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Wilder Hobson

Wilder Hobson (February 18, 1906 – May 1, 1964) was an American writer and editor for Time (1930s-1940s), Fortune (1940s), Harper's Bazaar (1950s), and Newsweek (1960s) magazines. He was also a competent musician (trombone), author of an history of American jazz, and long-time contributor to Saturday Review (1940s, 1950s, 1960s) magazine. Also, he served on the planning committee of the Institute of Jazz Studies.[1]

Wilder Hobson
Born
Wilder Hobson

(1906-02-18)February 18, 1906
DiedMay 1, 1964(1964-05-01) (aged 58)
NationalityAmerican
EducationYale University
Occupation(s)Writer, magazine editor
Employer(s)Time (1930s-1940s)
Fortune (1940s)
Harper's Bazaar (1950s)
Newsweek (1960s)
Saturday Review (1940s, 1950s, 1960s)
Board member ofPlanning committee of the Institute of Jazz Studies
Spouse(s)Peggy Hobson
Verna Harrison Hobson (married 1945-1964)

Life edit

Early years edit

Born in 1906, Hobson attended Yale University. There, he was a roommate of Dwight Macdonald, with whom he produced campus humor magazine The Yale Record.[2] He was a 1928 member of Scroll and Key.[3]

Famed American documentary photographer Walker Evans captured Hobson and Agee on a Long Island beach during the summer of 1937, when Evans and Agee were visiting Hobson and his first wife Peggy.[4] (The Metropolitan Museum of Art houses those photos, which are also available online—see "Images," below.)

Magazines edit

Hobson wrote for Time in the 1930s and 1940s.[5] After covering a coal strike during the 1930s, he helped lead unionization at Time and became the first head of Time's Newspaper Guild branch.[6]

In October 1942, Hobson succeeded the late Calvin Fixx as assistant editor to Whittaker Chambers, then editor of Arts & Entertainment. Other writers working for Chambers included: novelist Nigel Dennis, future New York Times Book Review editor Harvey Breit, and poets Howard Moss and Weldon Kees.[7][8] Hobson worked amidst the struggle between Soviet-sympathizing and anti-Communist staffers at Time. Chambers and Willi Schlamm led the anti-Communist camp (and both later joined the founding editorial board of William F. Buckley, Jr.'s National Review). Theodore H. White and Richard Lauterbach led the pro-Soviet camp. Time founder Henry R. Luce came to support the anti-Communist camp before the end of World War II in 1945.[9] Hobson, however, rode out the storm and even managed to write two books at Time: a historical study called American Jazz Music (1939—see "Music," below) and a novel called All Summer Long (1945).

When Chambers received a promotion to senior editor in September 1943 and then joined Time's senior editorial group in December 1932, Hobson succeeded to the Arts & Entertainment section.[10] He hired friend Walker Evans to write reviews first on Film and then on Art (1943–1945).[11]

In 1946, Hobson moved to editorial board of Fortune,[12] where he worked until severe writer's block caused him to resign.[5]

In November 1950, Hobson became managing editor of Harper's Bazaar (then with a circulation of 340,605), replacing Frances MacFadden, who retired after 18 years in that position.[13]

Later, Hobson joined Newsweek, where he worked for a decade.

Hobson become a contributor to the (now defunct) Saturday Review during the late 1940s, the 1950s, and into the 1960s.

Later life with Verna Hobson edit

Hobson was a heavy alcoholic and died at the age of 58 in 1964 of gastrointestinal hemorrhage in Princeton, New Jersey.[1][14]

