Richard O. Boyer
Richard O. Boyer (1903–1973) was an American freelance journalist.
Background[]
Richard Owen Boyer was born on January 10, 1903, in Chicago.[1]
Career[]
Boyer worked a various newspapers, including the St. Louis Post Dispatch, Boston Herald, New Orleans Item, and Dallas Times Herald.[1]
Boyer co-founders the Boston Newspaper Guild.
He contributed to The New Yorker magazine during the 1930s and 1940s.[1]
In the late 1940s, he was foreign correspondent for PM newspaper in Germany, France, Italy, and Central America. He was also editor of U.S. Week.[1]
In 1948, he was an editor of the cultural monthly magazine Masses & Mainstream.[1]
Before appearing at a Senate hearing, he had written for the Daily Worker. He was implicated in Winston Burdett's June 1955 testimony before the Senate Internal Security Subcommittee hearings as a Communist. The Senate subpoenaed Boyer in November 1955 and he testified the next January.[citation needed] At the hearing, Boyer refused to answer questions about his affiliations with the Communist Party, under the protection of the First and Fifth Amendment.[2] He was one of many witnesses in 1956 called by the Subcommittee in an "inquiry into New York press. To questions of whether he was a Communist or whether others were party members, the write invoked both his First and Fifth Amendments. Privately, however, Boyer identified himself as a Communist, saying that he had been a party member from the 1930s until 1956, when Nikita Khrushchev, the then Soviet leader, disclosed the secrets of the Stalin regime."[2]
Death[]
Boyer died age 70 on August 7, 1973.[2]
Works[]
References[]
- ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g Boyer, Richard O. (1948). If This Be Treason. New Century Publishers. Retrieved 19 November 2020.
- ^ Jump up to: a b c "Richard Boyer, 70, Biographer and New Yorker Writer Dies". The New York Times. August 9, 1973. Retrieved September 10, 2019.
External links[]
- Time magazine article, January 16, 1956
- Richard O. Boyer's obituary at the New York Times
- 1903 births
- 1973 deaths
- American reporters and correspondents
- American tax resisters
- 20th-century American non-fiction writers