Knowledge (XXG)

Louis Jay Heath

Source đź“ť

74: 25: 161:
Heath entered the newspaper field in 1924 when he joined the United Press foreign department. Heath covered Diplomatic Row for the United Press for 15 years, acting as correspondent for 150 newspapers in 21 South and Central American countries. While at the American Newspaper Guild, Jay Heath held
139:(1912). In addition to teaching English at the University of Pittsburgh from 1912 to 1915 and the University of Texas at Austin from 1917 to 1918, Heath also taught at the 363: 176:
Louis J. Heath was the son of Jay E. and Harriet E. Sears Heath. Heath married Martha Elizabeth Pickels in 1913 and died in 1939 of heart disease at his home in
330: 358: 368: 239:
Obituary: Louis Jay Heath, Newspaperman, 49 - Veteran U.P. Expert on Latin American Covered Embassies, Brooklyn Eagle, January 9, 1939, p. 8.
101: 100:
and was co-author of “A New Basis for Social Progress.” Jay Heath was a descendant of a distinguished line of early Americans including two
155: 378: 109: 373: 331:
http://www.americanairmailsociety.org/APJbackissues/Volume%2010/APJ,%20Issue%20105,%20Vol%20X,%20No%204,%20January%201939.pdf
117: 97: 140: 169:, was a member of the Overseas Writers' Club, President of the Washington Airmail Society, and Vice President of the 85: 299:
American Journal of Public Health, Public Health Notes, D. Greene, James A. Tobey, and Homer N. Calver, May 1922.
170: 93: 89: 353: 348: 35: 300: 181: 151: 136: 128: 216: 154:
in England, France and Italy. In 1920 he launched a radio course in health education for the
177: 166: 132: 276: 257:
Minutes, Delphic Fraternity, Epsilon Chapter, Cortland Normal School, October 13, 1905.
54: 342: 124: 162:
continued offices in the Washington Newspaper Guild and the United Press Guild.
147: 73: 180:
Louis Jay Heath is buried at the Cortland Rural Cemetery in his home town of
113: 44: 220: 77:
Photo of Louis Jay Heath, courtesy of the Amherst College Library Archives.
24: 105: 210: 212:
A new basis for social progress, (Book, 1917) [WorldCat.org]
84:(July 14, 1886 – January 8, 1939) was a foreign correspondent for 72: 123:
Louis Jay Heath graduated from the Cortland Normal School, today
301:
http://ajph.aphapublications.org/doi/abs/10.2105/AJPH.12.5.432
277:"1910s Faculty | English | University of Pittsburgh" 18: 266:
Amherst College Biographical Record, Class of 1910, p. 394.
200:
Amherst College Graduates’ Quarterly, May 1941, p. 186-197.
158:
and lectured semi-weekly for that bureau for two years.
127:, in 1906. While at Cortland he became a member of the 49: 39: 16:Journalist and descendant of U.S.Founding Fathers 8: 329:The Airpost Journal, January 1939, p. 5. 92:. He was an instructor of English at the 320:Washington Daily News October 17, 1929. 248:SUNY Cortland Memorial Library Archives 193: 88:and one of the first organizers of the 364:University of Texas at Austin faculty 102:Founding Fathers of the United States 7: 311:Cortland Standard January 8th, 1939. 156:United States Public Health Service 110:Chief Justice of the United States 14: 359:University of Pittsburgh faculty 23: 369:People from Cortland, New York 118:President of the United States 1: 98:University of Texas at Austin 141:United States Naval Academy 395: 86:United Press International 379:Harvard University alumni 229:– via worldcat.org. 171:American Airmail Society 150:, Heath served with the 131:. He was a graduate of 94:University of Pittsburgh 90:American Newspaper Guild 38:, as no other articles 374:Amherst College alumni 78: 76: 143:from 1920 to 1938. 182:Cortland, New York 152:Army Medical Corps 137:Harvard University 129:Delphic Fraternity 79: 57:for suggestions. 47:to this page from 71: 70: 386: 333: 327: 321: 318: 312: 309: 303: 297: 291: 290: 288: 287: 281:english.pitt.edu 273: 267: 264: 258: 255: 249: 246: 240: 237: 231: 230: 228: 227: 207: 201: 198: 178:Washington, D.C. 66: 63: 52: 50:related articles 27: 19: 394: 393: 389: 388: 387: 385: 384: 383: 339: 338: 337: 336: 328: 324: 319: 315: 310: 306: 298: 294: 285: 283: 275: 274: 270: 265: 261: 256: 252: 247: 243: 238: 234: 225: 223: 209: 208: 204: 199: 195: 190: 167:stamp collector 165:Heath, an avid 133:Amherst College 82:Louis Jay Heath 67: 61: 58: 48: 45:introduce links 28: 17: 12: 11: 5: 392: 390: 382: 381: 376: 371: 366: 361: 356: 351: 341: 340: 335: 334: 322: 313: 304: 292: 268: 259: 250: 241: 232: 202: 192: 191: 189: 186: 69: 68: 55:Find link tool 31: 29: 22: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 391: 380: 377: 375: 372: 370: 367: 365: 362: 360: 357: 355: 352: 350: 347: 346: 344: 332: 326: 323: 317: 314: 308: 305: 302: 296: 293: 282: 278: 272: 269: 263: 260: 254: 251: 245: 242: 236: 233: 222: 218: 214: 213: 206: 203: 197: 194: 187: 185: 183: 179: 174: 172: 168: 163: 159: 157: 153: 149: 144: 142: 138: 134: 130: 126: 125:SUNY Cortland 121: 119: 116:, the second 115: 111: 107: 103: 99: 95: 91: 87: 83: 75: 65: 56: 51: 46: 42: 41: 37: 32:This article 30: 26: 21: 20: 325: 316: 307: 295: 284:. Retrieved 280: 271: 262: 253: 244: 235: 224:. Retrieved 211: 205: 196: 175: 164: 160: 145: 122: 108:, the first 81: 80: 59: 33: 354:1939 deaths 349:1886 births 148:World War I 135:(1910) and 62:August 2024 343:Categories 286:2017-08-31 226:2017-08-31 114:John Adams 53:; try the 40:link to it 43:. Please 106:John Jay 96:and the 221:2107066 188:Sources 146:During 219:  36:orphan 34:is an 217:OCLC 112:and 345:: 279:. 215:. 184:. 173:. 120:. 104:: 289:. 64:) 60:(

Index


orphan
link to it
introduce links
related articles
Find link tool

United Press International
American Newspaper Guild
University of Pittsburgh
University of Texas at Austin
Founding Fathers of the United States
John Jay
Chief Justice of the United States
John Adams
President of the United States
SUNY Cortland
Delphic Fraternity
Amherst College
Harvard University
United States Naval Academy
World War I
Army Medical Corps
United States Public Health Service
stamp collector
American Airmail Society
Washington, D.C.
Cortland, New York
A new basis for social progress, (Book, 1917) [WorldCat.org]
OCLC

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.

↑