Genealogy Richard Remmé, The Hague, Netherlands » Frederick G. (Frederick "Ted" G.) "Ted" Vosburgh (1904-2005)

Persoonlijke gegevens Frederick G. (Frederick "Ted" G.) "Ted" Vosburgh 

Bron 1Bronnen 2, 3, 4

Gezin van Frederick G. (Frederick "Ted" G.) "Ted" Vosburgh

(1) Hij is getrouwd met Doris E. Kennedy.

Zij zijn getrouwd op 2 januari 1929 te Elisabeth, New Jersey, hij was toen 24 jaar oud.Bron 9


Kind(eren):

  1. (Niet openbaar)
  2. Alan F. Vosburgh  1931-1999

Het echtpaar is gescheiden.


(2) Hij is getrouwd met Valerie M. Paterson.

Zij zijn getrouwd in het jaar 1949, hij was toen 44 jaar oud.


Notities over Frederick G. (Frederick "Ted" G.) "Ted" Vosburgh

"I did have a wonderful meeting with [Fred, called] Ted, at the National Geographic.  He and his wife took us to lunch at the Press Club and I gave him the idea for the National  Geography Bee."
Email message from his great-niece, Diane Vosburgh Halvorson, Subject: Re: Vosburgh, Date: 1/2/2011, From: (XXXXX@XXXX.XXX).com
*********
Source Citation: Encyclopedia of Twentieth-Century Journalists. By William H. Taft. New York: Garland Publishing, 1986. (EncTwCJ)
*********
Frederick G. Vosburgh
Scrupulous editor of the 'National Geographic'
Friday, 4 March 2005
Frederick G. Vosburgh worked for The National Geographic Magazine for 37 years, starting as an aide to the assistant editor, and ending as Editor, as well as Vice-President of the National Geographic Society. Despite his advancing years, he kept an interested and increasingly concerned eye on current events; a few days before his 100th birthday, he made it clear to his many loved ones that he would not welcome a congratulatory message from President George W. Bush.

Frederick George ("Ted") Vosburgh, writer and editor: born Johnstown, New York 16 September 1904; staff, The National Geographic Magazine 1933-42, 1945-70, Assistant Editor 1951-57, Associate Editor 1957-67, Editor 1967-70; married 1929 Doris Kennedy (died 1986; one son, and one son deceased; marriage dissolved 1948), 1949 Valerie Paterson (died 1997); died Rockville, Maryland 16 February 2005.

Frederick G. Vosburgh worked for The National Geographic Magazine for 37 years, starting as an aide to the assistant editor, and ending as Editor, as well as Vice-President of the National Geographic Society. Despite his advancing years, he kept an interested and increasingly concerned eye on current events; a few days before his 100th birthday, he made it clear to his many loved ones that he would not welcome a congratulatory message from President George W. Bush.

My father, Frederick George Vosburgh, was born in Johnstown in Upstate New York. His mother was a strict Methodist, his father a salesman whose successful inventions included a rubber mushroom-shaped bicycle-tyre plug. Baby Frederick looked so like a teddy bear to his father that he was dubbed "Ted", a nickname he carried for a century.

At 15, after winning a $5 prize in an essay contest sponsored by American Boy Magazine, he was emboldened to create and edit a high-school paper, The Purple and Gold, after the school's colours. "My contributions were more purple than gold," he wrote later, "but the prize and the paper seduced me forever by enabling me to see my own words in print." He was also the editor of the college paper when he attended Syracuse University.

Soon after graduating, he became a professional newspaperman, spending seven years with the Associated Press, first in New York and then in Washington, DC. The National Geographic Magazine was published in Washington, and in 1933 he applied for a job on its editorial staff. After a series of interview-cum-lunches, he was hired. ("I must have used the right fork," was his explanation.) Two years later his first article, "Wonders of the New Washington", was published. For the next seven years he wrote on such disparate subjects as Yellowstone National Park, new metallic alloys and the 17th-century navigator Henry Hudson.

"Reluctant to sit in civilian job while country fighting fateful war." With these words, my 37-year-old father applied to his magazine soon after the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, requesting military leave of absence. With me, my younger brother and our mother as dependents, he would hardly have been called up, but he was eager to do his part.

