Silverton's heroic Clark Kent

Silverton's heroic Clark Kent

Esper writes, edits, lays out and delivers the Standard weekly
Mark Esper reports, writes and edits the Silverton Standard & the Miner. He also delivers the paper, which he picks up every Thursday before sunrise from the dock at The Durango Herald building.
Mark Esper works the phone for a story for his Silverton Standard and The Miner newspaper from within his office in the old Hospital Building in Silverton.
With pen and paper ready, Mark Esper works on a story Tuesday inside the San Juan County Courthouse.
ABC journalist Peter Greenberg interviews Silverton Standard Editor Mark Esper at the Hotel Nacional in Havana about Cuba's economy in the wake of the collapse of the Soviet Union. The interview was for "Good Morning America." The segment aired in October 1993.

Silverton's heroic Clark Kent

Mark Esper reports, writes and edits the Silverton Standard & the Miner. He also delivers the paper, which he picks up every Thursday before sunrise from the dock at The Durango Herald building.
Mark Esper works the phone for a story for his Silverton Standard and The Miner newspaper from within his office in the old Hospital Building in Silverton.
With pen and paper ready, Mark Esper works on a story Tuesday inside the San Juan County Courthouse.
ABC journalist Peter Greenberg interviews Silverton Standard Editor Mark Esper at the Hotel Nacional in Havana about Cuba's economy in the wake of the collapse of the Soviet Union. The interview was for "Good Morning America." The segment aired in October 1993.
A well-traveled journalist

Mark Esper started working at the Silverton Standard & the Miner seven years ago after working as a copy editor for Traverse City Record-Eagle, a Michigan paper with a circulation of almost 30,000.
He grew up in Flint, Michigan, and attended Eastern Michigan University, where he got his start writing for 'Bowling for Columbine' director Michael Moore at Moore's Michigan Voice newspaper.
'That was before he got famous,' Esper said.
In his long career, Esper has worked at weekly and daily newspapers in Michigan, Colorado, Montana and New Mexico, traveled to 53 countries, reported from Northern Ireland, the former Yugoslavia, Central America, Cuba and the Middle East, interviewed Fidel Castro, been featured on ABC's 'Good Morning America' while in Havana and has won dozens of Colorado Press Association awards.
In 2009, he was a finalist for The Washington Post's Next Great American Pundit Contest, finishing eighth in a pool of 5,000 entrants.
Esper loves history, especially World War I and the Balkans.
Chase Olivarius-McAllister
An earlier version of this story erred in saying Mark Esper was college roommates with Michael Moore.

The Silverton Standard's history

The Silverton Standard & the Miner is the oldest newspaper in Colorado, but it has two birthdays. The Weekly Miner was established in 1875, and the Silverton Standard first published in 1889.
For much of the 20th century, the Standard was the dominant newspaper in the Southwest. A Sept. 21 headline in the 1901 edition of the Standard proclaimed, 'DURANGO TO BE A SILVERTON SUBURB: Silverton is destined to become a city with Durango as a suburb.'
But the newspaper's fortune reversed. During the most recent recession, the Standard almost went under because of financial losses. At the time, GateHouse Media - a New York-based media conglomerate - owned it. The company tried to sell it, but when it couldn't find a buyer, it said it would cease production.
Salvation came when the San Juan Historical Society took it over.
Now, under Esper's stewardship, the Standard has rebounded.
It has 900 subscribers and sells a couple hundred more copies in the racks.
'Sixty percent of our subscribers are out of state. A lot of them are train people, or people who are interested in the history of mining or the Southwest or Silverton for whatever reason,' Esper said. 'One guy in Norway started subscribing, for whatever reason.'
An inmate in a California prison tried to subscribe a few years ago because he was trying to figure out if he wanted to live in Silverton once he was released.
'It turns out he was a pretty serious sex offender. So I sent him back his money,' Esper said.