Heywood Broun is remembered as the founder and first president of The Newspaper Guild union, but he was also a celebrated columnist, author, playwright and Socialist known for his progressive views and his passionate interests – from sports and books to poker and, especially, Christmas.
He even had a slight tie to Central Illinois.
Bishop Fulton J. Sheen – a graduate of Peoria’s Spalding Institute ordained in Peoria and a pastor at the old St. Patrick’s parish before transferring to Washington, D.C., to teach at the Catholic University of America – became a popular national broadcaster in the 1930s. As a Monsignor, Sheen arranged Broun’s conversion to Catholicism seven months before the columnist’s untimely 1939 death at the age of 51.
Broun’s short life was one of enthusiasms.
The son of a Scottish immigrant printer, Broun became editor of his high school newspaper before enrolling at Harvard, where classmates ranged from future radical journalists John Reed and Walter Lippman to poets T.S. Eliot and Alan Seeger. After Harvard (where he was prevented from earning a degree by failing French), he joined the staff of the New York Morning Telegraph, working alongside the young gossip columnist Louella Parsons and the old ex-gunfighter Bat Masterson, who was its sports editor.
Fired after a year for asking for a $2 raise, Broun freelanced for the New York Sun before getting a job at the conservative New York Tribune, where he worked as a copy editor, sportswriter, drama critic and columnist for more than a decade.
His Tribune tenure was interrupted by World War I, where Broun became a war correspondent in 1918, and upon his return he published his first book, “The A.E. F.: With General Pershing and the American Forces,” and became a member of the “Algonquin Round Table,” a group of writers who gathered almost daily at the Algonquin Hotel, where he socialized with regulars including Robert Benchley, Alexander Woollcott, George S. Kaufman, Dorothy Parker, Harpo Marx, Edna Ferber and Harold Ross.
In 1921 Broun was hired by Joseph Pulitzer’s more liberal New York World and continued writing for liberal magazines such as The Nation and The New Republic.
But Broun was more than a journalist.
“There were many more Brouns than just Heywood the phrase-maker,” wrote Philadelphia Guildsman Saul Schraga. “There were Broun the humanitarian, Broun the angry fore of special privilege, Broun the devoted father, Broun the thoughtful son and husband, and, of course, Heywood the soft touch, who sprinkled dimes and $20 bills with the same abandon to men standing in bread lines.”
Indeed, i the 1920s, Broun’s column advocated for various social causes, from the Scottsboro Boys to the Sacco and Vanzetti case, the latter of which ultimately led to Pulitzer firing him in 1928. Then Scripps-Howard hired him for its New York Telegram and syndicated his column, which reached more than a million readers. After unsuccessfully running for Congress as a Socialist in 1930, Broun continued his column for the Telegram and World when the dailies merged in 1931.
In 1933, he founded the Guild, which affiliated with the AFL in 1937, then moved to the then-more radical CIO a year later.
By 1939, Broun’s pay was deemed too steep for the cost-cutting World-Telegram, so his contract wasn’t renewed, and he moved to the New York Post, but he wrote just one column there before dying.
At a New York memorial, dignitaries remembering Broun ranged from United Mine Workers president John L. Lewis to Hollywood actor Edward G. Robinson.
Author Lewis Gannett said, “It was precisely because Heywood played the races, visited the bread lines, produced a Broadway play, ran for Congress, walked picket lines, organized the Guild, and joined a church that he and his column stayed young.”
Inducted into both the National Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, N.Y., and the International Labor Hall of Fame in Detroit, Broun was eulogized as a determined free spirit by Sheen.
“Heywood Broun lived a full life and leaves a noble heritage,” the priest said at Broun’s funeral. “Some of his friends who were loudest in shouting for freedom were the loudest in protesting against him because he acted freely.”
If Broun’s own words serve as an epitaph of sorts, one passage might be a comment he made in 1938, when he said the Guild “is the only important work I ever did in my life. The Guild did for me what Harvard could not do.”
Another may be his enduring Christmas columns, often printed independently from the newspapers and even read by President Franklin D. Roosevelt on a Christmas Eve radio broadcast in 1938.