Research Catalog

William Randolph Hearst : a new appraisal

Title
William Randolph Hearst : a new appraisal / John K. Winkler.
Author
Winkler, John K. (John Kennedy), 1891-1958
Publication
New York : Hastings House, [1955]

Items in the Library & Off-site

Filter by

1 Item

StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextUse in library PN4874.H4 W52 1955Off-site

Details

Description
viii, 325 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations, facsimiles; 24 cm
Summary
From Chapter 1: At rare intervals, in human experience, arises an individual of such towering ability and diversified talents as to assume not only leadership but domination of his chosen field. Such an individual was William Randolph Hearst. This phenomenal American placed his stamp upon world journalism as has no other, before or since. William Randolph Hearst evolved new technique in newspaper making, strikingly synchronizing his type, his text and his illustrations. An artist to his finder tips, he succeeded in challenging and arresting the attention of the eye and of the mind, achieving effects hitherto unattempted. His methods have been so widely imitated and so universally adopted that the originator has been all but lost sight of. Hearst's active career spanned two-thirds of a century, his life one-half that of his country. It was typical of him that he should have died in harness, a pad and pencil at his bedside. For, in all the triumphs and defeats and backwashed and vicissitudes of the crowded decades, Mr. Hearst took the fiercest pride in calling himself a working newspaper man. "If I had my life to live over again," he once remarked, "I would be a newspaper man, and merely try to be a better one." It is a matchless journalist that posterity will best remember him.--page 1.
Subject
  • Hearst, William Randolph, 1863-1951
  • Hearst, William Randolph, 1863-1951
  • Perswezen
  • Publishers and publishing > United States > Biography
  • Newspaper publishing > United States > History
Genre/Form
  • Biographies
  • Biographies.
Note
  • Includes index.
  • "A Hearst family album occurs after page 166"--Table of contents.
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
Does this explain William Randolph Hearst? -- Boyhood of a genius -- Harvard-birth of a journalist -- He multiplies himself in others -- New blood in park row -- Crusader extraordinary -- Journalist liberates a country -- In the political arena -- People's champion -- Standard oil letters -- Potpourri -- America first and forever -- Exeunt political ambition -- Movies and a touch of Don Juanism -- French dressing down -- Making and breaking with Franklin Roosevelt -- Anti-Communism, the greatest crusade -- Last years -- Appendix. Cavalcade of great newspaper comics -- Index.
LCCN
55011639
OCLC
  • ocm00928341
  • 928341
  • SCSB-113852
Owning Institutions
Princeton University Library