MERTON'S CORRESPONDENCE WITH: Luce, Clare Boothe, 1903-1987
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Descriptive Summary
Record Group: Section A - Correspondence
Dates of materials: 1948-1968
Volume: 10 item(s); 21 pg(s)
Scope and Content
This is a file in the correspondence of Thomas Merton under the heading: "Luce, Clare Boothe".
Biography
From a humble beginning in New York, Clare Boothe Luce rose to prominent and varied careers, including an advocate for the women's movement, managing editor of Vanity Fair, a satirist and playwright, Life magazine correspondent in Europe during World War II, Republican legislator in the U.S. House of Representatives for Connecticut, and ambassador to Italy. She was known for her scathing wit. Her husband after a remarriage was Henry R. Luce, who was president of Time magazine, and his death in 1964 allowed her to retire to Hawaii, but she remained active in Republican politics. She converted to Catholicism in 1944 after the death of her only daughter. Henry Luce donated the land that made Mepkin Abbey possible in Conyers, Georgia. Clare Boothe Luce writes to Merton in 1948 to thank him for his books. (Source: "Luce, Clare Boothe." World Authors 1900-1950 (1996). Online. H.W. Wilson. Bellarmine University Library, Louisville, KY. 16 September 2005. ‹http://vnweb.hwwilsonweb.com›.)
Usage Guidelines and Restrictions
Related Information and Links
See also Cold War Letters #17 published in Witness to Freedom, pp. 26-27.
Other Finding Aids
If the person in correspondence with Merton has full text records in the Merton Center Digital Collections, there will be a numeric link to them below.
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