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Watergate editor Bradlee dies

Oct 22, 2014
Ben Bradlee transformed the Washington Post.

Ben Bradlee transformed the Washington Post.

The hard-charging editor who guided The Washington Post through its coverage of the Watergate scandal, Ben Bradlee, has died aged 93.

The Washington Post reports that Bradlee died at his home on Tuesday of natural causes.

As managing editor first and later as executive editor, the raspy-voiced Bradlee engineered the transformation of the Post from a sleepy hometown paper into a great national one.

He brought in a cast of talented journalists and set editorial standards that brought the paper new respect.

Bradlee got an early break as a journalist thanks to his friendship with one president, John F Kennedy, and became famous for his role in toppling another, Richard Nixon, helping guide Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein’s Pulitzer Prize-winning coverage of the Watergate scandal.

Actor Jason Robards turned Bradlee into a box-office hit with his Oscar-winning portrayal of the editor in the movie All the President’s Men.

Bradlee’s marriage in 1978 to Post star reporter Sally Quinn (his third) added more glamour to his image.

He was one of the few to know the identity early on of the celebrated Watergate source dubbed Deep Throat, finally revealed publicly in 2005 as FBI official W Mark Felt.

FIVE THINGS TO KNOW ABOUT BEN BRADLEE:

HE HAD SOME LUCKY BREAKS. Bradlee ended up getting a job at the Post in part because it was raining in Baltimore. How so? Bradlee had been headed for a job interview in Baltimore in 1948 when a heavy rain prompted him to skip that appointment and stay on the train to job search in Washington. “My world might certainly have changed – and some other people’s worlds – if the sun had been shining that day,” he wrote in his memoir.

HE HAD FRIENDS IN THE RIGHT PLACES. Yes, location matters. Just months after Bradlee bought a house in Georgetown, Senator John F Kennedy and his wife moved in across the street. They soon ended up at the same dinner party and became close friends. “When I got to know Kennedy, I kind of staked him out as part of my own territorial imperative, and as he prospered, so did I,” Bradlee later wrote.

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HE PRESSED TO PUBLISH THE PENTAGON PAPERS. As executive editor, Bradlee’s push in 1971 for the Post to publish the Pentagon Papers, a secret study of the Vietnam War, in the face of strong government opposition, helped prepare the newspaper for the tough decisions to come in unravelling the Watergate scandal that toppled President Richard Nixon. “After the Pentagon Papers, there would be no decision too difficult for us to overcome together,” he said.

HE OVERSAW COVERAGE OF WATERGATE. As executive editor, Bradlee lived the Watergate scandal from the 1972 break-in at the headquarters of the Democratic National Committee in the Watergate building through the 1974 resignation of Nixon and the jailing of more than 40 people. In the beginning, the going was tough. “For six weeks after the break-in, we were flailing, searching everywhere for any information that might shed any light, unaware that we were up against a massive cover-up being orchestrated by the White House.”

HE WAS IN ON ONE OF AMERICA’S BEST-KEPT SECRETS. Bradlee was one of the few people who knew the identity of the Watergate source known as Deep Throat early on. He said he never told a soul. In 2005, Deep Throat was publicly identified as former FBI official W Mark Felt. “I think he did a great service to society,” Bradlee said then.

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