Theodore Joslin

Ted Joslin

Joslin (right) with President Hoover
White House Press Secretary
In office
March 16, 1931  March 4, 1933
President Herbert Hoover
Preceded by George E. Akerson
Succeeded by Stephen Early
White House Appointments Secretary
In office
March 16, 1931  March 4, 1933
President Herbert Hoover
Preceded by George E. Akerson
Succeeded by Marvin H. McIntyre
Personal details
Born Theodore Goldsmith Joslin
(1890-02-28)February 28, 1890
Leominster, Massachusetts, U.S.
Died April 12, 1944(1944-04-12) (aged 54)
Wilmington, Delaware, U.S.
Political party Republican

Theodore Goldsmith "Ted" Joslin (February 28, 1890 – 1944) was press secretary to President Herbert Hoover from 1931 until 1933.

Background

Joslin was born in Leominster, Massachusetts, to Frederick A. and Hanna Hopgood Joslin. After graduating from high school, he took a job with the Boston bureau of the Associated Press (AP), rising from office boy to correspondent. In 1913 he joined the staff of the Boston Evening Transcript. In 1916 the Evening Transcript sent him to its Washington, D.C. bureau, and he became chief correspondent in 1924. From 1916 to 1931 he was also on the staff of World’s Week and contributed to other magazines. He married Rowena A. Hawes in 1913, and had two sons, Richard and Robert.

White House Press Secretary

In March 1931 Joslin was appointed press secretary to President Herbert Hoover, replacing George Akerson, who had taken the blame for the Republican president’s deteriorating relations with the Washington press corps. Joslin held that post until Hoover left office in March 1933. After his White House tenure, he produced Washington reports for the statistician Roger W. Babson, 1933–1936, and served as president of The News-Journal Company of Wilmington, Delaware, 1936-1939 . In 1939, he became director of public relations for the DuPont Company, holding that post until he died in his office of a heart attack.

During his tenure as presidential press secretary, Joslin struggled to improve President Hoover’s public image, an impossible endeavor given Hoover’s distaste for the press and personal publicity, the collapse of the national economy in the Great Depression, and such public relations blunders as setting army troops on the Bonus Marchers in 1932. Joslin admired Hoover, and his diary recorded the president’s conversations and other events inside the administration, as well as during Hoover’s race for reelection, which he lost in a landslide to Franklin D. Roosevelt.

Later life and death

After Hoover left office, Joslin published an expurgated version of the diary as Hoover Off the Record (1934). Much of what he omitted was later published by Timothy Walch and Dwight M. Miller in Herbert Hoover and Franklin D. Roosevelt: A Documentary History (1998). He died in 1944.

See also

Political offices
Preceded by
George E. Akerson
White House Press Secretary
1931–1933
Succeeded by
Stephen Early
White House Appointments Secretary
1931–1933
Succeeded by
Marvin H. McIntyre
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.