Lucius Beebe

Lucius Morris Beebe

Lucius Beebe (r), with Charles Clegg at their home office while publishing the Territorial Enterprise newspaper, Virginia City, Nevada.
Born (1902-12-09)December 9, 1902
Wakefield, Massachusetts, U.S.
Died February 4, 1966(1966-02-04) (aged 63)
San Francisco, California, U.S.
Residence Boston; New York City; San Francisco; Virginia City, Nevada
Education Harvard University, B.A. 1926
Yale University
Occupation Author, Journalist, Columnist, Photographer, Gourmand
Employer New York Herald Tribune
San Francisco Examiner
Boston Telegram
Boston Evening Transcript
Territorial Enterprise
Gourmet
The New Yorker
Playboy
Known for Railroad history and documenting café society
Partner(s) Jerome Zerbe, Charles Clegg

Lucius Morris Beebe (December 9, 1902 – February 4, 1966) was an American author, gourmand, photographer, railroad historian, journalist, and syndicated columnist.

Early life and education

Beebe was born in Wakefield, Massachusetts, to a prominent Boston family.[1] Beebe attended both Harvard University and Yale University, where he contributed to campus humor magazine The Yale Record.[2] During his tenure at boarding school and university, Beebe was known for his numerous pranks. One of his more outrageous stunts included an attempt at festooning J. P. Morgan's yacht Corsair III with toilet paper from a chartered airplane.[3] His pranks were not without consequence and he proudly noted that he had the sole distinction of having been expelled from both Harvard and Yale, at the insistence, respectively, of the president and dean of each.[4] Beebe earned his undergraduate degree from Harvard in 1926, only to be expelled during graduate school.

Journalist

During and immediately after obtaining his degree from Harvard, Beebe published several books of poetry, but eventually found his true calling in journalism. He worked as a journalist for the New York Herald Tribune, the San Francisco Examiner, the Boston Telegram, and the Boston Evening Transcript and was a contributing writer to many magazines such as Gourmet, The New Yorker, Town and Country, Holiday, American Heritage, and Playboy. Beebe re-launched Nevada's first newspaper, the Territorial Enterprise, in 1952.

Beebe wrote a syndicated column for the New York Herald Tribune from the 1930s through 1944 called This New York. The column chronicled the doings of fashionable society at such storied restaurants and nightclubs as El Morocco, the 21 Club, the Stork Club, and The Colony. Mr. Beebe is credited with popularizing the term "cafe society" which was used to describe the people mentioned in his column.

In 1950, Beebe and his long-time friend and partner, photographer Charles Clegg, moved to Virginia City, Nevada, where they purchased and restored the Piper family home and later purchased the dormant Territorial Enterprise newspaper. The newspaper was relaunched in 1952 and by 1954 had achieved the highest circulation in the West for a weekly newspaper. He and Clegg co-wrote the "That Was the West" series of historical essays for the newspaper.

In 1960 Beebe began work with the San Francisco Chronicle where he wrote a syndicated column, This Wild West.[5] During the six years that he wrote the column, Beebe covered such topics as economics, politics, journalism, religion, history, morals, justice, finance, and travel.[5]

Gourmand

Beebe was a noted gourmand. He had his own column "Along the Boulevard," in Gourmet, and wrote extensively for Holiday and Playboy about restaurants and dining experiences around the world. Some of the restaurants he covered include The Colony, The Stork Club,[6] The Pump Room, the 21 Club, Simpson's-in-the-Strand, and Chasen's. A noted wine aficionado, he was a member of the Confrérie des Chevaliers du Tastevin.

Author

In addition to his work as a journalist, Beebe wrote over 35 books. His books dealt primarily with railroading and café society. He was the first writer to use a painting by Howard L. Fogg, noted railroad artist, on the cover of a book.[7] Many of his railroad books were written with his longtime companion Charles Clegg.

Beebe was inducted into the Nevada Writers Hall of Fame in 1992.

Railroad history

Along with Clegg, Beebe owned two private railcars, the Gold Coast and The Virginia City. The Gold Coast, Georgia Northern / Central of Georgia No. 100, was built in 1905 and is now at the California State Railroad Museum. After Beebe and Clegg purchased The Virginia City they had it refurbished and redecorated by famed Hollywood set designer Robert T. Hanley in a style known as Venetian Renaissance Baroque. Beebe in the Virginia City The Virginia City has been restored and currently operates as an excursion car.[8] Beebe and Clegg wrote about and photographed the Virginia & Truckee Railroad and worked unsuccessfully with other railroad fans to preserve it.[9] Their fame was such that they were caricatured in "Fiddletown & Copperopolis," by Carl Fallberg.[10]

Ship travel

Beebe was also a noted partisan of the Cunard Line and passenger liner travel in general. He wrote several articles about trans-Atlantic passage on Cunard ships during the "Golden Era" of the 20's, 30's and 40's.

