Everything about Fox Butterfield totally explained
Fox Butterfield (born
1939 in
Lancaster, Pennsylvania) is an
American journalist who spent much of his 30-year career reporting for
The New York Times.
Butterfield served as
Times bureau chief in
Saigon,
Tokyo,
Hong Kong,
Beijing, and
Boston and as a correspondent in
Washington and New York. During that time, he was awarded the
Pulitzer Prize as a member of
The New York Times team that published
the Pentagon Papers, the Pentagon's secret history of the Vietnam War, in
1971.
Butterfield's books include
China: Alive in the Bitter Sea (1982) and
All God's Children: The Bosket Family and the American Tradition of Violence (1995).
Personal
Butterfield is the son of Lyman Henry Butterfield, a historian and a director of the
Institute of Early American History and Culture in
Williamsburg, Va. The Canadian industrialist
Cyrus S. Eaton was one of Fox Butterfield's grandfathers.
Butterfield received a bachelor's degree
summa cum laude, master's degree, and doctor of philosophy in Chinese history from
Harvard University.
In 1988, Butterfield married Elizabeth Mehren, a reporter for
The Los Angeles Times.
Trivia
Michael Moriarty played Fox Butterfield in the 1993 television movie
Born Too Soon, based on Mehren's book about their daughter Emily, who was born prematurely in the late 1980's. Mehren was played by
Pamela Reed.
Bibliography
- China: Alive in the Bitter Sea.
- All God’s Children: The Bosket Family and the American Tradition of Violence.
Further Information
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