Marjorie Mader, an Almanac education reporter for 40 years, died on Dec. 31 at her home in Ladera at the age of 93.
Born in Wausau, Wisconsin on Nov. 9, 1930, Mader earned a bachelor's degree in journalism at Stanford University. She spent a year as a Coro Foundation fellow, studying public affairs, and then worked as a reporter for the Independent Journal in Marin County. She joined The Almanac five years after its inception in 1970, when it was known as The Country Almanac, according to The Almanac's archives.
During that time, she met George Mader, who would become Portola Valley's longtime and legendary town planner. They married and moved to the Menlo Park area in 1956, and then to their new Ladera home in 1965, The Almanac previously reported.
It was a school issue that brought her back into journalism in 1970. After working very hard on a curriculum problem in the Las Lomitas district, The Almanac failed to cover a key meeting. She called the editor, Hedy Boissevain, to complain. Boissevain said the paper didn't have enough reporters and recruited Marjorie to cover Portola Valley.
Marjorie's daughter, Ann Stillman, remembers observing her mother on deadline.
"I knew my mom's work required her to attend night meetings and I understood that," Stillman said. "I saw how stressful the approaching deadlines were and how some stories came easily for her to write while others were much more difficult to have come together in her mind and on paper."
As was the case for many families in the years before cellphones, there was only one home phone line at the Mader household. This meant that as a teenager Stillman recalled wanting to talk on the phone with friends, but couldn't when her mom was on deadline and waiting for a source to call back.
"My mom worked for The Almanac for decades and she was able to balance family and work; to both my parents, family was very important," Stillman said. "I have always been a working mom and I know my family fills my heart and my work is also important to me. Having the right balance is not easy, but good to strive for."
Marjorie started the job during the days of typewriters and eventually worked on a Mac.
"I think my mom enjoyed journalism and being a reporter; capturing the stories or the information," Stillman said. Her mother had a genuine interest in people and had the ability to ask probing questions, she said.
Stillman remembers her mother pulling out a notebook to take notes during phone calls with family members. Then she'd report out during dinner.
"She wouldn't take a phone call without taking notes," she said.
Former Almanac editor Richard Hine said in an email that Mader was part of a core group of Almanac staffers who were deeply embedded in the community and made the paper a distinctive and valued community asset during more than four decades, dating to the early years of the paper.
"After I arrived at The Almanac in 1988, I often encountered readers with an unusually strong and personal connection to the paper, saying they read it from 'cover to cover' and considered it their paper," he said. "That was due to staffers like Marjorie, who had a deep knowledge of the community, in particular, local school districts, which she covered tirelessly for years, sitting through countless hours of board meetings. Marjorie and her late husband, George Mader, who became an internationally recognized expert on urban planning in areas threatened by earthquakes and landslides, were community treasures."
Marjorie covered Portola Valley schools, the Menlo Park City School District and the Sequoia Union High School District, as well as community colleges and regional educational issues. She also wrote profiles of impressive Midpeninsula residents.
She and George traveled across Europe while George completed his Fulbright Program in Holland. Marjorie loved the mountains and to visit her native Wisconsin. They also visited places prone to major earthquakes in places like Turkey and China through George's disaster preparedness work.
"They did a lot together," Stillman reflected. She's also grateful that she was able to live so close to them (Stillman lives in unincorporated west Menlo Park) for many years. "They worked so well with decision making; picking the artwork they had. They evaluated, but always together."
The town of Portola Valley recognized the pair for their work in the community in 2001.
Marjorie is preceded in death by her husband George, who died in 2022. She is survived by her three children: Steve, Ann and Phil. Steve and Helen live in Santa Rosa. Phil and Alison live in Woodside and have three children — Caroline, Max and Jillian. Ann and John Stillman have two children Cayla (who lives in Portland, Oregon) and Bradley (who lives in Sacramento). Steve is a local contractor, Ann is director of public works for San Mateo County, and Phil is an investment manager.
Memorial services have not yet been planned.
Comments
Registered user
Portola Valley: Westridge
on Jan 11, 2024 at 3:41 pm
Registered user
on Jan 11, 2024 at 3:41 pm
Marjorie Mader was indeed a legendary reporter. She was able to change small town stories into meaningful guiding and honest lessons. She and George are now part of the fabric of our community. George, some would say, wrote the Portola Valley Plan, but, then again, Marjorie was always be his side and who is to say that some of her beautiful writing did not rub off on the lovely opening pages of that document- a celebration of dark starry nights and shared open spaces in rolling hills. Her writings were charming, witty, balanced and informative with her brilliance and intelligence shining through every word.
Yes, I was, am and will remain a fan. I offer to you a favorite article in 2005, as I am also a fan of Simon Winchester. It is called "Simon Winchester got it wrong about Portola Valley". Web Link
Both Marjorie and Simon were prescient we now face decisions on the cumulative risks of fire and earthquake, without throwing safety to the wind, in a Wildland Urban Interface on the San Andreas Fault in Silicon Valley. Climate change, sustainability, life style, economics and social values are all interdigitated in their writings.
I will miss her and I send my condolences to George, her family, her colleagues, her friends and our community. She has given us so much.
Mary
Registered user
Portola Valley: other
on Jan 11, 2024 at 5:08 pm
Registered user
on Jan 11, 2024 at 5:08 pm
It was with regret tempered by gratitude that I read about Marjorie. I am so grateful for her many years of reporting, giving her time to our community and a model to our youth (and adults!) She showed up for so many events around town, enjoying youth theatre, school programs and so many other activities... she supported our community regardless of her reporting responsibilities, and she helped us all appreciate our community through her reporting. My condolence to her family, AND my joy that we had her for so many years!