Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Benjamin Crowninshield Bradlee Jr. (born August 7, 1948) is an American journalist and writer. He was a reporter and editor at The Boston Globe for 25 years, including a period when he supervised the Pulitzer Prize–winning investigation into sexual abuse by priests in the Boston archdiocese, and is the author of a comprehensive biography of Ted Williams.
Ben Bradlee was born in Boston, Massachusetts, to Frederick Josiah Bradlee, Jr., who was from the Boston Brahmin Bradlee family and who was an investment banker, and Josephine de Gersdorff, daughter of a Wall Street lawyer.
Quinn was the third wife of Ben Bradlee, her former boss at The Washington Post until he died in 2014. They married on October 20, 1978. They married on October 20, 1978. In 1979, Quinn and Bradlee purchased Grey Gardens in East Hampton, New York from Edith Bouvier Beale , known as "Little Edie," for $220,000 (equivalent to $924,000 in 2023 ...
A very short time after Pinchot Meyer's brother-in-law Ben Bradlee finished eating lunch, hours before police identified the body, CIA official Wistar Janney placed a phone call to Bradlee. [14] According to Bradlee's account in his memoir A Good Life, moments earlier Janney had heard a radio news report about the murder of a woman at the C&O ...
The Newspaperman: The Life and Times of Ben Bradlee is an American documentary film that premiered on December 4, 2017 on HBO. Directed by John Maggio , the film explores the life and legacy of journalist Ben Bradlee .
Her first husband was Ben Bradlee Jr., a Pulitzer Prize-winning editor for The Boston Globe, [17] biographer, and son of former Washington Post executive editor Benjamin C. Bradlee. [18] Her second husband was Julius Genachowski , chairman of the U.S. Federal Communications Commission under the Obama administration . [ 19 ]
Benjamin C. Bradlee, the Washington Post editor during the Watergate era, purchased the house in 1983 and lived there with Sally Quinn until his death there at age 93 on October 21, 2014. References [ edit ]
Leonard "Len" Downie Jr. is an American journalist who was executive editor of The Washington Post from 1991 to 2008. He worked in the Post newsroom for 44 years. His roles at the newspaper included executive editor, managing editor, national editor, London correspondent, assistant managing editor for metropolitan news, deputy metropolitan editor, and investigative and local reporter. [1]