Everything about Cassie Mackin totally explained
Catherine "Cassie" Patricia Mackin (1939-1982) was a pioneer woman journalist in United States television network broadcasting. In 1976 she became the first woman to solely anchor an evening network newscast on a regular basis. In the early 1970s she anchored a
WRC-TV newscast and in 1972 became NBC's first female correspondent to serve as a floor reporter at the national political conventions.
Catherine (Cassie) Patricia Mackin was born 28 August 1939 in
Baltimore, Maryland, to Francis and Catherine Mackin. Raised in Baltimore, she attended a local parochial school. Winning a four-year scholarship, she went to the
Institute of Notre Dame before entering
Washington College in 1956. A year later she transferred to the
University of Maryland at College Park. While a student there, she worked for the now defunct
Free State Press, a weekly paper published in suburban
Washington, D.C. She graduated magna cum laude in June 1960 with a B.A. degree in English and minors in economics and history.
After graduation, Mackin obtained a position at the
Baltimore News-American. Beginning as a general assignment reporter, she held a variety of positions before she left the paper in 1963. Between 1960 and 1962 she made guest appearances on both a Baltimore news panel show and on a morning variety show. From 1963 until 1969, Mackin was employed by the
Hearst newspapers in their Washington Bureau. During the six years she worked for Hearst, she covered the
Justice Department, numerous elections, and presidential campaigns, polishing the talents that would make her a successful national news correspondent.
In 1967 Mackin became one of the few women to receive a Neiman Fellowship to
Harvard University, where she studied the history of political institutions. Hired by NBC in 1969, she anchored a half-hour newscast at WRC-TV, the Washington affiliate of
NBC, in addition to her reporting responsibilities. A tough minded and tenacious interviewer, Cassie Mackin, having moved to
NBC News, received national attention three years later when she became that network's first woman floor reporter at the Democratic and Republican presidential conventions. Her work contributed to the subsequent award of an
Emmy to the NBC news team for its coverage. Her report later that year on the President Nixon's re-election campaign, in which she stated that the President was saying things about opponent George McGovern that were untrue, was highlighted in Timothy Crouse's book,
The Boys on the Bus. After a brief stint in
Los Angeles, Mackin returned to Washington D.C., to become the Sunday evening anchor and congressional correspondent in 1974.
When
Barbara Walters left
The Today Show in 1976, Mackin was one of six candidates were tested on air to replace her. On December 12, 1976, Mackin took over NBC's Sunday Night News, becoming the first woman to solely anchor an evening network newscast on a regular basis.
ABC News President
Roone Arledge offered Mackin a salary of $100,000, an unprecedented salary for a national correspondent. In September 1977 she joined
ABC as their Washington correspondent, temporarily covering the Senate. She also worked on a
20/20 story about drunk driving, for which she received another Emmy in 1981. Assigned to the 1980 presidential campaign, Mackin spent a good portion of the year following Senator
Edward Kennedy around the country.
Mackin moved to Baltimore in October 1981 to live with her sister, Margaret, after having a kidney removed in an effort to stop the spread of cancer. She appeared periodically on
This Week with David Brinkley as part of a discussion group and updated her drunken driving report for
20/20, but succumbed to cancer on 20 November 1982.
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