- Linton Wells
Linton Wells (1893–1976) was a noted foreign correspondent, world traveler and pioneer broadcaster.
Born in
Louisville, Kentucky , on April 1, 1893, he attended theUS Naval Academy with the Class of 1914, but left before graduation. He began his career as a foreign correspondent with the China Press inShanghai in 1912, coveringSun Yat Sen and theXinhai Revolution . Returning from China early inWorld War I via Europe, he covered a revolution inMexico , learned to fly in 1915, and helped build the first dam inSamoa .After service in the Navy during World War I, he covered the Russian revolution, being imprisoned briefly by the Bolsheviks near
Irkutsk . Following reporting from East Asia, he returned to the States in 1921 to cover Hollywood and events along the West Coast, returning to Japan in 1923, just in time to be injured in theGreat Kantō earthquake of September 1, 1923.In 1924, while working for the
Associated Press , he stowed away on the US Army aircraft "Boston" during theCalcutta toKarachi leg of the first round-the-world flight. [Thomas, Lowell and Thomas, Lowell, Jr. (2004). "Famous First Flights That Changed History: Sixteen Dramatic Adventures", pp. 75-76. Guilford, Connecticut: The Lyons Press. ISBN 1592285368.] The following year he and Leigh Wade, who had been the pilot of the "Boston" during the First World Flight, made the first non-stop automobile trip between Los Angeles and New York (167 hours and 50 minutes).In 1926 he and
Edward Steptoe Evans set a record for the fastest circumnavigation of the globe (28 days, 14 hours, 36 min). The following year he participated in fighting inNicaragua , and returned to newspaper work in 1929 reporting from Europe for the International News Service.From 1932 to early 1934 he reported from Moscow, where he met his future wife, the aviatrix Fay Gillis. After covering the coronation of the Puppet Emperor
Puyi in Manchukuo, he returned to the US.He married Fay Gillis on April 1, 1935 and, a few months later, they spent their honeymoon covering the Italian invasion of Abyssinia (
Ethiopia ) for the "Herald Tribune ". He published an autobiography, "Blood on the Moon", in 1937.After returning to the States to cover Hollywood for the "Herald Tribune", he and his wife pioneered overseas radio broadcasts from Latin America in 1938 for the Magic Key of RCA. They both were founding members of the
Overseas Press Club .In 1939, at the suggestion of President Roosevelt, and in support of a secret British request, he and Fay investigated potential locations in Africa for a Jewish homeland. On December 7, 1941, after the Japanese
attack on Pearl Harbor , he was part of one of the first television news broadcasts. From 1942–1946 he and Fay headed theUS Commercial Company in West Africa, buying strategic materials for the war effort.Returning to the States after the birth of their son
Linton Wells II inLuanda in 1946, he owned a radio station in New York, lived for a time on a houseboat in Florida, returned to New York, and worked for theAmerican Export Lines .In 1962 he came to Washington in 1963 to open the Washington News Bureau for the
Storer Broadcasting Company (then the largest privately owned radio and television network in the US), serving as the Washington Bureau Chief until 1972.Linton Wells died in Washington, DC in January 1976. He was survived by his wife and son, two daughters, Barbara Church and Pat Ramacciotti, from his first marriage, and two granddaughters.
In addition to his autobiography, he wrote "Around the World in Twenty-Eight Days", "Jumping Meridians", "Salute to Valor" and a play, "Suzanna".
References
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