Joseph J. Thorndike
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Joseph Jacobs Thorndike (July 29, 1913 – November 22, 2005) was an American editor and writer.Richard F. Snow
"Mister Thorndike," ''American Heritage'', February/March 2006.
He was Managing Editor of ''Life'' for three years in the late 1940s, and a co-founder of '' American Heritage'' and '' Horizon'' magazines.


Biography

Thorndike was born and raised in Peabody, Massachusetts, a small town north of
Boston Boston (), officially the City of Boston, is the state capital and most populous city of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, as well as the cultural and financial center of the New England region of the United States. It is the 24th- mo ...
. His father was a stockbroker, his mother a teacher. Thorndike was a straight A student at Peabody High,
valedictorian Valedictorian is an academic title for the highest-performing student of a graduating class of an academic institution. The valedictorian is commonly determined by a numerical formula, generally an academic institution's grade point average (GPA ...
of his class, and a writer for two school magazines. At Harvard ('34) he majored in Economics, but spent much of his time at ''
The Harvard Crimson ''The Harvard Crimson'' is the student newspaper of Harvard University and was founded in 1873. Run entirely by Harvard College undergraduates, it served for many years as the only daily newspaper in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Beginning in the f ...
'', rising to Managing Editor his junior year, and to President his senior year. In June 1934, he started work at ''Time'' magazine, writing people, miscellany and education articles. 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.. His immediate boss at ''Life'' was John Shaw Billings, the first Managing Editor. 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."Wainwright, Loudon (1986). ''The Great American Magazine: An Inside History of Life''. New York: Knopf. p. 111. In 1946, as ''Life'''s circulation topped five million, Thorndike became the magazine's third Managing Editor, a position he held for three years. Toward the end of his stay, disagreements grew between him and Luce. ''Life'', in late 1948, had published a "''Life'' Goes To A Party" story about an uninhibited dance party in
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, including photos of scantily-dressed partygoers. Luce's reaction was to subject the Managing Editor to more supervision, which Thorndike resisted. 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. Thorndike read it, packed his briefcase and resigned. In 1950, Thorndike and another refugee from ''Life'', Oliver Jensen, formed a small publishing company, Picture Press. They put out a book of cowboy photos by ''Life'' photographer Leonard McCombe, and a lavish picture book for
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, ''Ford at Fifty''. 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''. They enlarged it, turned it into a hardcover, profusely illustrated bimonthly with no advertisements, and hired popular
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historian
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as editor and writer. Circulation at ''American Heritage'' rose to over 300,000.
David McCullough David Gaub McCullough (; July 7, 1933 – August 7, 2022) was an American popular historian. He was a two-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Award. In 2006, he was given the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the United States ...
, author of the bestsellers ''Truman'' and ''John Adams'', and writer and editor for the magazine, later said that it was "the best place I ever worked as an employee... They were receptive to new ideas, with very high editorial standards, high accuracy, and quality writing... You felt like you were cast in a hit show with great people." A second magazine, '' Horizon'', followed in 1958, and over the next three decades the company published dozens of illustrated books on history, art and architecture. Thorndike wrote two of them: ''The Magnificent Builders And Their Dream Houses'' (1978), and ''The Very Rich: A History of Wealth'' (1985). American Heritage sold to
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in 1970, to private investor Samuel Pryor Reed of New York City in 1976, to
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in 1986, and to an independent publisher, Edwin S. Grosvenor, in 2007. In his early seventies, Thorndike served for two years as head of The ''
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'' Usage Panel, a group of writers and scholars who are polled on acceptable
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. In 1993 Thorndike published his last book, ''The Coast: A Journey Down the Atlantic Shore'', which '' Kirkus Reviews'' described as "an effective combination of eyeball observation, rich history, and sad acknowledgment of how poorly we have used still another national resource." Thorndike was married twice: to Virginia Lemont in 1940, with whom he had two sons,
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and Alan, and to Margery Darrell in 1964, with whom he had a son, Joe. For twenty-eight years until she died in 2004, Thorndike had a close relationship with his "great and good friend" Jane Allport. Thorndike died in 2005 of complications from Alzheimer's and congestive heart failure. He is buried in the Island Pond Cemetery in
Harwich, Massachusetts Harwich ( ) is a New England town on Cape Cod, in Barnstable County in the state of Massachusetts in the United States. At the 2020 census it had a population of 13,440. Harwich experiences a seasonal increase to roughly 37,000. The town is a ...
.


Books

* ''The Magnificent Builders and Their Dream Houses'' - Hardcover: 352 pages, American Heritage Publishing Co. (1978), * ''The Very Rich: A History of Wealth'' - Hardcover: 344 pages, American Heritage Publishing Co. (1985), . * ''The Coast: A Journey Down the Atlantic Shore'' - Hardcover: 227 pages, St. Martin's Press (1993),


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Thorndike, Joseph American magazine editors American male journalists 1913 births 2005 deaths The Harvard Crimson people