Meloney, Marie Mattingly

Meloney, Marie Mattingly

▪ American journalist and editor
née  Marie Mattingly  
born Dec. 8, 1878, Bardstown, Ky., U.S.
died June 23, 1943, Pawling, N.Y.

      American journalist and editor whose active interest in public service and the open exchange of ideas and information marked her editorial tenure at several popular periodicals.

      Marie Mattingly was educated privately and by her mother, who at various times edited the Kentucky Magazine and taught at Washington (D.C.) College for Girls. Mattingly's early ambition to be a professional pianist was ended by a disabling accident, and in 1895 she took a job as a reporter for the Washington Post. A series of sketches of various political personages won her the job of chief of the Washington bureau of the Denver (Colorado) Post in 1897, when she was only 18 years old. In November 1899 she scored a journalistic coup when she discovered, quite by chance, the unannounced wedding of Admiral George Dewey (Dewey, George).

      In 1900 Mattingly moved to New York City, where she worked briefly for the World, the Herald, and the Sun (1901–04), to which she contributed a column called “Men About Town.” After her marriage in June 1904 to William B. Meloney, an editor on the Sun, she retired to domestic life for a decade. In 1914 she became editor of the Woman's Magazine, a post she held until the magazine failed in 1920. From 1917 to 1920 she was also associate editor of Everybody's, and from 1921 to 1926 she edited the Delineator.

      In her position as a women's magazine editor, Meloney promoted various campaigns, including relief for postwar Europe, for which she was decorated by the governments of France and Belgium, and cancer research, toward which she raised $100,000 to purchase a gram of radium for Marie Curie (Curie, Marie) in 1921. In 1926 she became editor of the Sunday magazine of the New York Herald Tribune, and in 1930 she organized the first of what became an annual Herald Tribune Forum on Current Problems, a prestigious event that soon drew statesmen from around the world to its platform. In 1935 she became editor of This Week, an experimental Sunday magazine published by the Herald Tribune and distributed with it and a number of other newspapers around the country; it eventually reached a circulation of six million. She resigned as editor in 1942.

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