Brucker first worked as a reporter at the Springfield Union (now The Republican) in Springfield, Massachusetts. After completing his graduate studies, he joined The New York World in New York City to serve as assistant editor and editorial writer for the Work section. Brucker later served on the editorial staff of the Review of Reviews, a monthly magazine,[1] and as a writer for the North American Review. During World War II, he worked for the U.S. Office of War Information, a federal agency, for two years (1942–1943). Brucker served as chief of their Media Division and then as associate chief of their Bureau of Overseas Publications.[3] He then joined the Hartford Courant as its associate editor (1944-1946) and then editor-in-chief.
The American Heritage Center at the University of Wyoming in Laramie, Wyoming houses Brucker's papers from 1930 to 1979. The center's collection contains scrapbooks of articles from the Hartford Courant, Brucker's speeches, his plaques and awards, and photographs of him.[4]
Family
Brucker first married Sydney Seabury Cook. They had three children: Christopher and Thomas, and Sydney. After Seabury died in 1950, Brucker married Elizabeth Spock. She had two children from a previous marriage: William and Anthony.[1]
Works
The Changing American Newspaper (1937)
Freedom of Information (1949)
Journalist (1962)
Communication is power: unchanging values in a changing journalism (1973)
References
^ abcJohn L. Hess (7 April 1977). "Herbert Brucker Dies at Age 78; Long Defended Press Freedom". The New York Times.
^ ab"Columbia Names Aid to Journalism Dean". The New York Times. 6 January 1932.
^"Brucker Quits Columbia; Journalism Professor to Join the Hartford Courant". The New York Times. 11 June 1944.