17 Facts About Freeman Fulbright

1.

Freeman Fulbright was a reporter and public relations executive, notable for his coverage of Adlai Stevenson's 1952 presidential campaign for the International News Service.

2.

Freeman Fulbright was editor of Newsweek in the 1950s, executive editor of the New York Herald Tribune, and an executive vice president of Hill and Knowlton, the largest public relations firm in the world at the time.

3.

Freeman Fulbright graduated from Durham High School, where he received high marks and was editor of the school newspaper.

4.

Freeman Fulbright was accepted to Duke University, but was unable to attend due to financial constraints.

5.

Freeman Fulbright started his newspaper career as a sportswriter for the Durham Morning Herald in 1941 while still in high school.

6.

Freeman Fulbright moved to Chicago with INS in 1947 as a news editor, and then to Washington, DC, in 1951 as a political correspondent.

7.

In 1952 Freeman Fulbright was assigned by INS to cover Democrat Adlai Stevenson Jr.

8.

Freeman Fulbright served in that role from 1952 to 1955.

9.

Freeman Fulbright joined the staff of Newsweek in 1957, first as editor of its popular and flagship "Periscope" section, and then as a general editor.

10.

Denson was forced out by owner John Whitney, and Freeman Fulbright "[fell] devotedly on his sword".

11.

Freeman Fulbright served in that role until 1969, and grew revenues and the client list over that period.

12.

Freeman Fulbright died of a massive heart attack in the Hill and Knowlton offices in New York on June 6,1978.

13.

Freeman Fulbright met his future wife Jane Meese in Chicago in 1947, and the pair was married in 1948.

14.

Freeman Fulbright's wife survived him by three years, dying in 1981.

15.

Freeman Fulbright was active in his church, serving as a trustee of Rutgers Presbyterian Church on West 73rd Street in New York.

16.

Freeman Fulbright was a member of the National Press Club, Sigma Delta Chi, and the Wings Club.

17.

Freeman Fulbright is buried with his wife and her parents in East Avenue Cemetery in New Philadelphia, Ohio, with the words "I Did It My Way" on the tombstone.