George C. Lodge

George Cabot Lodge II

Lodge and family
Born George Cabot Lodge II
(1927-07-07) July 7, 1927
Education Harvard College (1950)
Occupation Professor, Harvard Business School, Politician
Spouse(s) Nancy Kunhardt (m. 1949; d. 1997)
Susan Alexander Powers (m. 1997)
Children 6
3 stepchildren by Powers
Parent(s) Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr.
Emily Esther Sears

George Cabot Lodge II (born July 7, 1927) is an American professor and former politician.

Early life

Lodge was born on born July 7, 1927.[1] His father was Henry Cabot Lodge, Jr., a United States Senate from Massachusetts, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations and South Vietnam, and the Republican nominee for Vice President in 1960.[2] After finishing high school at Groton School,[3] Lodge served in the U.S. Navy from 1945-1946 and then entered Harvard College, graduating cum laude in 1950.[4][5] While at Harvard he was a member of the Krokodiloes.[6]

Career

Lodge was a political reporter and columnist at the Boston Herald prior to entering federal civil service.[4] In 1954, Lodge became Director of Information at the U.S. Department of Labor. In 1958, he was appointed Assistant Secretary of Labor for International Affairs by Dwight D. Eisenhower,[7] and was reappointed by John F. Kennedy in 1961. He was the United States Delegate to the International Labour Organization and was elected chairman of the organization's Governing Body in 1960.[4]

He later entered politics and was the 1962 U.S. Senate candidate from Massachusetts against Ted Kennedy, marking the third time in history that the Lodges faced the Kennedys in a Massachusetts election. Previously, Lodge's father was the incumbent 1952 U.S. Senate candidate from Massachusetts against John F. Kennedy. Additionally, Lodge's patrilineal great-grandfather Henry Cabot Lodge was reelected for the same Senate seat as the incumbent 1916 U.S. Senate candidate against the Kennedy brothers' maternal grandfather, John F. Fitzgerald.

Personal life

Lodge met his first wife, the late Nancy Kunhardt, daughter of author Dorothy Kunhardt, while she was studying at the Harvard Graduate School of Education and they married in 1949.[5][8] They have three sons and three daughters. One of their daughters, also named Nancy, is a published children's author and professor of art history.[9]

Archives and records

Ancestry

References

Bibliography

Incomplete

Books
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