Name | Henry Robinson LUCE [1] | |
Born | 3 Apr 1898 | |
Gender | Male | |
HIST | Henry Luce From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Luce with wife Clare Boothe Luce (1954) Henry Robinson Luce (April 3, 1898 – February 28, 1967) was an influential American publisher. Contents [hide] 1 Biography 2 Alleged lovers 3 References 4 External links [edit] Biography Luce, known to his friends as "Father Time," was born in Penglai City, China, the son of Elizabeth Middleton (née Root) and Henry Winters Luce, who was a Presbyterian missionary. He received his education in various Chinese and English boarding schools and at 10, traveled to the China Inland Mission Chefoo School, a boarding school at Yantai on the Shandong coast. At 14, he traveled to Europe alone, then to the U.S. arriving at the age of 15 to attend the Hotchkiss School in Connecticut. Luce split his time between waiting tables after school and editing for the Hotchkiss Literary Monthly, holding the position of editor-in-chief. In 1920, he graduated from Yale University, where he was a member of Alpha Delta Phi. At Hotchkiss, he first met Briton Hadden, who would become a lifelong partner. At the time, Hadden served as editor-in-chief of the school newspaper. Luce worked as an assistant managing editor. The two continued to work together at Yale, with Hadden as chairman and Luce as managing editor of the Yale Daily News. Luce, recalling his relationship with Hadden, said, "Somehow, despite the greatest differences in temperaments and even in interests, we had to work together. We were an organization. At the center of our lives — our job, our function — at that point everything we had belonged to each other." After being voted "most brilliant" of his class at Yale, he parted ways with Hadden to embark for a year on history studies at Oxford University. During this time he worked as a cub reporter for the Chicago Daily News. In December 1921, Luce rejoined Hadden to work at The Baltimore News. Nightly discussions of the concept of a news magazine led the two, both age 23, to quit their jobs in 1922. Later that same year the two formed Time Inc. Having raised $86,000 of a $100,000 goal, the first issue of Time was published on March 3, 1923. Luce served as business manager while Hadden was editor-in-chief. Luce and Hadden annually alternated year-to-year the titles of president and secretary-treasurer. Upon Hadden's sudden death in 1929, Luce assumed Hadden's position. Luce launched the business magazine Fortune in February 1930 and founded the pictorial Life magazine in 1936, and launched House & Home in 1952 and Sports Illustrated in 1954. He also produced The March of Time for radio and cinema. By the mid 1960s, Time Inc. was the largest and most prestigious magazine publisher in the world. (Dwight Macdonald, a somewhat reluctant employee at Fortune during the 1930s, referred to him as "Il Luce".) Among media writers, Luce's cryptical editor's comment survives him: "Needs work." Cover of TIME September 17, 1951; depicting the World Peace Council as a front organization of Soviet leader Joseph Stalin During his life, Luce supported many programs like Save the Children Federation, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and United Service to China, Inc. Luce, who remained editor-in-chief of all his publications until 1964, maintained a position as an influential member of the Republican Party.[1] Holding anti-communist sentiments. An instrumental figure behind the so-called "China Lobby", he played a large role in steering American foreign policy and popular sentiment in favor of Nationalist leader Chiang Kai-shek and his wife Soong Mei-ling in their war against the Japanese. (the Chiangs appeared in the cover of Time eleven times between 1927 and 1955.[2]) Once ambitious to become Secretary of State in a Republican administration, Luce penned a famous article in Life magazine in 1941, called "The American Century", which defined the role of American foreign policy for the remainder of the 20th century (and perhaps beyond).