Agnes E. Meyer
The purchase of ''The Washington Post'' in 1933 gave Meyer and her family the capacity to affect American opinion for several generations. Daughter Katharine Graham led the newspaper during the coverage of Watergate Investigation that eventually led to the resignation of President Richard Nixon and earned the paper a Pulitzer Prize. During Senator Joseph McCarthy's anti-Communist campaign in the 1950s, Meyer delivered speeches that characterized the campaign as a threat to academic freedom.
Meyer was an active patron and supporter of the arts, who with her husband contributed paintings by Paul Cézanne and Edouard Manet, sculptures by Constantin Brâncuși, and watercolors by John Marin to the National Gallery of Art in Washington. Provided by Wikipedia
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1by Meyer, Agnes Elizabeth Ernst, 1887-### CRL customization ### ?> ### Add publisher and desc details ### ?>
Published 1944New York, Harcourt, Brace and company [1944]xvii, 388 p. 21 cm. -
2by Meyer, Agnes Elizabeth Ernst, 1887-1970### CRL customization ### ?> ### Add publisher and desc details ### ?>
Published 1944New York, Harcourt, Brace and Co. [1944]1 online resource (xvii, 388 p.)Center for Research Libraries
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