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Samuel Cothran Obituary

Samuel Alexander Cothran AIKEN, SC - Mr. Samuel Alexander Cothran, 94, died Sunday, Jan. 3, 2010, at his residence in Aiken. Funeral services will be held at 3 p.m., Friday, at First Presbyterian Church with the Rev. Dr. David Cozad and Jane Keisler officiating. The family will receive friends in the church Fellowship Hall following the service. Interment will be held Thursday, at 1 p.m., in Edgewood Cemetery in Greenwood. Honorary pallbearers will be Scott Hunter, Tim Simmons, Whit Smith, David Humphries, Bill Collins, Alexander Chiles Cothran and Evan Thomas Cothran. After a distinguished career in Charleston, Mr. Cothran came to Aiken in 1968 to head the newspaper that had just been purchased by Evening Post Publishing Company. Not only did he build a strong newspaper company, Mr. Cothran had enormous influence on the Aiken community. He was honored as Man of the Year by the Greater Aiken Chamber of Commerce in 1989. A native of Laurens, Mr. Cothran attended public school in Charlotte. When his father, an engineer, went to Canada to build two large hydroelectric plants, he entered Bishop's College School in Lennoxville, Quebec. He graduated from the McCallie School in Chattanooga, Tenn. He was an alumnus of Davidson College and a cum laude graduate of the University of South Carolina. As a college student, he served as a special correspondent for The Charlotte Observer while a student at Davidson and did summer work at The Index-Journal in Greenwood. In 1939, he joined the staff of The News and Courier in Charleston. Called to service in the Army Infantry in 1941, he served in the European Theater during World War II and attained the rank of lieutenant colonel while still in his 20s. In 1945, he returned to The News and Courier and became managing editor in 1960. In 1947 he co-authored "Charleston Murders." Evening Post Publishing Company is based in Charleston. In 1968, it published the Post and Courier and the Evening Post. When it began to build a larger media company that now includes more than 20 newspapers, television stations and other companies, it called on Mr. Cothran to lead the effort in Aiken. The Aiken Standard and Review was purchased from Annie Howell King. At that time, it was published Monday through Friday and had a circulation of around 2,000. By the time Mr. Cothran retired in 1989, the circulation had grown to nearly 15,000, and a Sunday paper had been added. Mr. Cothran chose the site and oversaw the construction of the Rutland Drive building that still houses the Aiken Standard. When the newspaper was moved to the new building in 1969, the printing method changed from hot type to offset. The building also housed Aiken Cablevision Inc. As president of Aiken Communications, Mr. Cothran managed both the newspaper and cablevision, until the cable operation was sold in 1983. Mr. Cothran served on and led numerous civic organizations. While serving on the Greater Aiken Chamber of Commerce board of directors, a group he later chaired, he was influential in naming Aiken's Triple Crown of Racing. And he also suggested that Aiken was worthy of a Racing Hall of Fame. The Aiken Jaycees agreed and worked to refurbish the former stables at Hopelands Gardens into today's Hall of Fame. Cothran's frequent editorials in the early 1970s also helped advance health care in Aiken County. Mr. Cothran was also a leader with Hitchcock Woods. While much of the Woods was preserved in a trust, some land surrounding the Woods - thought to be part of the trust - was actually privately owned. As chairman of the Hitchcock Foundation Board of Trustees, Cothran worked to add these areas to the trust. He also served as president of Friends of Hopelands and served as a member of the advisory board of the Salvation Army, as a board member of the Aiken Chapter of the American Red Cross and a member of the Green Boundary Club. Mr. Cothran was a member of the Jamestowne Society, the St. Andrews Society of Charleston and the Palmetto Golf Club. He was a former member of the Carolina Yacht Club and the Charleston Country Club. He was a Deacon and an Elder at First Scots Presbyterian in Charleston and also served on the session at First Presbyterian Church of Aiken and, he was a Rotarian. Mr. Cothran was a member of several professional organizations, including the S.C. Press Association, the Southern Newspaper Publishers Association and the National Newspaper Association. He once served as president of the S.C. Associated Press News Council. He was predeceased by his parents, Frank Harrison Cothran and Julia Blanche Clardy Cothran, and his brothers, Frank Harrison Cothran, Jr. and James Clardy Cothran. Mr. Cothran is survived by his beloved wife, Nona Owens Crane Cothran; three sons, Samuel A. (Cecile) Cothran Jr. of Summerville, Thomas C. (Virginia) Cothran of Minneapolis, Minn., and Frank C. (Carolyn) Cothran of Mt. Pleasant; seven grandchildren, Perrin Cothran Conrad, Amelia Heyward Cothran, Julia Cothran Testa, Virginia Crane Cothran, Alexander Chiles Cothran, Evan Thomas Cothran and Carleigh Rachel Cothran; and two great-grandchildren, Kristopher Samuel Conrad and Madeline Cothran Testa. Memorials may be directed to the First Presbyterian Church Angel Fund, 224 Barnwell Ave., Aiken, SC 29801. Mr. Cothran's online guest book may be signed at www.shellhousefuneralhome.com SHELLHOUSE FUNERAL HOME, INC., 924 Hayne Ave., Aiken. Visit our guestbook at www.postandcourier.com/deaths

To plant trees in memory, please visit the Sympathy Store.

Published by Charleston Post & Courier from Jan. 6 to Jan. 8, 2010.

Memories and Condolences
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3 Entries

Bill Townsend

January 8, 2010

Nona, Sammy, Tommy, Frank and family.

Thinking of you. May the sympathy of those who care for you and the precious memory of your loved one help to comfort you at this time.

Many fond memories of Sam and family for over 60 years.

Margaret Davis

January 8, 2010

You are in our thoughts and prayers.
Love,

Carl Hilton

January 6, 2010

Please accept my deepest sympathies.

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