Garet Garrett

Garet Garrett (1878-1954) was an American journalist and author who was noted for his critiques of the New Deal and U.S. involvement in the Second World War.

Early years

Garet Garrett was born in 1878 in Illinois. By 1903, he had become a well known writer for the old New York Sun. In 1911, he wrote a fairly sucessful book, Where the Money Grows and Anatomy of the Bubble. In 1916, at the age of 38, Garrett became the executive editor of the New York Tribune, after having worked as a financial writer for The New York Times, the Evening Post, and The Wall Street Journal. From 1920 to 1933, his primary focus was on writing books. Between 1920 and 1932 Garrett wrote and had eight books including The American Omen in 1928 and A Bubble That Broke the World in 1932. He also wrote regular columns for several business and financial publications.

Critic of the New Deal and Roosevelt's foriegn policy

After the election of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Garrett went on to become one of the most vocal critics of the New Deal and what he saw as its socialist measures. He wrote a series of his columns in the Saturday Evening Post between 1933 to 1940, which were later compiled into a collection of his essays titled Salvos Against the New Deal: Selections from the Saturday Evening Post: 1933-1940, published in 2002. To their credit, the Saturday Evening Post kept Mr. Garrett on as a columnist despite the fact that at one point it became financially perilous for them to do so. In 1940 the management of the Saturday Evening Post made Garrett editorial-writer-in-chief after the passing of George Horace Lorimer. Mr. Garrett was highly critical of the Roosevelt Administration's moves toward intervention in the war then underway in Europe; he covered this topic a series of editorials which were collected under the title Defend America First: The Antiwar Editorials of the Saturday Evening Post, 1939-1942 which was published in 2003.

Later years

In 1951, Garrett wrote The People's Pottage (later republished as Ex America) and in 1952, The Burden of Empire. Through these works, he questioned the aftermath of the Roosevelt administration and its impact on American society. Garet Garrett died in 1954 at the age of 76.

Works

  • Where the Money Grows and Anatomy of the Bubble (1911)
  • The American Omen (1928)
  • A Bubble That Broke the World (1932)
  • Rise of Empire (1941)
  • On the Wings of Debt (Economic Sentinel) (1943)
  • The Revolution Was (1944)
  • Garet Garrett's: The People's Pottage(1951)
  • Burden of Empire: The Legacy of the Roosevelt-Truman Revolution (1952)
  • The Wild Wheel (1952)
  • The American Story (1955)
  • Salvos Against the New Deal: Selections from the Saturday Evening Post: 1933-1940, edited by Bruce Ramsey (2002)
  • Defend America First: The Antiwar Editorials of the Saturday Evening Post, 1939-1942, edited by Bruce Ramsey (2003)

References

  • Profit's Prophet: Garet Garrett (1878-1954), by Carl Ryant (1989)

External link

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
tipa
100 girls
oklahoma transportation authority
lucian yahoo dragoman
hobbs end
time egg
rich fields
the morning after girls
michael cohl
guy savoie
william v, duke of bavaria
china northern flight 6136
arima kinen
faj de baixo
esquire (disambiguation)
charles e. smith
charles smith
monster thickburger
broder singer
res extensa
phoenix games
false brinelling
gaming store
hershel w. gober
area code 701
cecil g. murgatroyd
bridgeton and millville traction company
wyoming locations by per capita income
career opportunities
flyweight
prince albert catholic school division
millville traction company
politics of texas
crdit commercial de france
rawk hawk
jon miller
lake norman
prince albert alternative education programs
berl broder
goro naya
discrete laplace operator
checkers (disambiguation)
need your love (album)
kumi sakuma