The Stars Are Right: Frank Lovejoy
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Name: Frank Lovejoy Str: 13 Occupation: Journalist Con: 08 Nationality: American Siz: 12 Gender: Male App: 12 Age: 31 (August 8, 1901) Dex: 07 Height: 5'8" Pow: 12 Weight: 157 lbs Int: 15 Hair Color: Brown Edu: 16
Contents
FRANK LOVEJOY ARCHIVES
General Information
This page contains links to transcribed source material generated for and about Frank Lovejoy.
The Biography contains details about Frank Lovejoy's personal history.
The Timeline contains a rough outline of Lovejoy's activities based on dates gleaned from the archived materials.
The Document section contains transcribed personal papers and other items from the archived materials.
The Journal section contains personal writings and/or observations on events within the campaign.
BIOGRAPHY
Born on August 28, 1900 as the third child of ten, Frank Lovejoy chafed at the oppressively blank horizons of his Iowa home. An avid reader, he dreamed of mountains, oceans and cities, and vaguely resented the burdens placed on him as the oldest surviving child. His parents, Nick and Edna, both the children of immigrants, encouraged his ambitions as much as they could, but were able to spare little of his time. With the outbreak of the Great War in Europe, Frank saw his chance, and served as a driver for the American Volunteer Motor Ambulance Corps from 1916 until the end of the war. There he met other established and aspiring writers like John de Passos and Olaf Stapledon; Stapledon's position as a conscientious objector to the conflict was especially fascinating to Lovejoy, who adopted similar anti-military positions following his service.
Following the end of the war, Lovejoy drifted around Europe for several years, supporting himself as a correspondent for various American newspapers and magazines, among them the Chicago Star and the Detroit Evening Times. Although he tried his hand at writing fiction, producing a few short stories and a formless, nervous novel, Lovejoy was a better reader of fiction than a producer of it. He was a popular newspaperman, however, and so in 1923 he accepted a job as a regular columnist in the Chicago Star and returned to the States to pen Night Beat, focusing on the disaffected and odd personalities and communities that thrived in the White City after hours.
The crash of the stock market in 1929 cut deeply into the public's taste for the cavalcade of freaks, loners and dipsos that Lovejoy had chronicled with sympathy for nearly seven years. The Star discontinued Night Beat, but offered to keep him on staff as a regular reporter for a substantially reduced salary.
TIMELINE
FRANK LOVEJOY 1932 DOCUMENTS
Lovejoy is a staff writer for the Detroit Evening Times. Enclosed is a selection of articles written by him about the Irish Rose Matter.
- Saloonkeeper Slain As Gang War Erupts - August 5, 1932
- Irish Rose Medico A Mystery - August 6, 1932
- Second "Doctor" In Rose Murder Identified - August 7, 1932
- Cream of Society Fills Rose While Gang War Brews - August 8, 1932
- Macklin's Girl Speaks! - August 9, 1932
- Strange Incident at Curtisville Church - August 10, 1932
- Kansas City Connection Discovered in Irish Rose Murder - August 11, 1932
- International Connection Discovered in Irish Rose Murder - August 12, 1932
- White Slavery in the Motor City! - August 16, 1932
- Heroic Doctor Speaks! - August 17, 1932