Hobson married his second wife, Verna Harrison (1923–2004), in the mid-1940s after meeting at Time. At first they lived in Manhattan but moved to Princeton. Each year, they summered on Squirrel Island, Maine while playing in the Hennessy Five Star Orchestra. Mrs. Hobson worked 1954-1966 as secretary to Robert Oppenheimer, then director of the Institute for Advanced Study. After her husband's death in 1964, she moved to London and worked first for the American Association of University Women and then for the London branch of Robert Matthew, Johnson-Marshall, architects. In 1976, she returned to America and settled in New Gloucester, Maine, working for the independent weekly New Gloucester News and also helping to re-establish The Squirrel Island Squid. In 1998, she became a photographic stringer for The Lewiston Sun. In 2001, she moved to New Rochelle, New York, to live with her son Archie's family. Verna Harrison Hobson died on April 13, 2004.[15]

Music edit

In 1939, Hobson became the second American to write a major book on jazz, American Jazz Music ( A year earlier, colleague Winthrop Sargeant, a staff writer at Life, had published Jazz—Hot and Hybrid). Sargeant believed that the "swing" in jazz derived from complex African multi-rhythms adapted to relatively simple Western music. Hobson and Sargeant—both amateur, though well informed, jazz enthusiasts—believed that jazz came from New Orleans bordellos, whereas in the 1930s European scholars like Robert Goffin of Belgium and Hugues Panassié of France had already ascribed (correctly) that jazz was a "vernacular-based art."[16]

Wilder's close ancestors were Maine "Downeasters" and he played summers on Squirrel Island in Southport with the Hennessy Five-Star Orchestra, which slide-trombonist Wilder joined in 1921 at age 15. Wilder's second wife Verna later became a tuba player. Family members still return, where, as of 2001, the Hennessy band was "still alive and well." Daughter Eliza Hobson became a jazz disc jockey and broadcast journalist as well as playing piano and guitar.[17] A biography of Time colleague Weldon Kees includes a reminiscence of Kees on piano and Hobson on trombone in the Greenwich Village home of James Agee's sister.[18]

Publications edit

Books edit

  • American Jazz Music. (NY: W.W. Norton, 1939, republished in 1941 and 1976)
  • All Summer Long. (New York: Duell, Sloan & Pearce, 1945) ()

Articles edit

  • "," Time, April 10, 1939
  • "," Time, April 17, 1939
  • "An Album of Chinese Paintings," Life, October 11, 1943, 7 pp
  • "The Business Suit - A short and possibly tactless essay on the costuming of American enterprise," Fortune, July 1948, illustrated by Bernarda Bryson
  • "The Gospel Truth," Down Beat, May 30, 1968. vol. 35, p. 19. (posthumous)

Photos edit

  • Metropolitan Museum of Art - photo of Wilder Hobson by Walker Evans in 1937 (one of 30 in collection)
  • Portsmouth Herald - Wilder Hobson as part of the Hennessy Five Star Orchestra on Squirrel Island in Booth Bay Harbor, Maine

