Brougham, Royal (1894-1978)

  • By Eric L. Flom
  • Posted 8/22/2005
  • HistoryLink.org Essay 7395
See Additional Media

A 68-year veteran of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer, journalist Royal Brougham was once dubbed "Dean of American Sportswriters." Brougham’s column, "The Morning After," was a fixture of P-I sports pages for more than half a century. Despite a casual demeanor -- many of his columns were simply credited to "your old neighbor" -- frequent misspellings, and creative grammar, Brougham established himself as one of Seattle's most celebrated, opinionated, and influential journalists. He was also one of the city's most generous people. To honor his efforts on behalf of others, the Seattle-King County Association of Realtors named him the "First Citizen" of 1946.

The Power of the Press

Royal Brougham was born in St. Louis on September 17, 1894, and arrived in Seattle with his family as a youngster. He vividly remembered his youth in Seattle, particularly on Queen Anne Hill, which, in his opinion, was a "mini-mountain."

"What a challenge for a 10-year-old boy and his red coaster wagon. Starting at the very top, we took off like a runaway rocket. If they were looking, passersby saw an apparition of a red streak doing about 60 mph, with a very scared passenger desperately clinging to the sides.

"Alas, the little wooden wagon disintegrated upon striking a telephone pole. Thanks to the protecting wings of some unseen angel, this juvenile Barney Oldfield wasn’t even scratched" ("Royal Brougham Remembers").

Brougham attended Franklin High School, but dropped out in 1910 to be a copy boy in the sports department of the Post-Intelligencer. Despite an unfinished education, Brougham quickly rose from errand boy to part-time writer, then full-time sports journalist. "I broke into the newspaper business 64 years ago at the Post-Intelligencer for a weekly salary of six dollars ... It was a steal," he recalled in 1975 ("Royal Brougham Remembers"). 

Never literary in style, Brougham wrote informally and often punctuated his columns with personal anecdotes or rhymes.  These traits infuriated his critics but delighted his readership. For many years Brougham was the face of the P-I, one of its highest-paid reporters, and the one who received the largest amount of fan mail as well as hate mail.

Brougham's rise at the P-I was swift. He became the paper's sports editor in 1923, then managing editor in 1925. In 1928, Brougham returned to the sports desk -- demoted, some said, because he refused to print several stories on actress Marion Davies (1897-1961), the mistress of William Randolph Hearst (1863-1951), as the P-I was a Hearst-owned paper.  Thereafter he helmed the sports department for the next 40 years, until becoming an associate editor in 1968.

In the Thick of Things

As the senior P-I sportswriter, Brougham had the good fortune to cover many of the 20th century's biggest sporting events, and befriended many of the athletes themselves -- friendships he would later tap for his various community-service projects. The list of luminaries who Brougham knew is astounding -- from Babe Ruth (1895-1948) to Babe Didrickson Zaharias (1914-1956), Bobby Jones (1902-1971), and innumerable prizefighters. Nor were his connections limited to sports: When attending one of the two Joe Louis/Jersey Joe Wolcott fights in the late 1940s, Brougham's ringside guest was John Roosevelt (1916-1981), son of the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt (1882-1945). 

Perhaps Brougham's most famous assignment was the one that no one in Seattle was able to read about. In 1936, he accompanied the University of Washington crew to the Berlin Olympics. None of his work reporting on the Olympics appeared locally, since the Post-Intelligencer went on strike while he was away. But that didn't stop Brougham from pursuing a good story. One tale has Brougham marching up to Adolph Hitler's (1889-1945) suite for an unscheduled interview with the German leader. Brougham was turned away, but not before locking eyes with Hitler, if only for a brief moment ("The Life and Times of Royal Brougham").

Power Put to Use

Brougham's columns could be very opinionated, and also very influential. Scathing articles may have helped show the door to several local coaches. Toward the end of the University of Washington's 1947 football season, Brougham reported that coach Ralph Welch would be given his walking papers at season's end. There were no facts behind this report; it merely represented Brougham's wishes. Shortly after the season ended, Welch was let go ("The Life and Times of Royal Brougham"). People forget, Emmett Watson quoted a former colleague as saying, "that Royal was once one of the most powerful men in the state. Not just in sports, in any field ... He used this power judiciously. And that is how he was able to raise enormous sums of money for charities, servicemen's recreations; how he could cajole and shame the citizens of Seattle into desegregating lilywhite golf courses and bowling alleys. His power translated into a better break for Japanese after World War II. He demanded living memorials in the form of playfields to remember military dead, instead of statues of some guy sitting on an iron horse" ("R.B. -- R.I.P.").

