Son remembers father's career as crime reporter
Earl "Skip" Aykroid's father wasn't a gangster, but he got closer to the mob scene than many who lived to tell about it.
Aykroid's father, H. Earl Aykroid, was a reporter for the Chicago Herald and Examiner and later The Associated Press in Chicago.
Skip, who lives in Gilberts, says didn't follow in his father's footsteps.
"The closest I got was delivering the Sunday paper when I was a kid," Skip said.
Instead, he was in the uniform textile business for several years. But he still remembers the big stories his father covered in his heyday as a crime reporter in one of the nation's most interesting crime cities.
When Skip was growing up in Park Ridge, sometimes he would overhear his father telling his mother about his days at the office -- coffee with notorious gangster Al Capone and chasing down leads from the city's top cops.
"He'd bring stuff home, and we'd get to read it," Skip said. "In passing, he'd talk about certain things that happened over the years. Once I got to be old enough to understand, he'd tell (my sister and me) things."
The senior Earl got his start working for newspapers at an early age. With only an eighth-grade education, Earl started out as a copy boy for the Herald and Examiner at 18 in 1924. He got a full-time gig after scooping some of Chicago's veteran reporters by identifying a young drowning victim.
Earl even got phone calls from some of the criminals themselves. Skip said Capone called up the newsroom one day, complaining that people weren't getting his side of the story. Earl was the one tapped to go and get it. The two soon were meeting on a regular basis for coffee or lunch.
One of the lasting stories from Skip's father's police beat days is what occurred on Feb. 14, 1929. Most Chicago-area residents know the story: Seven people with ties to Bugs Moran's gang were shot in a North Side garage. The victims were lined up with their backs to their shooters, who were disguised as police. The real police were never able to collect enough evidence to put anyone on trial for the murders.
"Because of the relationship my dad had with Capone, they let him know so he could have the scoop," Skip said.
The story Skip heard was that Earl, a city editor at the time, and a photographer pulled up to the garage on Clark Street right as the shooters were pulling away. According to Skip, Earl and his staff photographer were among the first on the scene and discovered the fresh bodies lying on the garage floor.
The picture of the scene the reporter saw that day is now a family heirloom of sorts, passed down to Skip. Blood and brains splattered across the cement floor of the crime scene are still visible in the cracked black-and-white photo.
"They were brutal in those days," Skip said.
When Skip was 12, he got a chance to ride along with his dad on a story. A helicopter had crashed off Roosevelt Road in Forest Park.
"I begged him to let me go," Skip said. Skip was told to wait in the car while Earl checked out the scene.
"When he got back, I asked him what happened. He said, 'You're not going out there. There are body parts everywhere,'" Skip said.
Some families pass down quilts or jewelry from generation to generation. Skip has a more nontraditional legacy from his father: a couple of albums full of press clippings and gory crime scene photos that were passed down from his father.
"He never made a lot of money," Skip said of his father, who died in 1988. "But he lived an interesting life."