| Franklin Pierce Adams |
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| 1881 births | |
| adams, franklin pierce | |
| 1960 deaths | |
| american columnists | |
| american humorists | |
| american journalists | |
| members of the american academy of arts and letters | |
| people from chicago | |
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Born in Chicago, Illinois , he was the son of Moses and Clara (Schlossberg) Adams. He graduated from the Armour Scientific Academy in 1889 and attended the University Of Michigan for one year. He first worked for the '' Chicago Journal '' in 1903 but soon moved to the '' New York Evening Mail '', where he worked from 1904 to 1913 and began the famed column which would later be known as "The Conning Tower". In 1913 , he moved his column to the '' New York Tribune '', where it would take "The Conning Tower" name, staying there until 1921 . During his time on the Evening Mail he wrote what remains his best known work, '' Baseball's Sad Lexicon '', a tribute to the Chicago Cubs Double Play combination of " Tinker and Evers and Chance ." During World War I , Adams was in the U.S. Army , working on the '' Stars And Stripes '', where he would work with Harold Ross , Alexander Woollcott , and other literary lights of the 1920s . After the war, Adams returned to New York. He went to the '' New York World '', in 1921 , writing there until that paper closed in 1931 . He returned to his old paper, renamed the '' New York Herald Tribune '', staying until 1937 when he went to the'' New York Post ''. He ended his column in September 1941 . During its long run, "The Conning Tower" publicized the work of such writers as Edna St. Vincent Millay , Dorothy Parker , George S. Kaufman , Moss Hart , Edna Ferber , and Deems Taylor . From 1938 , he was a panelist on the radio quiz show '' Information, Please '' having written a trivia book with Harry Hansen , ''Answer This One'' ( 1927 ). He also was a translator of Horace and other classical authors. He died in New York City . QUOTE
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