Heywood Campbell Broun, newspaper columnist, author, and
one of the founders of the American Newspaper Guild,
was
born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1888. After attending Harvard,
he worked for several New York papers including the
New
York Tribune and New York World and the
New York Telegram and World Telegram.
While at the World, he began a syndicated column,
"It Seems to Me," which he wrote until his death. In his
column, the first of its kind to disagree with the policies
of the newspapers that carried it, Broun championed the
underdog, criticized social injustice, and supported labor
unionsall issues of intense concern to ER. He also
publicly backed ER's efforts to retain her own identity
after becoming
first lady, writing that "she has a right to her own individual
career regardless of the prominence of her husband."(1)
In addition to his journalistic and literary endeavors
(he wrote several books and edited a literary weekly),
Broun
was also active in politics. In 1930, he unsuccessfully
ran for Congress as a Socialist. He also served as the
first
president of the Newspaper Guild from 1933 until his death
in 1939.
Notes:
- Joseph Lash, A World of Love:
Eleanor Roosevelt and Her Friends (Garden City,
N.Y.: Doubleday & Company, Inc., 1984), 131.
Sources:
The Concise Dictionary of American Biography.
5th ed. New York: Charles Scribner's
Sons, 1997, 146-147.
Lash, Joseph. World of Love: Eleanor Roosevelt and
Her Friends, 1943-1962. Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday
& Company, Inc., 1984, 131.