He served, from captain to lieutenant-colonel (1942-45), in the Eighth and Ninth Army Air Forces in England and on the Continent soon after D-Day. For his service as an intelligence officer with the air cover for General George Patton's Third Army in the dash across France, the relief of Bastogne and the final push deep into Germany, he was awarded the Air Medal and the Bronze Star. He returned to his home and to the Geographic on 11 September 1945, five days before his 41st birthday.

Although no one else was involved, his marriage to my mother ended in divorce in 1948. The following year he had the good fortune to meet Valerie ("Pat") Paterson, a journalist who was born in England and raised in Canada. The marriage of Ted and Pat was a supremely happy one, lasting until my stepmother's death in 1997.

Robert M. Poole, in his book Explorers House: National Geographic and the world it made (2004), wrote: "Ted Vosburgh was the steady, decent man who scrutinised every headline, paragraph, phrase and semicolon written for the magazine; he made sure that no mistakes or vagaries of expression appeared in the journal."

Realising that a vital restrictive comma had been omitted from an article that had already gone to press, my father had it inserted, to the tune of $30,000. "It had to be done," he wrote to me, "but I did feel like one of those hard-nosed newspapermen in the movies who dash around yelling 'Stop the presses!' "

During his three years as Editor he published articles on such emerging topics as organic farming and computers. In December 1969 the Geographic made a giant leap for publishing; in addition to its 67-page cover story "First Explorers on the Moon - the Incredible Story of Apollo 11", the edition included "Sounds of the Space Age", a vinyl recording celebrating space travel "from Sputnik to Lunar Landing".

In 1970 he left the Geographic having reached the then compulsory retirement age. His final issue featured the magazine's first major article on saving the environment, "Pollution, Threat to Man's Only Home".

After the death of his cherished Pat, he tried to fill the vacuum by writing his autobiography, "The Century As I Saw It", which was completed on his 96th birthday. (Extracts appeared in the Geographic.) He also emulated his father by indulging in a little inventing: infuriated by squirrels stealing food from his beloved feathered friends, he constructed a feeder which took a bird's weight, but which sent a squirrel hurtling ignominiously to the ground. "The squirrel," he used to say, "is just a rat with a press agent."

For three years my father drove patients to hospitals for the Red Cross and for 10 years, until in his nineties, he took pleasure in delivering Meals on Wheels to what he called "old people". Most of these senior citizens were younger than he, but not nearly so young in heart.

Dick Vosburgh

SOURCE:  Obituary published in The Independent; ; found online at http://www.independent.co.uk/news/obituaries/frederick-g-vosburgh-7558 77.html

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Voorouders (en nakomelingen) van Frederick G. Vosburgh

