He met Helen Vivarttas, a leader of the American Amateur Press Association, at a gathering of local amateurs, and they soon began publishing Siamese Standpipe for both organizations. Helen and Wes were married shortly before he shipped out to fight in World War II. (He spent time in both the European and Japanese theaters.) The Wessons' flair for colorful printing and writing made their amateur papers among the best ever seen.
Professionally, he spent thirty years working for a variety of Fairchild Publication newspapers and was located in New York and Tokyo. He was director of press relations for the American Iron and Steel Institute for 13 years before his retirement in 1992. He died in January 1997.
Here are some selected Wesson essays that show his humor, letterpress expertise, and editorial skill:
Go to the Sheldon Wesson page.
Go to the AAPA home page.
This page was last modified Feb 6, 2009
Dave Tribby / dtribby@stanfordalumni.org