kvmguitar.blogg.se

The Coast by Joseph J. Thorndike Jr.
The Coast by Joseph J. Thorndike Jr.











The Coast by Joseph J. Thorndike Jr.

They enlarged it, turned it into a hardcover, profusely illustrated bimonthly with no advertisements, and hired popular American Civil War historian Bruce Catton as editor and writer.Ĭirculation at American Heritage rose to over 300,000. James Parton, whom Thorndike had known at the Crimson, joined them in 1952 to create Thorndike Jensen & Parton, and in 1954 they took over a small history publication named American Heritage.

The Coast by Joseph J. Thorndike Jr.

They put out a book of cowboy photos by Life photographer Leonard McCombe, and a lavish picture book for Ford Motor Company, Ford at Fifty. In 1950, Thorndike and another refugee from Life, Oliver Jensen, formed a small publishing company, Picture Press. Thorndike read it, packed his briefcase and resigned. The dispute came to a head in August, 1949, after Luce circulated a memoir proposing an "Editor-in-Chief's Committee" that would decide on all future articles for the magazine. Luce's reaction was to subject the Managing Editor to more supervision, which Thorndike resisted. Life, in late 1948, had published a "Life Goes To A Party" story about an uninhibited dance party in Hawaii, including photos of scantily-dressed partygoers. Toward the end of his stay, disagreements grew between him and Luce. In 1946, as Life's circulation topped five million, Thorndike became the magazine's third Managing Editor, a position he held for three years. Billings kept a diary in which, according to Loudon Wainwright's book The Great American Magazine: An Inside History of Life, he called Thorndike "a mulish young Yankee," and "a stubborn little New England cuss" Wainwright himself called Thorndike "a handsome, bright, reserved, efficient fellow.ambitious, proud, marked from the start for bigger things." His immediate boss at Life was John Shaw Billings, the first Managing Editor. He was asked by Henry Luce to join a group planning a new picture magazine, and when Life debuted in 1936, Thorndike, though only 23, was an associate editor of the magazine. In June 1934, he started work at Time magazine, writing People, Miscellany and Education articles. Thorndike was a straight A student at Peabody High, valedictorian of his class, and a writer for two school magazines.Īt Harvard ('34) he majored in Economics, but spent much of his time at The Harvard Crimson, rising to Managing Editor his junior year, and to President his senior year. His father was a stockbroker, his mother a teacher. Thorndike was born and raised in Peabody, Massachusetts, a small town north of Boston. He was Managing Editor of Life for three years in the late 1940s, and a co-founder of American Heritage and Horizon magazines. Joseph Jacobs Thorndike (J– November 22, 2005) was an American editor and writer.













The Coast by Joseph J. Thorndike Jr.