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  1. John Hay Whitney (August 17, 1904 – February 8, 1982) was U.S. Ambassador to the United Kingdom, publisher of the New York Herald Tribune, and president of the Museum of Modern Art. He was a member of the Whitney family .

  2. 15 de abr. de 2024 · John Hay Whitney (born August 17, 1904, Ellsworth, Maine, U.S.—died February 8, 1982, Manhasset, New York) was an American multimillionaire and sportsman who had a multifaceted career as a publisher, financier, philanthropist, and horse breeder.

  3. Biography. John Hay Whitney was born August 17, 1904, the second child of Payne and Helen Hay Whitney. He was the namesake of his maternal grandfather John Hay, who served as secretary to President Lincoln and as Ambassador to Great Britain and Secretary of State under McKinley and Roosevelt.

  4. 9 de fev. de 1982 · John Hay Whitney, master of one of the great American fortunes and a pace-setting leader in a kaleidoscope of fields, died yesterday in North Shore Hospital, Manhasset, L.I., after a long...

  5. Helen Hay Whitney, known as the “First Lady of the Turf,” campaigned 116 stakes winners, including greats such as Twenty Grand, Shut Out, Devil Diver and Jolly Roger. After graduating from Yale in 1926, John Hay Whitney, known as “Jock,” studied at Oxford in England until his father died in 1927.

  6. 9 de fev. de 1982 · John Hay (Jock) Whitney, 77, who was born into one of America's wealthiest families and went on to notable careers in diplomacy, publishing, film productions and the worlds of art and...

  7. John Hay Whitney, 1957–61 Thomas C. Mills Taking up his post as American Ambassador to the Court of St James’s in February 1957, John Hay Whitney entered Grosvenor Square just a few months after the Suez crisis of the previous year. As such, his principal task on behalfof theDwight D. Eisenhoweradministrationwas to repairrelations