David Gaub McCullough (1933- )
Coat of Arms of Clansfolk of Clan McCulloch
Writer, journalist, historian, television host
American writer, journalist, historian, and television host,
David Gaub McCullough was born on 7 July 1933 to Christian Hax
McCullough, a businessman, and Ruth (Rankin) McCullough. A
Modern Literature graduate of Yale University, McCullough moved
to New York on receipt of his BA and took a job with Sports
Illustrated. He also worked freelance for
Time magazine and Architectural
Forum. In 1961, he accepted a job with the United States
Information Agency in Washington, DC, where he discovered his
penchant for historical writing.
In 1964, McCullough moved back to new York to work for the
American heritage Publishing Company. He became editor-in-chief
for the American Heritage Picture History of World War
Two (1966), a series of books he has described as his
"greatest accomplishment". He also edited the six volume set
entitled The Smithsonian Library (1968-70).
McCullough's first independently-researched book entitled
The Johnstown Flood was well-received by critics in
1968. The New York Times called it "a superb job,
scholarly yet vivid, balanced yet incisive." His next book
however,The Brooklyn Bridge, received thunderous
critical applause and also won several prizes for excellence and
literary merit. The Saturday Review opined that
McCullough had produced "an engrossing piece of social history, a
latitudinal view of the politics and business practises and daily
life of the two or three decades after the ending of the Civil
War." McCullough's third book,The Path Between the Seas:
The Creation of the Panama Canal, 1870-1914, (1977) won
several awards including the US National Book Award for History
and the prestigious Francis Parkman Award from the Society of
American Historians.
While researching his Panama Canal book, McCullough became
intrigued with the personal life of Theodore Roosevelt, one of
the key players in the building of the canal. Out of that
fascination came McCullough's fourth book, Mornings on
Horseback (1981), a biographical study of Roosevelt's
early childhood, adolescence and early manhood. It, too, like
its predecessors, was well-received and was nominated for a
Pulitzer Prize. His next book was also a political biography,
detailing the life and times of President Harry Truman.
Truman (1993) won the Pulitzer Prize for Biography
in 1993.
While researching and writing Truman in 1983,
McCullough was invited by the Smithsonian Institute to host a new
TV series which he accepted. It led to his next hosting job with
PBS in 1988 as the popular host of The American
Experience. He also narrated The Civil
War, an Emmy-award winning documentary series on PBS by
Ken Burns, first broadcast in 1990.
The white-haired, blue-eyed McCullough bears a striking
resemblance to Walter Cronkite. He has been described by Esther
B. Fein as ža tall and elegant man, funny and charmingly politež
and by another writer as having "a ready smile and a relaxed and
casual affability that somehow co-exist with an aura of intensity
and concentrated awareness."
McCullough currently serves as a senior contributing editor to
American Heritage magazine and is president of the Society of
American Historians. David McCullough believes deeply in the
utility of history in modern society. He once said:
"History, while no index to the future, helps us
better understand our human nature. Politicians and great
cataclysms like war are only part of it. History is, and
should be seen as all subjects - politics, war, art,
science, industry, economics, engineering, literature, show
business, and little towns you have never heard of. And the
great pull of it all is people. Stir around in the
supposedly dead past and you always find life."
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