Once Anita E. Buck found her love of history, it caught on big, inspiring a passion for chronicling the St. Croix River Valley's rich past.
She did that by writing books and newspaper columns, painting watercolors and volunteering for preservation efforts such as the drive to save the fabled Historic Courthouse in Stillwater.
"She was a very good historian, a good editor, and accurate. You would trust her to do things correctly," said Nancy Goodman, a fellow Stillwater historian.
Buck, 92, died Oct. 29 in Bayport.
Her beginnings lacked an interest in history, she would admit later, but after graduating from Hamline University in English and fine arts, she took a job at a historic location.
According to a Stillwater Gazette interview in 1997, she worked for the U.S. Army Special Services in Seoul during the Korean conflict, about 30 miles from the front lines. She operated a service club with a theater, post office and snack bar. She arranged dances, Ping-Pong matches and carnivals for U.S. soldiers until the war came too close and she was evacuated on a Norwegian freighter.
After returning to Minnesota, Buck took a job at WAVN radio station in Stillwater. She was paired with eventual WCCO radio legend Roger Erickson in a program in which she was "Auntie Anita" and he was "Uncle Eric."
"As she experienced the atmosphere of the river town that was the birthplace of Minnesota, her interest peaked in a subject she never really liked — history," the Gazette reported.