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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsAlan Brinkley, Leading Historian of 20th-Century America, Dies at 70
Alan Brinkley in 2003 in his office at Columbia University, where he had taught for more than two decades.
https://www.nytimes.com/2019/06/17/obituaries/alan-brinkley-leading-historian-of-20th-century-america-dies-at-70.html
Alan Brinkley, one of the pre-eminent historians of his generation, with a specialty in 20th-century American political history, died on Sunday night at his home in Manhattan. He was 70.
The cause was complications of frontotemporal dementia, a neurological disorder, his daughter, Elly Brinkley, said.
Mr. Brinkleys work spanned the full spectrum of the last centurys seminal events and influential characters, including the Great Depression and World War II, Franklin D. Roosevelt and John F. Kennedy.
His Voices of Protest: Huey Long, Father Coughlin, and the Great Depression (1983) won the National Book Award. And his high school and college history textbooks American History and The Unfinished Nation were best sellers and frequently updated.
For the 20th century, Alan set the agenda for most political historians, especially about the New Deal, Michael Kazin, a history professor at Georgetown University and co-editor of Dissent magazine, said in a telephone interview.
But his interests ranged widely, and he was devoted to teaching. He received teaching awards at both Harvard and Columbia and held the rare distinction for an American historian of teaching at both Oxford and Cambridge in England.
Eric Foner, a fellow historian at Columbia, wrote in a foreword to Alan Brinkley: A Life in History (2019), a collection of essays written in tribute, that the central themes of Mr. Brinkleys scholarship were the strengths, limits and vulnerabilities of the 20th-century American liberal tradition; the challenges to it, both internal and external; the connections between popular movements and partisan politics, as well as the New Deals legacies.
Mr. Brinkley grew up in Washington, a son of David Brinkley, the longtime NBC News anchor, who died in 2003. His brother Joel was a reporter and editor for The New York Times and died in 2014; his brother John is a writer at Forbes.
Although journalism was the family business, Alan was less comfortable in that world than his brothers were and toyed with alternatives. After graduating from Princeton, he applied to Harvard Law School and was accepted, but his fathers loathing of lawyers intimidated him and he abandoned that plan.
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Alan Brinkley, Leading Historian of 20th-Century America, Dies at 70 (Original Post)
Dennis Donovan
Jun 2019
OP
Dennis Donovan
(18,770 posts)1. A couple of fun facts about Brinkley (from the same article)
Alan Brinkley was born on June 2, 1949, in Washington. His mother was Ann (Fischer) Brinkley. He was born in the same hospital room on the same day as Frank Rich, the future New York Times chief theater critic and opinion columnist, now a television producer and writer for New York magazine.
Their mothers were good friends, both part of a relatively small enclave of Jewish families in Chevy Chase, Md. The boys remained close friends. Together they watched the first installment of The Huntley-Brinkley Report, the nightly news program co-anchored by David Brinkley and Chet Huntley, from the Brinkleys living room couch in 1956.
<snip>
Mr. Brinkley, who was then in his late 30s, was apparently deemed by senior faculty members too young to deserve tenure, Jonathan Alter, a journalist and former student of his at Harvard, wrote in the tribute book.
And rumor had it, Mr. Alter added of those who denied him tenure, that his popularity including occasional television appearances rendered him suspiciously unrigorous in their jealous eyes.
</snip>
Their mothers were good friends, both part of a relatively small enclave of Jewish families in Chevy Chase, Md. The boys remained close friends. Together they watched the first installment of The Huntley-Brinkley Report, the nightly news program co-anchored by David Brinkley and Chet Huntley, from the Brinkleys living room couch in 1956.
<snip>
Mr. Brinkley, who was then in his late 30s, was apparently deemed by senior faculty members too young to deserve tenure, Jonathan Alter, a journalist and former student of his at Harvard, wrote in the tribute book.
And rumor had it, Mr. Alter added of those who denied him tenure, that his popularity including occasional television appearances rendered him suspiciously unrigorous in their jealous eyes.
</snip>