Lewis Barrett: Difference between revisions

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On [[June 27]], [[1907]] she married widower [[Edward Barrett]] (1866-1922), a former city editor for the ''Augusta Chronicle'' who had purchased [[Birmingham]]'s ''[[Daily State Herald]]'' from [[John Rountree]] in [[1897]] and revived the paper's earlier "Age-Herald" name. The couple resided at 3603 [[Cliff Road]]. Their son, [[Edward Barrett Jr]] (1910-1989) later became dean of the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University. They also had a daughter, Kitty.
On [[June 27]], [[1907]] she married widower [[Edward Barrett]] (1866-1922), a former city editor for the ''Augusta Chronicle'' who had purchased [[Birmingham]]'s ''[[Daily State Herald]]'' from [[John Rountree]] in [[1897]] and revived the paper's earlier "Age-Herald" name. The couple resided at 3603 [[Cliff Road]]. Their son, [[Edward Barrett Jr]] (1910-1989) later became dean of the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University. They also had a daughter, Kitty.


Lewis Mayer assisted Edward with some of his business duties, and she took over responsibility for managing and publishing the ''Age-Herald'' at his death in June [[1922]]. The transition made her, according to ''Editor and Publisher'', "America's first [female] directing head of a metropolitan newspaper." She sold the newspaper to ''Mobile Register'' and ''Mobile News-Item'' publisher [[Frederick Thompson]] with a few months, and married hotel executive [[Robert Mayer]] that November.
Lewis Mayer assisted Edward with some of his business duties, and she took over responsibility for managing and publishing the ''Age-Herald'' at his death in July [[1922]]. The transition made her, according to ''Editor and Publisher'', "America's first [female] directing head of a metropolitan newspaper." She sold the newspaper to ''Mobile Register'' and ''Mobile News-Item'' publisher [[Frederick Thompson]] with a few months, and married hotel executive [[Robert Mayer]] that November.


==References==
==References==

Revision as of 12:29, 2 December 2017

Lewis Mayer

Lewis Butt Barrett (born Lewis Robertson Butt in 1879; died 1947 as Lewis Butt Mayer in Birmingham) was briefly the owner and publisher of the Birmingham Age-Herald.

Lewis was the daughter of John Decatur Butt and the former Catherine Joyner Boggs of Augusta, Georgia. She married George Alford Cunningham in 1898 and had one son with him.

On June 27, 1907 she married widower Edward Barrett (1866-1922), a former city editor for the Augusta Chronicle who had purchased Birmingham's Daily State Herald from John Rountree in 1897 and revived the paper's earlier "Age-Herald" name. The couple resided at 3603 Cliff Road. Their son, Edward Barrett Jr (1910-1989) later became dean of the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University. They also had a daughter, Kitty.

Lewis Mayer assisted Edward with some of his business duties, and she took over responsibility for managing and publishing the Age-Herald at his death in July 1922. The transition made her, according to Editor and Publisher, "America's first [female] directing head of a metropolitan newspaper." She sold the newspaper to Mobile Register and Mobile News-Item publisher Frederick Thompson with a few months, and married hotel executive Robert Mayer that November.

References

  • "They Are All in The Day's News" (July 29, 1922) Editor & Publisher, Vol. 55, No. 9, p. 9
  • "Widow of late publisher weds owner of string of hotels." (November 25, 1922) The Fourth Estate