Wednesday May 21st, 2025 6:21AM

Services Sat. for Gainesville native, veteran Voice of America broadcaster

By Ken Stanford Contributing Editor
GAINESVILLE - A Gainesville native whose career in broadcasting took him to the ends of the world and back to his hometown will be remembered at a service in Gainesville Saturday.<br /> <br /> A celebration of life for Rhett Turnipseed, who died Sunday, will be held at Alta Vista Cemetery at 2:00.<br /> <br /> Turnipseed grew up with a love of radio and aviation but his chosen career was in radio.<br /> <br /> His first job as a teenager was putting remote amplifiers and microphones in churches for Sunday morning broadcasts on WGGA (now 1240 ESPN). <br /> <br /> Turnipseed studied broadcast journalism at the University of Georgia, earning a master's degree while engaged in local radio broadcasting. His thesis was a history of Georgia radio and television in its first 50 years, a work that earned him the unofficial title of historian of Georgia broadcasting. <br /> <br /> During the Korean Conflict, he served in the U.S. Army in Korea as a combat correspondent, filing stories from the battlefront for statewide radio stations and newspapers. Turnipseed joined Voice of America as a producer and editor for various programs emphasizing American science and technology. He described live events worldwide, such as NASA's Mercury through Apollo space flights and President Kennedy's funeral. <br /> <br /> He was the principal correspondent for the Apollo 11 coverage that earned Voice of America's 1968 Peabody Award. His Apollo moon landing broadcast achieved worldwide English language listeners of some 550 million. In 1973, Turnipseed became involved in the Energy Research and Development Administration federal initiative to develop solar energy technologies. <br /> <br /> He retired in 1982, and returned to Georgia where for 13 years he was an assistant professor at Brenau University in Gainesville and the University of West Georgia in Carrollton. He served for two decades as a judge and director of state broadcasting awards by the Georgia Association of Broadcasters and was inducted into the Georgia Broadcasting Hall of Fame in 2003.<br />
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