Arthur Daley was born on July 31, 1904, in New York City.[1] He attended Fordham Preparatory School and continued his education at Fordham University.[1] He was a multifaceted athlete, participating in baseball, basketball, football, swimming, and track.[2] He wrote for the university newspaper, The Fordham Ram, and served as its sports editor in his senior year.[2]
Career
After graduating in 1926, Daley was hired almost immediately as a field reporter for The New York Times,[1] and for the rest of his life the newspaper would be "his one and only employer".[3] Among his first major assignments was the 1927 heavyweight championship boxing match between Gene Tunney and Jack Dempsey – the infamous "Long Count Fight".[2] He reported from the 1932 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, and when he was chosen to repeat that role at the 1936 Olympics in Berlin, he became the first Times correspondent to be sent overseas for a sports assignment.[2] In later years, Daley covered Olympics in Rome, Tokyo, Mexico City and Munich.[2]
In 1942, he succeeded John Kieran as the sports columnist for the Times, a position he held for the next 32 years.[2] As the daily writer of "Sports of The Times", he composed over 10,000 columns,[4] with an estimated 20 million words.[3] He also authored numerous books, including a collaboration with Kieran called The Story of the Olympic Games.[3]
With his wife Betty, Daley lived in Old Greenwich, Connecticut; the couple had four children and fifteen grandchildren.[2] A son, Robert, and a granddaughter, Suzanne, followed in Daley's footsteps by also working as writers for the Times.[3]
Previously the Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting, No Edition Time from 1953–1963 and the Pulitzer Prize for Local Investigative Specialized Reporting from 1964–1984