Edward Price Bell | |
Birth Date: | 1 March 1869 |
Birth Place: | Parke County, Indiana |
Death Place: | Pass Christian, Mississippi |
Burial Place: | Evergreen Cemetery, Gulfport |
Occupation: | Journalist |
Education: | Wabash College |
Edward Price Bell (March 1, 1869 – September 23, 1943) was a Chicago journalist, best known for his work with the Chicago Daily News.
Bell was born in Parke County, Indiana, on March 1, 1869. He began his career as a newsman at the Terre Haute Evening Gazette at the age of 13.[1] After attending Wabash College, he married May Alice Mills in 1897, and moved to Chicago in 1898, where he wrote for the Chicago Record Herald. Shortly thereafter, he was transferred to London as a foreign correspondent for the Record, and then the Chicago Daily News, where he served for 20 years. In December 1917, Editor & Publisher praised his coverage of events in Europe relating to the United States' entry into World War I.
Bell covered U.S. President Herbert Hoover's good will tour through Latin America, and developed a strong friendship with Hoover. He used this close relationship to the advantage of British-American relations by organizing the London Naval Conference and Treaty, attended and signed by President Hoover and UK Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald in 1930. Bell was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize due to his role in this conference.[2]
Bell died on September 23, 1943, at his home in Pass Christian, Mississippi, of complications of beriberi. He was buried at Evergreen Cemetery in Gulfport.[2]