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b . Time. June 5, 1964. Archived from the original on May 14, 2009.
  2. ^ Osborn, Robert C. (1982). Osborn on Osborn. New York. Ticknor & Fields. p. 44.
  3. ^ . Time. May 4, 1931. Archived from the original on September 15, 2008. Retrieved 2008-09-13.
  4. ^ Rathbone, Belinda (1995). Walker Evans: A Biography. Houghton Mifflin. p. 150. ISBN 0-618-05672-6.
  5. ^ a b Rathbone, Belinda (1995). Walker Evans: A Biography. Houghton Mifflin. p. 144. ISBN 0-618-05672-6.
  6. ^ Vanderlan, Robert (2008). ""Telling the Truth in the Headquarters of Lying": Intellectuals Writing for Fortune Magazine in the 1930s". Reconstruction: Studies in Contemporary Culture. ISSN 1547-4348. Retrieved 2008-09-13.
  7. ^ Tanenhaus, Sam (1997). Whittaker Chambers: A Biography. Random House. pp. 174–175. ISBN 978-0-394-58559-8.
  8. ^ Reidel, James (2007). 'Vanished Act: The Life and Art of Weldon Kees. University of Nebraska Press. p. 121. ISBN 978-0-8032-5977-5.
  9. ^ Herzstein, Robert E. (2005). Henry R. Luce, Time, and the American Crusade in Asia. Cambridge University Press. pp. 42–43. ISBN 978-0-521-83577-0.
  10. ^ Tanenhaus, Sam (1997). Whittaker Chambers: A Biography. Random House. pp. 175. ISBN 978-0-394-58559-8.
  11. ^ Rathbone, Belinda (1995). Walker Evans: A Biography. Houghton Mifflin. p. 190. ISBN 0-618-05672-6.
  12. ^ Rathbone, Belinda (1995). Walker Evans: A Biography. Houghton Mifflin. p. 199. ISBN 0-618-05672-6.
  13. ^ . Time. November 13, 1950. Archived from the original on June 29, 2010. Retrieved 2008-09-13.
  14. ^ Rathbone, Belinda (1995). Walker Evans: A Biography. Houghton Mifflin. p. 249. ISBN 0-618-05672-6.
  15. ^ "Milestones". Boothbay Register. May 13, 2004.
  16. ^ ""Those Frenchmen Got a Hellova Nerve": European Jazz Discography and the Creation of a New Art Music, 1932-1976". NOVA Southeastern University. 2005. Retrieved 2008-09-13.
  17. ^ "Legacy of jazz author, musician plays on". Portsmouth Herald. 2001. Retrieved 2008-09-13.
  18. ^ Reidel, James (2007). 'Vanished Act: The Life and Art of Weldon Kees. University of Nebraska Press. p. 141. ISBN 978-0-8032-5977-5.

Sources edit

  • Herzstein, Robert E. Henry R. Luce, Time, and the American Crusade in Asia (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2005). ISBN 978-0-521-83577-0
  • Rathbone, Belinda. Walker Evans: A Biography (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Books, 1995). ISBN 978-0-618-05672-9
  • Reidel, James. Vanished Act: The Life and Art of Weldon Kees'. (University of Nebraska Press, 2007). ISBN 978-0-8032-5977-5
  • Tanenhaus, Sam. Whittaker Chambers: A Biography (New York: Random House, 1997). ISBN 978-0-394-58559-8.
  • Down Beat magazine

External links edit

  • 1979 Audio Interview with Verna Hobson by Martin Sherwin Voices of the Manhattan Project
  • Wilder Hobson at Find a Grave

