Florida journalism loses Nancy Ancrum, whose courage and poise drove Herald editorial board | Opinion

December 22 was Nancy Ancrum Day in Miami-Dade County.

That proclamation, made official with a plaque from the county and a small ceremony, was bestowed in appreciation for her 40 years of work at the Miami Herald, the last 10 as editorial page editor, a job she dispatched with a lightness of spirit that belied the heaviness of her responsibilities.

The announcement came during one of Nancy’s multiple retirement parties — she decided late last year that it was time to hand over the reins of the opinion section.

Nancy was surprised by the framed proclamation hand delivered by Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava. Those of us who served with Nancy on the Miami Herald Editorial Board weren’t. The honor was deserved.

Nancy led the editorial board the way she approached everything in life: with compassion, humor, humility, joy and an occasional dose of sternness. “I’m channeling my mother now,” she would laugh after she had to use a steely tone during a particularly difficult interview with a political candidate.

She died on Friday at age 67 after a long illness.

Leading an editorial board through tough decisions and controversial election recommendations is not for the faint of heart. Nancy displayed the necessary mental toughness as required. When criticism was leveled or fury vented, she absorbed that without flinching, often bearing the brunt of it so others wouldn’t have to.

But it’s her joy we remember most. During our morning meetings, held virtually throughout the pandemic, we discussed South Florida’s issues with vigor, intensity — and a lot of laughter. Nancy was our boss but she was also our friend. She cared about her fellow board members and colleagues and understood that, in the midst of opining on Gov. Ron DeSantis’ latest proposal or dissecting the current scandal at Miami City Hall, we had lives outside of work. She had perspective, a valuable trait in a world where overheated rhetoric can feel all-consuming.

She fostered an environment where members of the editorial board could express their opinions without fear or embarrassment. Nancy lived up to the principles of journalism and of democracy, where the free exchange of ideas is paramount.

Journalists were her tribe, she liked to say, and that is how she approached each meeting with the editorial board, each conversation with a member of the community. She considered any meeting she attended a success if she was able to offer someone the opportunity to write an opinion piece for the Herald. Extending the Herald’s platform to the community was second nature to her.

She also kept common sense at the fore when making editorial decisions. She defended the positions of the editorial board even when they weren’t popular with some members of the community. When we changed our minds — as we did with some election recommendations based on new information — she was forthcoming about it.

Nancy’s headline writing was among the sharpest in opinion journalism. She had a knack for helping her staff put thoughts into words during our discussions. She also authored powerful editorials. When footage of the 2021 Surfside building collapse was released, she wrote a piece that captured what many felt in the wake of such a tragedy, titled “Surfside condo-collapse video is haunting for what we didn’t see: the people inside.”

Nancy also gave us freedom to innovate in a business that is ever changing. Under her leadership, the editorial board launched a podcast called “Woke Wars” and won several awards. Among them is the Pulitzer Prize her successor, Amy Driscoll, won for editorial writing in 2023.

Her Miami Herald retirement party, just a little over three weeks ago, made her feel like “the belle of the ball,” she said. Storms had been on the horizon but when the evening dawned, the weather was fine. We toasted her and celebrated together, as a team.

Nancy remained a committed Miami Herald editor in spirit even after her official retirement. Her husband, George Fishman, a familiar face to the board in no small part because our morning meetings gave us a window into each other’s households, sent a message to the board on Saturday, after she passed away. Nancy, he said, had noticed a typo the night before in an editorial.

We fixed it, of course, with profound thanks and gratitude.