Frosty Troy Dead At 83

Oklahoma Observer

Observer Founding Editor Frosty Troy, the diminutive firebrand who became an Oklahoma journalism giant, died early today in Oklahoma City after an extended illness. He was 83.

Services are pending.

Known across Oklahoma for his fiery essays and editorials, Troy called out injustice wherever he saw it, championed public education, and routinely exposed duplicitous and corrupt politicians.

Nationally, he was revered for his Okie eloquence – one of the state’s most sought-after public speakers since Will Rogers, booked by diverse groups ranging from educators and social workers to union laborers and Chambers of Commerce.

The seeds of Troy’s more than half-century career in journalism were sewn in his hometown of McAlester, OK, when a Benedictine sister complimented his stories that appeared in the school paper, The St. John’s Siren.

It was all the encouragement he’d need. As a soldier in the Korean War, he filed dispatches for the McAlester News Capital. He later wrote for the Lawton Constitution, the Muskogee Phoenix and the Tulsa Tribune.

But it was the humble journal of free voices, The Oklahoma Observer, for which he became most famous – a platform from which the liberal, yellow dog Democrat sought to inform and influence generations politically, socially and religiously.

With Troy as editor, the monthly began publishing Oct. 17, 1969, launched by Father John Joyce with a subsidy from the Catholic Archdiocesan Council. When church leaders pulled their support because of his vigorous opposition to the Vietnam War, Father Joyce defiantly sold the publication to Troy and his late wife Helen for $1.

Troy not only was a fixture at the state Capitol where he covered 10 governors and more than five decades of legislatures, but also on the radio – his daily commentaries were carried by stations across the state – and at high school graduations where he was a favorite commencement speaker.

He later had weekly shows on OETA and KOSU radio called Fridays with Frosty, where he reported on and analyzed state politics – often skewering the state’s political, corporate and religious elite who responded by pressuring station management to fire him.

Even though a product of Catholic education, Troy is perhaps best remembered for his indefatigable support of public education – which he regarded as America’s most important institution.

Celebrating its egalitarianism, he once wrote:

Every autumn the most beautiful thing happens in America. The school doors open and there’s a teacher in front saying, “Come on in. We don’t care who you are or what side of town you came from or who your mommy and daddy are. You do your best and we’ll do our best.”

Frosty and Helen Troy operated The Observer for nearly 40 years. In September 2006, they sold it to veteran journalist Arnold Hamilton and his wife Beverly – also for $1. Helen retired in January 2007 and died later that year, but Frosty continued to write for The Observer until May 2013 when his last column appeared.

Under his leadership, The Observer won more than four-dozen journalism awards. He was inducted into the Oklahoma Journalism Hall of Fame in 1977.

Before becoming The Observer’s founding editor, Troy headed both the state Capitol and Washington bureaus of the Tulsa Tribune and served as its associate editor, supervising the daily’s editorial pages.

For his vigorous defense of public education across America, Troy received the Walter Cronkite Faith and Freedom Award, an award he shared with the late Peter Jennings of ABC News.

Among his other honors: The National Champion of Children Award, the National and Oklahoma Friend of Education awards, Scouting’s God and Country Award, the First Amendment Award, the PTA’s Distinguished Service to Children Award and the American Legion’s Patriotism Award.

Among Troy’s survivors are his daughter, Marti, of Oklahoma City; his son, Philip, and daughter-in-law, Jolline, of Wellston; his brother, Jerry, and wife, Neva, of Edmond; his sister, Mary Ruth Troy Menegay and husband, Larry, of Harlingen, TX; and niece Cynthia Troy-Ury of McAlester.

For more on the life of Frosty Troy – and his impact on Oklahoma politics and journalism – see the February edition of The Oklahoma Observer.


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  1. Bob, 19 January, 2017

    I remember my boss who listened to some other reporters who were “talking with Frosty” about his thoughts on a story that was hanging fire at the capitol. He told me, “If you EVER interview another reporter for a story–YOU’RE FIRED!” Frosty was fun to know and was always in the know. God speed Frosty, Helen has been waiting.

  2. cal hobson, 20 January, 2017

    Love him or hate him………..there was nothing in between. Frosty knew what he stood for and never hesitated to tell everybody else within shouting, or reading, distance.

    He and other great writers made going to the press room at the capitol both fun and sometimes painful but always educational. Ralph Sewell, Carter Bradley, Chuck Ervin, John Greiner, Jim Myers, Mike Carrier, Scott Carter, Barbara Hoberock, Joan Biskupic, JoAnn Wolfe, Mick Hinton, Arnold Hamilton, Paul English, my conservative friend Mike McCarville, and so many others with names that do not come to me this early morning,, were dedicated to their chosen profession and did it very well.

    Most of all they knew the only two things of real value that legislators at the capitol could offer them were and are (1) knowledge and (2) honesty. Bullshitters and liars need not apply to be in their stories at least not more than once.

    Frosty was a fine, principled man, a veteran, husband and father who possessed three things of incredible value as a reporter: A sharp tongue, encyclopedic mind and a pen that never ran out of ink.

    Rest well Frosty and put your pen away. God already knows all that stuff and Helen doesn’t want to read it again.

    Sincerely,

    Cal Hobson

  3. Jan New, 31 January, 2017

    Well said, for both replies. Frosty was unique in so many ways, and it is great that the Observer can still be relied on to offer alternative perspectives on virtually every issue that concerns us.

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