The Carnegie Hero Fund Commission in Pittsburgh was recently visited by a crew from the CBS Sunday Morning show. The segment was originally scheduled to run last month but was bumped for a more timely report upon the death of Cuba's Fidel Castro. It ran this morning - see below for a link to the video.
President Walter Rutkowski also edits their newsletter imPULSE and he kindly sent me for republishing here the cover article from their December 2016 issue which discusses the CBS visit. Thanks!
-Editor
‘CBS Sunday Morning’ visits Hero Fund
to film segment on its history and work
CBS Sunday Morning, the long-running staple of the CBS television morning lineup, is featuring the Hero
Fund in a segment that was scheduled to air in late November. The network sent crews to Illinois and
Pittsburgh to document Hero Fund activities as part of a story on the history and work of the Commission,
and central to the piece is recognition of the heroes who have been honored and supported through the
vision of Commission founder Andrew Carnegie.
Correspondent for the segment is National Public Radio’s Scott Simon, long-time host of Weekend
Edition Saturday and acclaimed journalist, author, and guest contributor for CBS Sunday Morning. The
show has an estimated six million viewers.
Filming began in late August over a three-day stretch at events in southern Illinois that included
presentations of the Carnegie Medal to newly named awardees, interviews of medal recipients and the
people they rescued, and a memorial event that honored past Carnegie heroes.
In September, the Hero Fund hosted Simon, producer Amy Wall, and the film crew at its offices in
Pittsburgh. The two-day visit and shoot included interviews with Mark Laskow, Commission chair;
Walter Rutkowski, president, and Linda T. Hills, a member of the Commission who is also the great-granddaughter of Andrew and Louise Carnegie.
A location shoot followed in Springdale, Pa., at the memorial for the victims of the 1904 Harwick mine
disaster, which, claiming 181 lives, remains one of the worst mining disasters in U.S. history. Rescue
activity during the disaster—only one miner survived—served as impetus for Carnegie’s establishment of
the Hero Fund in the months that followed. Grace Abbs of Pittsburgh, the granddaughter of the lone
survivor, Adolph Gunia, was interviewed on site, giving her impressions of the tragedy, its heroes, and its
impact on her family through the years.
Simon, Wall, and all others from the network involved in the filming showed great interest in the
Commission’s work and said they were inspired by the accounts of heroism documented in the Hero
Fund’s files. Simon “Tweeted” to his 1.25 million followers of his experience, and Walls later made the
effort to nominate a candidate for recognition.
Linda T. Hills, Commission member and great-granddaughter of Andrew Carnegie, shares a moment
with correspondent Scott Simon in the Commission’s offices during filming of a CBS Sunday Morning
segment.
Grace Abbs, granddaughter of the lone survivor of the 1904 Harwick mine disaster, was interviewed at
the disaster memorial in Springdale, Pa.
Thanks to Matt Campbell and Pat McBride of the Pennsylvania Numismatic Association for keeping me apprised of the air date. Check it out.
-Editor
To watch the video, see:
Carnegie Heroes: A definition of selfless humanity
(www.cbsnews.com/news/carnegie-heroes-a-definition-of-selfless-humanity/)
For more information on the Carnegie Hero Fund Commission, see:
www.carnegiehero.org
Wayne Homren, Editor
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