Kenamore in 1897
Rufus Clair Kenamore (c. 1875 – November 3, 1935) was an American journalist who was a foreign correspondent and editor on the St. Louis Post-Dispatch newspaper in the early 20th century.
Kenamore in 1918
Personal
Rufus Clair Kenamore was born in 1875 or 1876 in Eminence, Missouri , the son of Emma Kenamore and George R. Kenamore , who represented Dent County in 1890 in the State Legislature . He had two brothers, Charles B. and Don.[ 1] [ 2] [ 3] [ 4] [ 5] [ 6]
He was a college graduate at age 21 when he and a friend, Paul H. Sankey, stopped in St. Louis and announced they were on their way to the Klondike in Canada to prospect for gold with three other people.[ 1]
Kenamore and Marguerite Martyn , a reporter and artist on the Post-Dispatch, were married in Martyn's home at Lake and Bompart avenues in Webster Groves, Missouri , on May 17, 1913.[ 7] [ 8] [ 9]
After the death of father George R. Kenamore in 1928, Clair Kenamore and his brother, Charles, gave a family collection of books to the public library in a new community building in Salem, Missouri .[ 10]
In 1931, a lung condition made it necessary for him to move to a drier climate in Tucson, Arizona . Kenamore died of tuberculosis in Portland, Oregon , on November 3, 1935.[ 11]
Career
Kenamore's early professional life as a journalist was with the St. Louis Republic , and for a time he worked in Chicago. Kenamore joined the Post-Dispatch editorial staff in October 1907 and was a telegraph editor , feature writer and Sunday magazine editor.[ 3]
In 1916 he was a correspondent and went into Mexico with General Pershing's expeditionary force . During World War I, he went to France, where he accompanied troops of the 35th Division of Missouri and Kansas and covered the St. Mihiel and Argonne-Meuse campaigns.[ 3]
Returning from Europe in 1919, he authored a book, From Vauquois Hill to Exermont, which was a history of the 35th Division . Later, he wrote History of the 139th Infantry. [ 3]
He was sent on assignment to Europe in 1927 to get information for the 50th anniversary edition of the Post-Dispatch, which was published on December 9, 1928. He interviewed H.G. Wells , Sir Philip Gibbs , Andre Siegfried , Count Hermann Keyserling , J.B.S. Haldane , Guglielmo Ferrero , Maxim Gorky , Martin Anderson Nexo , Bertrand Russell , Albert Einstein , Rudolph M. Holzapfel and Benedetto Croce .[ 3]
In the 1930s, Kenamore covered stories in Europe, particularly in Soviet Russia . After moving from St. Louis, he covered stories in the Southwest and Pacific Northwest .[ 3] [ 4]
References
^ a b "Caught the Gold Fever," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, July 25, 1897
^ Randy McConnell, "The Dent County Kenamores," Christian County, Missouri, Genealogy, undated
^ a b c d e f "Clair Kenamore Dies; Editor, War Writer," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, November 4, 1935, page 30
^ a b 1930 U.S. census
^ "Mrs. G.R. Kenamore, 75, to Be Buried at Salem, Mo.," St. Louis Star, July 23, 1925, page 2
^ "Rufe Kenamore Dies," "The Houston Herald", April 19, 1926, page 2
^ "Marguerite Martyn Weds Newspaperman," St. Louis Star, May 18, 1913, page 2
^ Marriage license
^ "Post-Dispatch Artist and Writer Who Weds Today," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, May 17, 1913, page 3
^ "Books Donated for Library at Community Building," The (Salem) Post, July 4, 1928, page 1
^ "Clair Kenamore Dies; Editor, War Writer," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, November 4, 1935
External links