Victor Whitman Knauth (10 June 1895 – 2 September 1977) was a journalist, publisher, and broadcasting executive. Knauth served as the editor-in-chief and an owner of The Bridgeport Times-Star, a newspaper published in Bridgeport, Connecticut. He also owned two Northeastern radio stations.[1]
Returning to the U.S. in 1928, Knauth began working in the public relations field. He joined Ivy Lee, the firm that pioneered the field of public relations. Knauth wrote copy to promote the opening of the Empire State Building and the development of Rockefeller Center. These experience with Ivy Lee led Knauth to co-found Keen, Simmons, & Knauth as a public relations firm headquartered in New York City.[1]
In 1938, Knauth acquired a controlling interest in The Bridgeport Times-Star.[6] He also served as vice president of the Select Printing Company, a publishing company,[3] president of Round Table Press,[6] and an owner of Omnibook Magazine. Knauth purchased WAVZ-1300, an AM station that aired in New Haven, Connecticut in 1949. Nine years later, he bought WTRY, an AM station that broadcast from Troy, NY. (Troy lies in the Albany, NY Capital Region.) [1]
Knauth married medical doctor Marjorie Lord Strauss on January 21, 1931.[7] They had two children: John and Mary.[1]
References
^ abcde"Victor Knauth Dies; Newsman, Publisher and Station Owner". The New York Times. 3 September 1977.
^Report of the Harvard Class of 1918. Harvard University. 1943.
^ abcFederal Communications Communication, ed. (1967). Federal Communications Commission Reports: Decisions, Reports, and Orders of the Federal Communications Commission of the United States, Volume 20. Government Printing Office.