On May 15, 1950, Evelyn Birkby took
her column on the air with KMA radio station, changing its name to "Down
a Country Lane." The program was broadcast over KMA until 1952 when the
needs of her husband and children, Dulcie Jean and Bob, made it difficult to
prepare a program and travel back and forth to the studio. Birkby took a
hiatus until 1955, when she began working for Kitchen-Klatter as a writer and
broadcaster. The Kitchen-Klatter radio program originated from KMA but was
syndicated over a six-state area, while some programs had an even wider
distribution: the Martha Bohlson and Edith Hanson programs were heard from
the Rocky Mountains to the Atlantic seaboard.
In 1983, Birkby left Kitchen-Klatter and returned full-time to radio
station KMA to head its book department. Besides authoring the KMA Festival
Cookie Book (1983), Cooking with KMA: Featuring 60 Years of Radio Homemakers
(1985), Adventure After Sixty: Alone Through England and Scotland (1985), the
KMA's Come Again Cookie Book (1987), Neighboring on the Air: Cooking with the
KMA Radio Homemakers (1991) and Up a Country Lane Cookbook (1993), Evelyn
Birkby assisted with the radio broadcasts until the summer of 1991, when she
resigned to give her full attention to writing. What followed were
Neighboring on the Air: Cooking With the KMA Radio Homemakers in 1991 and Up
A Country Lane Cookbook in 1993. She is currently writing her seventh book.
In May 1990, KMA honored Birkby on the 40th anniversary of her first
broadcast, May 15, 1950.
Birkby has had many opportunities and accolades: she was a member of
the Iowa Bicentennial Commission, the Iowa Judicial Nominating Commission,
the Iowa Grievance Commission, the Rural Betterment Commission, the National
Board of Communication for the United Methodist Church, and a member of the
state Methodist Communication Board. She was one of the Iowans in 1996 to
represent Iowa at the Smithsonian Folk Life Festival in Washington, D.C. and
Des Moines, Iowa, and in 1998, she was chosen as one of the Iowa Master Farm
Homemakers. Birkby's alma mater, Simpson College in Indianola, Iowa, honored
her with their Alumni Achievement Award in 1999.
Birkby is in demand as a speaker on many subjects, including life on
the farm from a woman's perspective in the 40's and the 50's. Birkby and her
husband Robert live on an acreage in Sidney, Iowa.
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