[1] Luce had two children — Peter Paul and Henry Luce III — with his first wife, Lila Hotz. He married his second wife, Clare Boothe Luce in 1935. He died in Phoenix, Arizona in 1967. At his death he was said to be worth $100 million in Time Inc. stock. Most of his fortune went to the Henry Luce Foundation. He is interred at Mepkin Plantation in South Carolina. According to the Henry Luce Foundation, Henry Luce III died September 8, 2005, age 80, on Fishers Island, New York, of cardiac arrest. [edit] Alleged lovers Ralph G. Martin's book Henry & Clare: An Intimate Portrait of the Luces claims that Henry had extended relationships with Jean Dalrymple (a Broadway producer and theatrical agent) and Mary Bancroft (who, among other accomplishments, had been a wartime spymaster for the OSS). According to Martin, Clare also had many lovers. Henry's liaison that most seriously threatened his marriage to Clare involved Lady Jeanne Campbell, granddaughter of the British press tycoon Lord Beaverbrook. TIME in 1956 found a minor job in its picture department for Lady Jeanne. Luce became so openly smitten with this cheerful redhead, 31 years his junior, that rumors of the affair appeared in gossip columns. Lady Jeanne eventually married novelist Norman Mailer. Martin's claims are controversial. An article in the August 26, 1991 issue of TIME states that "Henry & Clare is rife with errors, undocumented innuendo, non sequiturs and contradictions. Martin shows little understanding of how the Luce organization worked; the portraits of his principals are caricature-crude, especially in the case of Clare. In biography even more than architecture, God is in the details. By that standard, Henry & Clare deserves the scathing verdict that Luce often penciled on drafts of unsatisfactory stories: 'Needs work'."[3] [edit] References 1. ^ a b "Henry R. Luce: End of a Pilgrimage". - TIME. - March 10, 1967 2. ^ Chiang covers at TIME 3. ^ Elson, John. - When Harry Met Clare . . . - TIME Magazine - August 26, 1991 [edit] External links ? TIME biography ? The Henry Luce Foundation ? Whitman, Alden. "Henry R. Luce, Creator of Time–Life Magazine Empire, Dies in Phoenix at 68," The New York Times, March 1, 1967. ? PBS American Masters ? Henry Luce at Find A Grave Categories: 1898 births | 1967 deaths | Alumni of the University of Oxford | American magazine founders | American magazine publishers (people) | American mass media owners | Time magazine | American Presbyterians | American anti-communists | Hotchkiss School alumni | People from Ridgefield, Connecticut | People from Shandong | Spouses of members of the United States House of Representatives | Yale University alumni article discussion edit this page history Log in / create account navigation ? Main page ? Contents ? Featured content ? Current events ? Random article search interaction ? About Wikipedia ? Community portal ? Recent changes ? Contact Wikipedia ? Donate to Wikipedia ? Help toolbox ? What links here ? Related changes ? Upload file ? Special pages ? Printable version ? Permanent link ? Cite this page languages ? <‰Ÿ—>Í… ? Deutsch ? Français ? Italiano ? Latina ? Português ? ??????? ? Simple English ? Ti?ng Vi?t ? íÜï∂ ? 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Occupation | the wealthy and influential publisher of Time, Fortune, and Life [1] | |
_UID | 5420FB4B2BB54105B7D0ED2D1F891A286B75 | |
Died | 28 Feb 1967 | Phoenix, Arizona |
Buried | Mepkin Abbey, Moncks Corner, Berkeley County, South Carolina [1] | |
Person ID | I237347 | Singleton and other families |
Last Modified | 13 Mar 2009 |
Family 1 | Lila HOTZ | |||||
_UID | BACF8D415BC44E67B8AF0005F0B0A9E3C3C6 | |||||
Children |
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Last Modified | 2 Mar 2024 | |||||
Family ID | F160211 | Group Sheet | Family Chart |
Family 2 | Anne Clare “Clare” BOOTHE, b. 10 Apr 1903, New York City, New York , d. 9 Oct 1987, Washington, D.C. (Age 84 years) | |
Married | 23 Nov 1935 [1] | |
_UID | A4A2840BE86C4BBCAD50830CD8C06E490B3E | |
Last Modified | 13 Mar 2009 | |
Family ID | F160210 | Group Sheet | Family Chart |
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