Barbara Dellenback
"I was born in Medford," says Barbara Dellenback, daughter of John
Dellenback, an independent-minded Republican representative in the
Oregon Legislature and the U.S. Congress, who later served as director
of the Peace Corps. "I spent many years, from age three until out of
high school, in Salem, Oregon, and Bethesda, Maryland." After high
school in Bethesda, Dellenback studied at Willamette University in
Salem, at Indiana University, and at the University of Oregon. She also
waitressed and worked in yarn stores. She was living in Portland when
she met Dave Ouelette, a childhood friend from Medford. "He was best
friends with my brothers," she recalls. "We got together at his
sister's wedding, and I moved to Eugene, where he was living." They
were married in 1987. Three years earlier, she was working at Soft
Horizons yarn shop when she volunteered at public radio station KLCC.
"I got hired as Morning Edition host in '85," she notes, and her career
in broadcasting was launched. She held that job until the first of her
two sons was born in 1988, and she subsequently worked at commercial
radio stations and at fundraising for community benefit organizations.
"In 1998, I was working for KPNW, across from the old library, when
they asked me to be on the library foundation," she says, "right when
the board was given the task of raising six million dollars for a new
library." The new library opened in 2002, and Dellenback continued as
executive director of the foundation until she and her family moved
back to Medford in 2007. There, she worked at fundraising, hosted
Morning Edition for Jefferson Public Radio, and started a new business,
Lives Recorded Live, making audio recordings of older folks telling
stories for the future enjoyment of their families. She and Dave
returned to Eugene in 2017, and she has returned to KLCC as substitute
host for NPR news programs.
happening people
photograph and story by Paul Neevel
Eugene Weekly / 11 July 2019
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