Emil Hurja
Emil Edward Hurja (22 January 1892, in Crystal Falls, Michigan - 30 May 1953, in Washington) was an American politician.[1] He founded a newspaper called "Breckenridge" in a Texas oil town, and is known to have bummed his way to Seattle in the hayrack of a cattle car from Michigan.[2] Hurja was 6'1" and weighed 218 pounds. He married a blonde girl named Gudrun whose father was a miner in the Yukon.
Hurja was a pioneer of political opinion polling, and an important person during Franklin D. Roosevelt's presidency in respect of social and economic reforms. He was a son of Finnish immigrants.[3]
Hurja appeared on the cover of Time Magazine in March 1936.[4] He is buried in Arlington National Cemetery.[3]
Sources
- ↑ Hurja, Sir Emil (1892–1953) Collection
- ↑ Fortune, April, 1935
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Emil Hurja
- ↑ Time Magazine cover
Time Magazine story
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