Mary Montanye
1844-1918
John R. Vosburgh
1874-> 1930

Frederick G. Vosburgh
1904-2005

(1) 1929

Doris E. Kennedy
± 1905-1986

(2) 1949

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Bronnen

  1. "http://wc.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?op=GED&db=delamontagne," supplied by Stewart, 10 jan 2016., Gedcom : rootsweb, Descendants of Jean Mousnier de la MONTAGNE (1595-1670), compiled by Lois Stewart Society of Descendants of Johannes de la Montagne [(E-ADDRESS) FOR PRIVATE USE\,]
  2. 1910 U.S. Census, Year: 1910; Census Place: Johnstown Ward 4, Fulton, New Yor k; Roll T624_949; Page: 6B; Enumeration District: 31; Image : 223.
    John R Vosburg 35, head, married 9 years, foreman skin [?] mill; Alice B Vosburg 31, wife, married 9 years, 3 births/2 children living;  Edwin B Vosburg 8, son;  Frederick G Vosburg 5, son.
  3. 1920 U.S. Census, Year: 1920;Census Place: Johnstown Ward 4, Fulton, New York ; Roll T625_1113; Page: 2A; Enumeration District: 32; Image : 790.
    John R Vosburg 45, head, supervisor of workers skin mill;  Alice B Vosburg 41, wife;
    Edwin B Vosburg 17, son;  Fredrick G Vosburg 15, son;  John R Vosburg 8, son;  Elizabeth Vosburg 6, daughter;  all born New York.
  4. 1930 U.S. Census, Year: 1930; Census Place: Queens, Queens, New York; Roll: 1 590; Page: 2B; Enumeration District: 189; Image: 547.0.
    Frederick G Vosburgh 25, head, married at 24, sports writer newspaper;  Doris E Vosburgh 25, wife, married at 24, born New York;  Richard K Vosburgh 9/12, son, born New York
  5. New York Passenger Lists 1820-1957, Records of the U.S. Customs Service, Record Group 36, National Archives, Washington, D.C., Year: 1933; Microfilm Serial: T715; Microfilm Roll: T715_53 59; Line: 24; Page Number: 81.
    Name: Frederick Vosburgh, Birth Date: 16 Sept 1904; Birth Location: Johnstown, New York;  Age: 28 Years 10 Months;  Gender: Male; Address:  2208 38th Street, Washington, D.C., c/o Bureau of Navigation;  Port of Departure: Southampton, England; Port of Arrival: New York, New York;  Arrival Date: 21 Jul 1933; Ship Name: President Roosevelt;
    / online database
  6. Obituary, Newspaper: Watauga Democrat; Publication Date: 4 Mar 2005 ; Publication Place: Boone , NC , USA
    MR. VOSBURGH, FORMER EDITOR OF NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC MAGAZINE WAS UNCLE OF ED VOSBURGH
    Frederick "Ted" Vosburgh, a former editor of National Geographic magazine and vice president of the National Geographic Society, died February 16 in Shady Grove, Maryland. He was 100.  Mr. Vosburgh was an occasional visitor to Blowing Rock, where he visited his nephew, Ed Vosburgh. He was the subject of an interview in The Blowing Rocket a number of years ago.
    He was the magazine's editor for three years, retiring in 1970 after 37 years with the organization. He was known for devotion to scrupulous accuracy. According to an internal history of the magazine, his exactitude and precision caused some colleagues to say he had "an instinct for the capillary." When the July 1964 issue was being printed, Vosburgh, then the associate editor halted the presses because a restrictive comma had been omitted from an article. He promptly inserted the punctuation, but the story of the $30,000 comma often would be quoted as an example of his insistence on accuracy. During his editorship, the magazine comprehensively covered the first moon landing and instituted a series of "traveler's maps."  Despite his trepidation over interjecting the magazine into policy debates (the magazine's job was to "hold up the torch, not to apply it," he said), he consented to the call of younger staff members and published the magazine's first extensive environmental report, "Our Ecological Crisis."
    Vosburgh, who was born in Johnstown, N.Y., received early encouragement by winning $5 for an essay in American Boy magazine. He helped start his high school newspaper and at Syracuse University, he was editor of his college yearbook one year and the college newspaper's editor the next year. He graduated in 1925 and shipped out as a sailor to South American ports. After returning, he worked for a year for the Syracuse Post-Standard.  He spent seven years with The Associated Press in New York and Washington and was introduced to then-New York Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1931. Not fully dressed, Roosevelt greeted two reporters from his berth in a private railroad car. "His polio-wizened legs were plainly visible, with the metal and leather braces that enabled him to stand but not to walk unaided," Vosburgh wrote in a 1997 memo. "Neither newsman even considered reporting this. Such personal details then were off-limits."
    Vosburgh joined National Geographic in 1933. He worked with many of the magazine's famous contributors, including Carl Sandburg, Jacques Cousteau, Jane Goodall, Louis and Richard Leakey, Frank and John Craighead and Roger Tory Peterson.  An avid traveler, he traveled to all seven continents and came within six degrees of the North Pole by air.  A precise speaker with a large and vivid vocabulary, he was inspired to write his memoirs after he told a supermarket cashier of his meeting with Mr. Roosevelt. His unpublished book, "The Century as I Saw It," was excerpted in a National Geographic publication. Even in retirement, Mr. Vosburgh enjoyed dressing well, in collared shirts and ties.
    His marriage to Doris Kennedy Vosburgh ended in divorce. A son from that marriage, Alan F. Vosburgh, died in 1999. His second wife, Valerie "Pat" Paterson Vosburgh, died in 1997.  Survivors include a son from his first marriage, Richard K. Vosburgh of London; a brother John R. Vosburgh of Bethesda; a sister, Elizabeth Peck of Cooperstown, N.Y.; and eleven grandchildren.
    A military funeral is planned at Arlington National Cemetery in Washington D.C. in April. His nephew, Ed Vosburgh and his wife, Tacky, plan to attend the service.
  7. U.S. Veterans Gravesites, ca. 1775-2006, National Cemetery Administration, Cemetery: Arlington National Cemetery, Cemetery Address: C/ O Director Arlington, VA 22211, Buried At: Section 8-Bb Ro w 13 Site 1
    Name: Frederick G Vosburgh, Service Info.: LTC US ARMY, Birth Date: 16 Sep 1904, Death Date: 16 Feb 2005
    / online database
  8. Social Security Death Index, Social Security Administration, Number: 579-48-8319;Issue State: District of Columbia;Issu e Date: 1952-1954.
    Name: Federick G. Vosburgh, Born: 16 Sep 1904, Died: 16 Feb 2005; Last Residence: 22041  Falls Church, Fairfax, Virginia
    / MyFamily.com
  9. Newspaper article, The Morning Herald, Gloversville and Johnstown, New York; J anuary 3, 1929
    F. G. VOSBURGH WEDS MISS DORIS KENNEDY
    Miss Doris E. Kennedy of New York City, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Kennedy of Syracuse, and Frederick G. Vosburgh, son of Mr. and Mrs. John R. Vosburgh.
    501 South' Market Street, this city, were united in marriage yesterday in Elisabeth, New Jersey.
    Mies Kennedy has been engaged in newspaper work and Mr. Vosburgh is a member of the New York staff of The Associated Press. Mr. Vosburgh is a graduate of the
    Johnstown High school and tbe Syracuse University.

