



Beloved Chicago television news broadcaster Harry Porterfield, who for years shared the unique tales of hundreds of area residents through his signature “Someone You Should Know” series, died Monday. He was 95.
His first profile for the series aired on WBBM-TV Channel 2 in 1977 and featured a paralyzed woman who worked as a hospital receptionist and operated a switchboard using a device she clutched in her teeth, family said.
Mr. Porterfield died Monday morning from natural causes while surrounded by his family in Munster, Indiana.
The idea to showcase people in the community doing extraordinary things quickly resonated with viewers.
“He started getting a lot mail from people who’d suggest other people to do stories on,” said Mr. Porterfield’s granddaughter, Amanda Porterfield, who is a news anchor at CBS 58 in Milwaukee.
A sampling of the personalities Mr. Porterfield’s “Someone You Should Know” profiled includes a retired mail carrier who volunteered at suburban junior high school; a woman who ran a business designing clothes for full-figured women and finished last in the 1987 Chicago triathlon; a teen professional jazz pianist; and a dentist who provided free care to ex-offenders.
Mr. Porterfield started his Chicago broadcast career at WBBM-Channel 2 in 1964 and spent 21 years at the station before moving to WLS-TV Channel 7 in 1985, where he worked for 24 years. He returned to WBBM in 2009 and retired in 2015 at age 87.
Mr. Porterfield was born Aug. 29, 1928, in Saginaw, Michigan, to Viola, a homemaker, and Harry Porterfield Sr., who owned an automobile service station. He graduated from Saginaw’s Arthur Hill High School in 1946. In 1951, he was drafted by the Army during the Korean War and served less than two years in Germany before returning home to earn a degree in chemistry from Eastern Michigan University.
Mr. Porterfield, who loved music, couldn’t find work as a chemist and “kind of fell into radio,” his granddaughter said.
He began working at a radio station in Saginaw as a jazz disc jockey and later as a cameraman and stagehand with an affiliated television station before moving to Chicago in 1964, where he started off as a news writer before becoming a reporter at WBBM.

Harry Porterfield
Provided
Mr. Porterfield received numerous community awards, 11 regional Emmy Awards and a Studs Terkel Award.
He was inducted into the Silver Circle of the Chicago/Midwest chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences in 1998.
“He loved his work. He put a lot of effort into it. He was a perfectionist,” his granddaughter said. “He rarely missed a day and worked holidays until late in his career. We would always wait for him to get home to have Thanksgiving.”

An accomplished violinist, Harry Porterfield performs in 1990 at a local fundraising gala. He was a volunteer member of the orchestra for Chicago’s annual “Do-It-Yourself Messiah” for more than 40 years.
Sun-Times File
Mr. Porterfield earned a law degree from DePaul University in 1993 at the age of 65.
“He wanted to see where all the decisions within our legal systems were made and why,” his wife, Marianita Porterfield said.
“He always told me every journalist should have a law degree so they’re fully informed about our justice system,” his granddaughter said.
Mr. Porterfield lived in the Miller Beach neighborhood of in Gary, Indiana, for more than 50 years until moving recently to Munster.
He played the violin with several groups. Most notably, he was a volunteer member of the orchestra for the “Do-It-Yourself Messiah” for more than 40 years, family said. And he loved hanging out at Andy’s Jazz Club in downtown Chicago.
In addition to his granddaughter and wife, Mr. Porterfield is survived by his children Eric Shropshire, Gina Shropshire, Harry Porterfield III, Allison Porterfield-Woods and one great-grandchild.
Funeral arrangements are pending, and a public memorial in Chicago is being planned.