Joseph C. Keeley
Joseph C. Keeley was an American public relations expert who became editor of American Legion magazine and wrote a biography of Alfred Kohlberg called The China Lobby Man in 1969.
Background
Joseph Charles Keeley was born on August 10, 1907, in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, the son of William T. and Martha C. Keeley; he had two brothers. In 1930, Keeley graduated from Columbia University.Career
Initially, Keeley went into public relations with clients like Ford Motor Company, Kellogg, Union Carbide, and National Dairy.In 1944-1945, Keeley served as a staff sergeant in the United States Marine Corps.
After the war, he joined the staff of American Legion magazine, of which he served as editor from 1949 to 1963. He also contributed to the Saturday Evening Post, Catholic Digest, Reader's Digest, The American Home, and Coronet (magazine) magazines.
Personal life and death
Keeley married Helen Kline; they had two children.Keeley died age 86 on April 1, 1994.
Works
Books: Keeley's work includes a biography of Alfred Kohlberg: They sold themselves; a practical guide to personal achievement with Howard Stephenson Making inventions pay; a practical guide to selling, protecting, manufacturing, and marketing your inventions Taking it easy with your camera The China Lobby Man: The Story of Alfred Kohlberg Left-leaning antenna; political bias in televisionThe China Lobby Man had extensive appendices, of which Appendix G listed individuals with ties to both IPR and Communism, including: Solomon Adler, James S. Allen, Joseph Fels Barnes, T.A. Bisson, Edward C. Carter, Frank Coe, Lauchlin Currie, Len De Caux, Laurence Duggan, Israel Epstein, John K. Fairbank, Frederick V. Field, Alger Hiss, Philip Jaffe, Corliss Lamont, Owen Lattimore, William Marx Mandel, Hotsumi Ozaki, Lee Pressman, Andrew Roth, John S. Service, Agnes Smedley, Edgar Snow, Guenther Stein, Anna Louise Strong, Mary Van Kleeck, John Carter Vincent, Harry Dexter White, and Ella Winter.
Articles:
- "Myths About Secret Inventions," Coronet magazine