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Historische gebeurtenissen

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  • Koningin Wilhelmina (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) was van 1890 tot 1948 vorst van Nederland (ook wel Koninkrijk der Nederlanden genoemd)
  • Van 1 augustus 1901 tot 16 augustus 1905 was er in Nederland het kabinet Kuijper met als eerste minister Dr. A. Kuijper (AR).
  • In het jaar 1904: Bron: Wikipedia
    • Nederland had zo'n 5,4 miljoen inwoners.
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    • 16 juni » Op deze dag speelt het boek Ulysses van James Joyce zich af.
    • 10 augustus » Priesterwijding van Angelo Roncalli in Rome.
    • 31 oktober » Einde van de pogingen van de Japanners om Port Arthur te veroveren in de Russisch-Japanse Oorlog
    • 15 november » Gillette verwerft patent op het veiligheidsscheermes
  • De temperatuur op 2 januari 1929 lag tussen -1.3 °C en 0.7 °C en was gemiddeld -0.3 °C. Er was 4,9 uur zonneschijn (63%). De gemiddelde windsnelheid was 5 Bft (vrij krachtige wind) en kwam overheersend uit het noord-oosten. Bron: KNMI
  • Koningin Wilhelmina (Huis van Oranje-Nassau) was van 1890 tot 1948 vorst van Nederland (ook wel Koninkrijk der Nederlanden genoemd)
  • Van 8 maart 1926 tot 10 augustus 1929 was er in Nederland het kabinet De Geer I met als eerste minister Jonkheer mr. D.J. de Geer (CHU).
  • Van 10 augustus 1929 tot 26 mei 1933 was er in Nederland het kabinet Ruys de Beerenbrouck III met als eerste minister Jonkheer mr. Ch.J.M. Ruys de Beerenbrouck (RKSP).
  • In het jaar 1929: Bron: Wikipedia
    • Nederland had zo'n 7,7 miljoen inwoners.
    • 6 januari » Proclamatie van het koninkrijk van Joegoslavië.
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    • 1 juni » Oprichting van de Nederlandse amateurvoetbalvereniging en latere profvoetbalclub Achilles '29.
    • 7 september » Bekrachtiging van het Protocol van Genève (verbod op chemische wapens).
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  • Van dinsdag 27 mei 2003 tot vrijdag 7 juli 2006 was er in Nederland het kabinet Balkenende II met als eerste minister Mr.dr. J.P. Balkenende (CDA).
  • In het jaar 2005: Bron: Wikipedia
    • Nederland had zo'n 16,3 miljoen inwoners.
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Dezelfde geboorte/sterftedag

Bron: Wikipedia

Bron: Wikipedia


Over de familienaam Vosburgh

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Wilt u bij het overnemen van gegevens uit deze stamboom alstublieft een verwijzing naar de herkomst opnemen:
Richard Remmé, "Genealogy Richard Remmé, The Hague, Netherlands", database, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/genealogie-richard-remme/I415293.php : benaderd 10 mei 2024), "Frederick G. (Frederick "Ted" G.) "Ted" Vosburgh (1904-2005)".