Sartorial splendor

A noted boulevardier, Beebe had an impressive and baroque wardrobe. Beebe's clothing included 40 suits, at least two mink-lined overcoats, numerous top hats and bowlers, a collection of doeskin gloves, walking sticks and a substantial gold nugget watch chain.[11] Columnist Walter Winchell referred to Beebe and his wardrobe as "Luscious Lucius."[11] Beebe's sartorial splendor was recognized when he appeared in full formal day attire on the cover of Life over the title of "Lucius Beebe Sets a Style."[12]

Many of Beebe's articles and columns addressed men's traditional fashion. He was especially fond of English bespoke tailoring and shoes and wrote glowing articles about noted court tailor Henry Poole and Company and noted bootmaker John Lobb, whom he patronized on a regular basis. He also liked ties, particularly from Charvet in Paris,[13] men's hats and wrote of the history of the bowler hat.[14]

Personal life

In 1940, Beebe met Charles Clegg while both were houseguests at the Washington, D.C., home of Evalyn Walsh McLean. The two soon developed a personal and professional relationship that continued for the rest of Beebe's life. By the standards of the era, the romantic relationship Beebe and Clegg shared was relatively open and well-known.[15] Previously, Beebe had been involved with society photographer Jerome Zerbe.

The pair initially lived in New York City, where both men were prominent in café society circles. Eventually tiring of that social life, the two moved in 1950 to Virginia City, Nevada, a tiny community that had once been a fabled mining boomtown.[16] There, they reactivated and began publishing the Territorial Enterprise, a fabled 19th century newspaper that had once been the employer of Mark Twain. Beebe and Clegg shared a renovated mansion in the town, traveled extensively, and remained prominent in social circles.

Beebe was a community activist while living in Nevada. He was appointed by Nevada's governor to be a member of the Nevada State Centennial Committee (1958) and was Chairman of the Silver Centennial Monument Committee, groups that planned events honoring Nevada's and Virginia City's history. Through their efforts, the federal government commissioned a commemorative stamp in recognition of the discovery of the Comstock Lode in the Virginia City region.

Clegg and Beebe sold the Territorial Enterprise in 1961 and purchased a home in suburban San Francisco. They continued the writing, photography, and travel that had marked their lives until Beebe's death. Beebe died at the age of 63 of a sudden heart attack at his winter home in Hillsborough, California (near San Francisco) on Friday, February 4, 1966. A memorial service was held three days later, on Monday, February 7, at 11:00 a.m. at Emmanuel Church on Newbury Street in Boston. His ashes, reportedly along with those of two of his dogs, were returned to Massachusetts and are buried in Lakeside Cemetery on North Avenue in his hometown of Wakefield, in one of the Beebe family plots, at the extreme north end of the cemetery.

Clegg committed suicide in 1979, at the same age that Beebe had reached when he died.

Bibliography

References

  1. Beebe Estate
  2. "Lucius Beebe Will Edit the Crimson Bookshelf". The Harvard Crimson. March 21, 1925.
  3. "Review of Snoot if You Must". TIME Magazine. November 29, 1943.
  4. The Lucius Beebe Reader, p. 7.
  5. 1 2 The Provacative Pen of Lucius Beebe, Esq., p. vii.
  6. Kamp, David The United States of Arugula, New York: Broadway Books, 2006.
  7. Beebe, Lucius. Mixed Train Daily. (1947)(New York: E. P. Dutton & Co.).
  8. "VC History". Retrieved 2007-07-16.
  9. Wurm, Ted and Demoro, Harre, "The Silver Short Line: A History of the Virginia & Truckee Railroad" (1983, Trans-Anglo Books) (ISBN 0-87046-064-1).
  10. The first cartoon in the Summer section shows them riding on the Beebe & Clegg Special. Beebe is decked out in spats and top hat while Clegg is in what appears to be a lovely silk bathrobe. Fallberg, Carl, "Fiddletown & Copperopolis," (1985, Heimburger House). ISBN 0-911581-04-9.
  11. 1 2 Emrich, D. "Biographical Sketch" in The Lucius Beebe Reader, p. 391.
  12. "Lucius Beebe Sets a Style". Life Magazine: cover. January 16, 1939. Retrieved 2009-11-15.
  13. The Lucius Beebe Reader , p. 214
  14. "The Bowler" in The Lucius Beebe Reader, p. 278.
  15. Reevy, Tony, and Dan Cupper. "Mixed Legacy." Railroad History 193 (Fall-Winter 2005), 28–39.
  16. "Piper-Beebe House". National Park Servicet. Retrieved October 4, 2012.

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