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Walter M. McCardell Jr., Baltimore Sun photographer whose career spanned more than 4 decades, dies



Walter M. McCardell Jr., a veteran Baltimore Sun photographer whose career spanned more than four decades, died of kidney cancer June 15 at a daughter’s Stoneleigh home.

Mr. McCardell, who is thought to be the oldest living Sun alumni and the last person to have worked in the newspaper’s old Sun Square building at Charles and Baltimore streets, was 98.

“Walter was always very poised whenever he was on an assignment and his photographs showed his training as a news photographer,” said Jed Kirschbaum, who spent 33 years as a Sun photographer before retiring in 2011.

“I loved Walter, who was always there to be helpful, and he had a way of making you feel comfortable, which came in handy on assignments,” he said. “He always said, ‘Don’t sweat the small stuff.”’

Robert K. “Bob” Hamilton was photo director for the Sun until retiring in 2015.

“Walter was a really talented and thorough photographer who had been through and seen a lot,” Mr. Hamilton said. “He was always willing to answer questions and I remember as a young photographer being out in a press car and Walter telling me this history of the city.”

Walter Miller McCardell Jr., son of Walter M. McCardell Sr., a Sears Roebuck & Co. department manager, and Amelia Myers, was born at home on McCabe Avenue in Govans, where he was raised.

He attended Loyola High School and the old Towson Catholic High School before dropping out, but later earned his GED, and studied for three years at what is now Loyola University Maryland.

In 1943, Mr. McCardell was working part-time delivering flowers for Isaac Moss Florist on Charles Street, when he met his future wife, Sarah Virginia Wilson, who also worked there. The two fell in love and married in 1950.

Walter M. McCardell Baltimore Sun Photographer | PHOTOS

Mr. McCardell, who had never owned a camera or been in a darkroom, applied for a photographer’s job at The Sun in 1944, as a $25 a week photo apprentice in the newspaper’s commercial art department.

“I thought I’d like that kind of work that keeps you outside, and the freedom of it all,” he explained in a 2014 Sun interview. “It kind of worked out for me.”

He honed his trade from such veteran news photographers as Leroy Merriken and Frank Miller, working assignments covering race tracks, the 1944 Army-Navy football game and fox hunts.

In June 1945, he began working as a $35 a week photographer in the Washington bureau of the Associated Press, where he covered President Harry S. Truman, Capitol Hill and the old Washington Senators baseball team.

At 1 p.m. on Aug. 14, 1945, when President Truman announced the Japanese surrender, Mr. McCardell was at Walter Reed Hospital photographing veterans, while another White House AP photographer took a photo of the president.

Mr. McCardell was given a copy of the photo, and in 1958, when President Truman was attending a political fundraiser in Baltimore, he asked the president to autograph it. He wrote: “To Walter McCardell. Kindest regards and happy memories of Aug. 14, 1945. Harry S. Truman.”

Mr. McCardell kept the photo on his desk for the rest of his life.

Drafted in September 1945, he spent 13 months in the Army as a military policeman and as a staff photographer for the then Camp Lee base newspaper, until being discharged in 1946, when he returned to The Sun as a staff photographer.



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