wilder, hobson, february, 1906, 1964, american, writer, editor, time, 1930s, 1940s, fortune, 1940s, harper, bazaar, 1950s, newsweek, 1960s, magazines, also, competent, musician, trombone, author, history, american, jazz, long, time, contributor, saturday, revi. Wilder Hobson February 18 1906 May 1 1964 was an American writer and editor for Time 1930s 1940s Fortune 1940s Harper s Bazaar 1950s and Newsweek 1960s magazines He was also a competent musician trombone author of an history of American jazz and long time contributor to Saturday Review 1940s 1950s 1960s magazine Also he served on the planning committee of the Institute of Jazz Studies 1 Wilder HobsonBornWilder Hobson 1906 02 18 February 18 1906New York City New YorkUnited StatesDiedMay 1 1964 1964 05 01 aged 58 Princeton New JerseyUnited StatesNationalityAmericanEducationYale UniversityOccupation s Writer magazine editorEmployer s Time 1930s 1940s Fortune 1940s Harper s Bazaar 1950s Newsweek 1960s Saturday Review 1940s 1950s 1960s Board member ofPlanning committee of the Institute of Jazz StudiesSpouse s Peggy HobsonVerna Harrison Hobson married 1945 1964 Contents 1 Life 1 1 Early years 1 2 Magazines 1 3 Later life with Verna Hobson 1 4 Music 2 Publications 2 1 Books 2 2 Articles 2 3 Photos 3 Notes 4 Sources 5 External linksLife editEarly years edit Born in 1906 Hobson attended Yale University There he was a roommate of Dwight Macdonald with whom he produced campus humor magazine The Yale Record 2 He was a 1928 member of Scroll and Key 3 Famed American documentary photographer Walker Evans captured Hobson and Agee on a Long Island beach during the summer of 1937 when Evans and Agee were visiting Hobson and his first wife Peggy 4 The Metropolitan Museum of Art houses those photos which are also available online see Images below Magazines edit Hobson wrote for Time in the 1930s and 1940s 5 After covering a coal strike during the 1930s he helped lead unionization at Time and became the first head of Time s Newspaper Guild branch 6 In October 1942 Hobson succeeded the late Calvin Fixx as assistant editor to Whittaker Chambers then editor of Arts amp Entertainment Other writers working for Chambers included novelist Nigel Dennis future New York Times Book Review editor Harvey Breit and poets Howard Moss and Weldon Kees 7 8 Hobson worked amidst the struggle between Soviet sympathizing and anti Communist staffers at Time Chambers and Willi Schlamm led the anti Communist camp and both later joined the founding editorial board of William F Buckley Jr s National Review Theodore H White and Richard Lauterbach led the pro Soviet camp Time founder Henry R Luce came to support the anti Communist camp before the end of World War II in 1945 9 Hobson however rode out the storm and even managed to write two books at Time a historical study called American Jazz Music 1939 see Music below and a novel called All Summer Long 1945 When Chambers received a promotion to senior editor in September 1943 and then joined Time s senior editorial group in December 1932 Hobson succeeded to the Arts amp Entertainment section 10 He hired friend Walker Evans to write reviews first on Film and then on Art 1943 1945 11 In 1946 Hobson moved to editorial board of Fortune 12 where he worked until severe writer s block caused him to resign 5 In November 1950 Hobson became managing editor of Harper s Bazaar then with a circulation of 340 605 replacing Frances MacFadden who retired after 18 years in that position 13 Later Hobson joined Newsweek where he worked for a decade Hobson become a contributor to the now defunct Saturday Review during the late 1940s the 1950s and into the 1960s Later life with Verna Hobson edit Hobson was a heavy alcoholic and died at the age of 58 in 1964 of gastrointestinal hemorrhage in Princeton New Jersey 1 14 Hobson married his second wife Verna Harrison 1923 2004 in the mid 1940s after meeting at Time At first they lived in Manhattan but moved to Princeton Each year they summered on Squirrel Island Maine while playing in the Hennessy Five Star Orchestra Mrs Hobson worked 1954 1966 as secretary to Robert Oppenheimer then director of the Institute for Advanced Study After her husband s death in 1964 she moved to London and worked first for the American Association of University Women and then for the London branch of Robert Matthew Johnson Marshall architects In 1976 she returned to America and settled in New Gloucester Maine working for the independent weekly New Gloucester News and also helping to re establish The Squirrel Island Squid In 1998 she became a photographic stringer for The Lewiston Sun In 2001 she moved to New Rochelle New York to live with her son Archie s family