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Vermont C Royster




Although his life began and ended in Raleigh, North Carolina , the parts in between took him to the rest of the world. His distinctive names were the result of a family tradition of using the names of states for offspring, begun by his great-grandfather. In addition to his grandfather's unusual name, his great-uncles were named Arkansas Delaware, Wisconsin Illinois, Oregon Minnesota, and Iowa Michigan Royster. These names were so unusual that for many years they were printed in the '' Ripleys Believe It Or Not '' series of books. Royster's father, Wilbur High Royster, owned and operated the Royster Candy Company in Raleigh, which in the early 1900's sold chocolate, peanut brittle, and other candies across the Carolinas and Virginia.

After graduating from the University Of North Carolina At Chapel Hill in 1935 , Royster secured a job as a reporter for the New York City News Bureau, and a year later began his 61-year career with the Wall Street Journal.

His career at the Wall Street Journal was one of steady advancement: reporter, 1936;
Washington correspondent, 1936-40 and 1945-46;
editorial writer and columnist, 1946-48;
associate editor, 1948-51;
senior associate editor, 1951-58;
editor, 1958-71;
contributing editor, columnist, 1971-96;
editor emeritus, 1993-96.

In 1940 Royster joined the United States Navy Reserve . During the Second World War he served as the captain of a US Navy destroyer, the USS ''Jack Miller'', in the Pacific theater of the war. He rose to the rank of Lieutenant Commander in the Navy. The ''Jack Miller'' saw a considerable amount of combat against the Japanese Navy, and survived being caught in two Typhoons . In late August 1945, Royster was among the first group of Americans to see the ruins of the Japanese city of Nagasaki , which had been destroyed by the second Atomic Bomb dropped on Japan. After the war ended Royster resumed his career at the ''Wall Street Journal.''

In 1953 Royster was awarded a Pulitzer Prize For Editorial Writing . He served as president of the American Society Of Newspaper Editors in 1965-66.
He retired as editor of the Wall Street Journal in 1971 and began writing his popular weekly column ''Thinking Things Over'', which he continued until the handicaps of old age forced him to discontinue it in 1986 .
He was awarded a second Pulitzer Prize, in 1984 , for Commentary .

After retirement from the Wall Street Journal, he became the Kenan Professor of Journalism and Public Affairs at the University Of North Carolina At Chapel Hill .

When he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President Ronald Reagan in 1986 , the citation read:
:For over half a century, as a journalist, author, and teacher, Vermont Royster illuminated the political and economic life of our times. His common sense exploded the pretensions of "expert opinion," and his compelling eloquence warned of the evils of society loosed from its moorings in faith. The voice of the American people can be heard in his prose—honest, open, proud, and free.

Other awards he received include Distinguished Service Award, Sigma Delta Chi, 1958; William Allen White Award, University of Kansas, 1971; Gerald Loeb Award for Distinguished Business and Financial Journalism, 1975; Elijah Lovejoy Award 1976; North Carolina Journalism Hall of Fame, 1980.

In 1976 , Royster received the Elijah Parish Lovejoy Award as well as an honorary Doctor Of Laws degree from Colby College .

Several of the editorials he wrote are considered classics: The Desolate Wilderness along with And the Fair Land are now the Wall Street Journal's traditional .

He married Frances Claypoole in 1937 . They had two daughters, Eleanor and Sara. Royster died on July 22, 1996 in Raleigh, North Carolina at the age of 82.


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Papers of Vermont Royster

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Essay by Jennifer Cook