Roger Tubby

Roger Tubby
9th White House Press Secretary
In office
September 18, 1952  January 20, 1953
President Harry S. Truman
Preceded by Joseph Short
Succeeded by James Hagerty
Personal details
Born Roger Wellington Tubby
December 30, 1910
Greenwich, Connecticut, USA
Died January 14, 1991 (aged 80)

Roger Wellington Tubby (December 30, 1910 – January 14, 1991) was White House Press Secretary from 1952 to 1953 and served under President Harry Truman.

Career

Roger Tubby born in Greenwich, Connecticut, in 1910 and went to Yale University. He worked in Bennington, Vermont, for the Bennington Banner;[1] Tubby was a reporter and then editor. His main achievement there was getting town manager government for Bennington.

During the war, he was in the Board of Economic Warfare and when that became the Foreign Economic Administration, a combination of BEW and Lend-Lease, he became assistant to the administrator, Leo Crowley. Subsequently, he went to the Department of Commerce as Director of Information of the Office of International Trade; and after that to the Department of State in 1946 with Mike [Michael J.] McDermott, who was then the chief spokesman of the Department of State and had been for a great many years before.

In 1950, he went to the White House as the assistant White House press secretary under Joseph Short. In 1953, John Foster Dulles asked him to come back to the State Department and be his Press Chief. Subsequently, in partnership with Jim [James] Loeb bought the Adirondack Daily Enterprise, the Adirondack Park's only daily newspaper based in Saranac Lake, where he was co-publisher-editor, jack-of-all-trades, and became president of the Adirondack Park Association, an association that covers all the communities of about a fifth of New York State, in the northeast corner; and advisor to the Governor on natural resources and conservation. For a short time, he worked with Averell Harriman when he was Governor.

In 1956, he went out to campaign with the Adlai Stevenson staff, and in 1960 joined John F. Kennedy at the Los Angeles convention and stayed with the Kennedy team through the election, serving as Director of Press Relations for the Democratic National Committee.

He later became Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs; and for the last seven and one half years he was Representative of the United States to the European Office of the United Nations in Geneva, 1962–69. Tubby was Dean of the School of Professional Studies, Foreign Service Institute, Department of State.

Notes

  1. "Bennington Banner". Bennington Banner. Retrieved 2011-08-14.

External links

Political offices
Preceded by
Joseph Short
White House Press Secretary
1952 1953
Succeeded by
James C. Hagerty
Government offices
Preceded by
Andrew H. Berding
Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs
March 10, 1961 April 1, 1962
Succeeded by
Robert Manning