Brougham had long been concerned with the plight of others, but World War II spurred him into civic activities as never before. Through a series of charity events, he raised more than $150,000 to purchase sporting and recreation equipment for soldiers overseas. Brougham was cited by the War Department for his exemplary fundraising efforts. He also served as chair of the Seattle War Athletic Council, vice-chair of the Seattle USO Council, on the board of directors of the Seattle/King County American Red Cross, and as Washington director of the National Commission of Living War Memorials.

Brougham's efforts went beyond America's soldiers. He promoted funding for school athletic facilities, in addition to recreation areas such as parks and national forests. He was an advocate for fairness in sports, such as when he campaigned to remove a whites-only clause from the bylaws of the American Bowling Congress. He sat on the Football Writers Association Board of Directors, was a member of the Seattle Rotary for almost half a century, and received citizenship awards from B’nai B’rith and other organizations. His stature was such that, in 1953, Seattle Pacific University named its basketball arena Royal Brougham Pavilion. This went nicely with a University of Washington rowing shell also named in his honor.

Such were Brougham's accomplishments that in 1946 the Seattle/King County Association of Realtors named him Seattl''s "First Citizen." The group bypassed the usual crop of business and financial leaders to honor Brougham's work in aid of American servicemen, and his promotion of recreational amenities throughout the Pacific Northwest. Brougham received his plaque, presented by boxer Jack Dempsey (1895-1983), on January 16, 1947, at a banquet at Seattle's Olympic Hotel.

The Gift That Keeps on Giving

Perhaps the most extraordinary story behind Brougham's community involvement comes from his friendship with one man: Portus Baxter, Brougham's predecessor as P-I sports editor. Baxter was the person who originally hired Brougham, and when Baxter retired in the early 1920s, Brougham made sure to keep him on the payroll at $5 per week. In addition, Brougham regularly performed odd tasks for Baxter over the years, and was one of the man's few regular visitors after Baxter's wife died in the 1930s. 

When Portus Baxter died in 1962 he had no heirs, so in return for Brougham's years of kindness, Baxter named him as the recipient of a $300,000 inheritance. It was an unexpected windfall, but not one that prompted Brougham to retire and enjoy the good life. Instead, he chose to give most of this fortune away.

After separating out $50,000 for his daughter and three grandchildren (Brougham married his wife Alice in 1915), in 1966 he created the Royal Brougham Foundation, intent on helping those less fortunate. "The Lord and this community have always been good to me," Brougham said. "I've just giving the money spent to enrich back to where it came from." The fact that he was choosing to give away such a large sum didn’t faze him. "I don’t see anything startling about it. I'm going to have the enjoyment of watching the money spent to enrich the lives of boys and girls. They have always been my favorite people ... Besides, it will be an interesting change to be sort of poor again. And it will keep a guy humble" ("Brougham Gives Away Fortune"). 

The $250,000 fund was established for grants and interest-free loans for securing counselors for boys and girls camps, funding Christian missionary efforts in foreign countries, and providing tuition for students in church-related schools or colleges. By 2003, Brougham's fund had grown to more than $1 million, and was being administered through CHRISTA Ministries in Shoreline, Washington. 

A Fond Farewell

Brougham continued to be a mainstay at the Post-Intelligencer throughout the 1960s and 1970s, and was named an associate editor of the paper in 1968. But on October 30, 1978, just 10 days after a banquet was held in his honor at the Washington Athletic Club -- a day proclaimed "Royal Brougham Appreciation Day" by Seattle and King County -- Brougham suffered a massive heart attack in a Kingdome pressbox during the closing minutes of a Seattle Seahawks/Denver Broncos football game. Brougham was rushed to Swedish Hospital, and as he was being wheeled from the stadium toward a waiting ambulance, made sure to ask an elevator operator for the score ("The Life and Times of Royal Brougham"). The Seahawks lost, 20-17. Brougham was 84. 

