Fairly early in their six-decade friendship, Marc Mauseth noticed something about Benjamin Mchie. "Benjie has always had a somewhat unusual combination of being very creative yet at the same time almost obsessive-compulsive with details," Mauseth said.
That as much as anything explains the voluminous and luminous nature of Mchie's African American Registry (www.aaregistry.org). The hours that Mchie has poured into what he calls "more of a calling than a career" pop off the Web page, in the form of thousands of historical nuggets and hundreds of engaging videos.
"I'm sort of chief cook and bottle washer," said Mchie, a Minneapolitan by birth and residence, with a chuckle.
Of course, a website that draws more than 80,000 unique visitors a month from more than 150 countries and territories requires a bit more than that -- something along the lines of that creative-obsessive combo.
So while his work behind the microphone in radio and behind the camera in television provided his artistic chops, Mchie's family's history helped propel him on this mission.
"My mother in 1982 contributed to a book called 'Every Woman Has a Story,'" said Mchie, 61. The chapter she wrote was called "Don't Ever Let the Sun Set on Your Anger."
He also had learned that his mother's uncle, John Elijah Ford, was the first black person to graduate from the Chicago Theological Seminary, and that his father's older sister, Frances Mchie, had integrated the University of Minnesota's nursing school in 1929. "They wrote her a letter turning her down. They told her she would be much happier at the Kansas City General Hospital."
Thanks to some political connections, Frances Mchie, then 18, read the letter to the Minnesota State Legislature, "and within two weeks she was admitted," her nephew said proudly. "And she has a permanent display in the nursing-school library."