Verna Harrison Hobson died on April 13 2004 15 Music edit In 1939 Hobson became the second American to write a major book on jazz American Jazz Music A year earlier colleague Winthrop Sargeant a staff writer at Life had published Jazz Hot and Hybrid Sargeant believed that the swing in jazz derived from complex African multi rhythms adapted to relatively simple Western music Hobson and Sargeant both amateur though well informed jazz enthusiasts believed that jazz came from New Orleans bordellos whereas in the 1930s European scholars like Robert Goffin of Belgium and Hugues Panassie of France had already ascribed correctly that jazz was a vernacular based art 16 Wilder s close ancestors were Maine Downeasters and he played summers on Squirrel Island in Southport with the Hennessy Five Star Orchestra which slide trombonist Wilder joined in 1921 at age 15 Wilder s second wife Verna later became a tuba player Family members still return where as of 2001 the Hennessy band was still alive and well Daughter Eliza Hobson became a jazz disc jockey and broadcast journalist as well as playing piano and guitar 17 A biography of Time colleague Weldon Kees includes a reminiscence of Kees on piano and Hobson on trombone in the Greenwich Village home of James Agee s sister 18 Publications editBooks edit American Jazz Music NY W W Norton 1939 republished in 1941 and 1976 All Summer Long New York Duell Sloan amp Pearce 1945 review in Time Articles edit Hobson on Jazz Time April 10 1939 Clarinetist s Progress Time April 17 1939 An Album of Chinese Paintings Life October 11 1943 7 pp The Business Suit A short and possibly tactless essay on the costuming of American enterprise Fortune July 1948 illustrated by Bernarda Bryson The Gospel Truth Down Beat May 30 1968 vol 35 p 19 posthumous Photos edit Metropolitan Museum of Art photo of Wilder Hobson by Walker Evans in 1937 one of 30 in collection Portsmouth Herald Wilder Hobson as part of the Hennessy Five Star Orchestra on Squirrel Island in Booth Bay Harbor MaineNotes edit a b Milestones Time June 5 1964 Archived from the original on May 14 2009 Osborn Robert C 1982 Osborn on Osborn New York Ticknor amp Fields p 44 Slaves for Sale Time May 4 1931 Archived from the original on September 15 2008 Retrieved 2008 09 13 Rathbone Belinda 1995 Walker Evans A Biography Houghton Mifflin p 150 ISBN 0 618 05672 6 a b Rathbone Belinda 1995 Walker Evans A Biography Houghton Mifflin p 144 ISBN 0 618 05672 6 Vanderlan Robert 2008 Telling the Truth in the Headquarters of Lying Intellectuals Writing for Fortune Magazine in the 1930s Reconstruction Studies in Contemporary Culture ISSN 1547 4348 Retrieved 2008 09 13 Tanenhaus Sam 1997 Whittaker Chambers A Biography Random House pp 174 175 ISBN 978 0 394 58559 8 Reidel James 2007 Vanished Act The Life and Art of Weldon Kees University of Nebraska Press p 121 ISBN 978 0 8032 5977 5 Herzstein Robert E 2005 Henry R Luce Time and the American Crusade in Asia Cambridge University Press pp 42 43 ISBN 978 0 521 83577 0 Tanenhaus Sam 1997 Whittaker Chambers A Biography Random House pp 175 ISBN 978 0 394 58559 8 Rathbone Belinda 1995 Walker Evans A Biography Houghton Mifflin p 190 ISBN 0 618 05672 6 Rathbone Belinda 1995 Walker Evans A Biography Houghton Mifflin p 199 ISBN 0 618 05672 6 For the Carriage Trade Time November 13 1950 Archived from the original on June 29 2010 Retrieved 2008 09 13 Rathbone Belinda 1995 Walker Evans A Biography Houghton Mifflin p 249 ISBN 0 618 05672 6 Milestones Boothbay Register May 13 2004 Those Frenchmen Got a Hellova Nerve European Jazz Discography and the Creation of a New Art Music 1932 1976 NOVA Southeastern University 2005 Retrieved 2008 09 13 Legacy of jazz author musician plays on Portsmouth Herald 2001 Retrieved 2008 09 13 Reidel James 2007 Vanished Act The Life and Art of Weldon Kees University of Nebraska Press p 141 ISBN 978 0 8032 5977 5 Sources editHerzstein Robert E Henry R Luce Time and the American Crusade in Asia New York Cambridge University Press 2005 ISBN 978 0 521 83577 0 Rathbone Belinda Walker Evans A Biography Boston Houghton Mifflin Books 1995 ISBN 978 0 618 05672 9 Reidel James Vanished Act The Life and Art of Weldon Kees University of Nebraska Press 2007 ISBN 978 0 8032 5977 5 Tanenhaus Sam Whittaker Chambers A Biography New York Random House 1997 ISBN 978 0 394 58559 8 Down Beat magazineExternal links edit1979 Audio Interview with Verna Hobson by Martin Sherwin Voices of the Manhattan Project Wilder Hobson at Find a Grave Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wilder Hobson amp oldid 1113541047, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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