Theodore "Ted" Henry is a retired television news anchor whose career spanned over 40 years in the Northeast Ohio area, most notably as the primary news anchor on Cleveland American Broadcasting Company affiliate WEWS channel 5.
Background
Henry was born during the baby boom generation in 1946 in Canton, Ohio, the son of a local hardware store owner and his wife. As a student at Canton Central Catholic High School, Henry actually got his first job in broadcasting - filming a commercial for his father"s hardware store (an ad Henry admits was "really bad").
Education
Following graduating high school in 1963, Henry attended Walsh University (then Walsh College) and a year later transferred to Kent State University, studying telecommunications.
Career
He would graduate from KSU in 1968. After graduating college, Henry went into the Peace Corps, serving overseas for over two years. Broadcast career Shortly after college, Henry worked as a reporter and weather forecaster for Akron, Ohio television station WAKR-television 23, and upon returning home from his Peace Corps service, Henry then worked at sister stations WKBN Department of Administration and Management 570 and WKBN-television 27 in Youngstown, Ohio as a government reporter.
In 1972, Henry came to Cleveland and began work at WEWS. First he served as the weekend weatherman (Henry would admit in later years that as he didn"t have a background in weather reporting, he would use forecasts from a Detroit radio station to base his forecast off of).
He would work his way up the ranks to reporter, then weekend news anchor, and in 1975 became the weeknight news anchor, serving in that post for 34 years until his retirement in 2009, working with 13 different co-anchors over that time frame. Henry would make numerous international trips during his WEWS career to cover stories, including to Germany to cover the fall of the Berlin Wall, to Rome to cover the death of Pope John Paul II, and six trips to Israel.
Retirement Henry announced his retirement on April 23, 2009, and his final newscast was on May 20. 1991 inductee - Ohio Broadcasters Hall of Fame.