Hundreds of mourners gathered at First Presbyterian Church for Brougham’s funeral on November 3, 1978. Brougham played a part in his own service, with tape recordings of a recent interview being played for the gathered crowd. He remarked how he had met some wondrous personalities during his time, but there was still one more to meet. "The greatest thrill I'll ever have is to come face-to-face with Him in the land that every Christian looks forward to," Brougham said. ("Hundreds from All Walks ... ").

Longtime friend Emmett Watson (1918-2001) remembered Brougham shortly after his death. "At his best, he had the surest instinct for a story of any man I ever knew," Watson noted. "He had an uncanny sense for what quickened the reader's interest, for what held him, and brought him back. This transcended R. B.'s faulty punctuation and his frequent misspellings. Once when I called him down on some minor misusage, he looked up and replied 'Thanks, kid, but you had a better education than I did. Nobody ever taught me these things'" ("R.B. – R.I.P."). 

A quarter century after his death, P-I reporter Dan Raley recalled Brougham's legacy:

"Most local sports fans under 40 couldn’t tell you who Brougham was or what he did. Yet from the outbreak of World War I through the aftermath of the Vietnam War, Brougham was a slight man who became a larger-than-life character, persistently sticking his nose into everything involving the local sporting landscape.  When he wasn't extolling the virtues of Seattle, Brougham was reaching out to some of the nation's biggest athletic names -- among them Babe Ruth, Jack Dempsey, Jessie Owens and Babe Didrikson Zaharias -- and coaxing them to travel to the Pacific Northwest as his guest for some charitable cause" ("The Life and Times of Royal Brougham").

In 1979, a year following his death, Brougham's peers nominated him to the State Hall of Journalistic Achievement. That same year saw a four-lane street near the Kingdome, formerly South Connecticut Street, renamed South Royal Brougham Way. The honor was supported by Emmett Watson, and sponsored on the city council by Councilman George Benson (1919-2004).


Sources:

“Realtors Pick Brougham as ‘First Citizen,’” The Seattle Times, December 15, 1946, p. 3; “Brougham Gives Away Fortune,” Seattle Post-Intelligencer, April 1, 1966, pp. A-1, A-4; “Royal Brougham ‘Man of the Year,’” Ibid., February 23, 1972, p.A-8; “Royal Brougham, A Living Legend,” Ibid., July 7, 1974, p. A-7; Royal Brougham, “Royal Brougham Remembers,” Ibid., October 5, 1975, pp. A-1, A-16; Royal Brougham, “Royal Brougham Remembers,” Ibid., October 19, 1975, p. A-8; “Gala Tribute for ‘Old Neighbor’ Brougham Oct. 19,” Ibid., October 6, 1978, p. B-4; “Royal Brougham Dies,” Ibid., October 30, 1978, pp. A1, A3; Emmett Watson, “R.B. -- R.I.P.,” Ibid., October 31, 1978, p. B-1; Don Tewkesbury, “Hundreds from All Walks in Farewell to Brougham,” Ibid., November 4, 1978, p. A-1, A-10; Emmett Watson, “Friday at Last,” Ibid., February 16, 1979, p. B-1; “Journalists Honor Brougham,” The Seattle Times, December 29, 1979, p. A-15; Dan Raley, “The Life and Times of Royal Brougham,” Seattle Post-Intelligencer, October 29, 2003, (http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/othersports/145946_royal29.html).


Licensing: This essay is licensed under a Creative Commons license that encourages reproduction with attribution. Credit should be given to both HistoryLink.org and to the author, and sources must be included with any reproduction. Click the icon for more info. Please note that this Creative Commons license applies to text only, and not to images. For more information regarding individual photos or images, please contact the source noted in the image credit.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License
Major Support for HistoryLink.org Provided By: The State of Washington | Patsy Bullitt Collins | Paul G. Allen Family Foundation | Museum Of History & Industry | 4Culture (King County Lodging Tax Revenue) | City of Seattle | City of Bellevue | City of Tacoma | King County | The Peach Foundation | Microsoft Corporation, Other Public and Private Sponsors and Visitors Like You