Don Knowlton
Donald Snow "Don" Knowlton (November 22, 1892 – July 27, 1976) was an American public relations executive. He co-founded Hill and Knowlton with John W. Hill.[1]
Life and career
Knowlton was born in Cleveland, Ohio. He graduated from Lincoln-West High School and Western Reserve University. He became advertising manager at Union Trust Co., including managing the bank-owned radio station WJAX. He authored the 1926 book These Bankers during that time. Union Trust closed during the Great Depression, so Knowlton joined Hill in the new venture. In 1946, Hill and Knowlton dissolved their partnership, and Knowlton took over the direction of Hill & Knowlton Cleveland, which closed shortly after Knowlton’s retirement in 1962.[2]
Knowlton also maintained an interest in music. His mother, Fanny Snow Knowlton, was a composer. He was a banjoist in a jazz band as an adult. Knowlton wrote one of the first serious discussions of jazz as an American art form in a 1926 article for Harper's, entitled "The Anatomy of Jazz."[3][4]
Selected publications
- Profit and Loss (1944)
- Brick House Stories (1936)
- Advertising for Banks (1932)
- Cooperation in Public Relations (1931)
- These Bankers (1926)
References
- ↑ Miller, Karen S. (1999). The Voice of Business: Hill & Knowlton and Postwar Public Relations. University of North Carolina Press, ISBN 978-0-8078-2439-9
- ↑ Knowlton, Donald Snow via The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History
- ↑ Lopes, Paul (2002). The Rise of a Jazz Art World. Cambridge University Press, ISBN 9780521000390
- ↑ Knowlton, Don (April 1926). "The Anatomy of Jazz," Harper's
External links
- Donald Snow Knowlton via The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History at Case Western Reserve University
- John W. Hill (r) and Don S. Knowlton, of the public relations firm of Hill & Knowlton, giving testimony before the Senate Civil Liberties Committee on steel company public relations campaign via United States Library of Congress