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J I Rodale

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Cause of death
  
Heart attack

Children
  
Robert Rodale

Known for
  
Organic gardening

Grandchildren
  
Name
  
J. Rodale

Role
  
Playwright


J. I. Rodale httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen885Jer

Full Name
  
Jerome Irving Rodale

Born
  
August 16, 1898 (
1898-08-16
)
New York City, New York, U.S.

Spouse(s)
  
Anna Andrews (m. 1927; wid. 1971)

Died
  
June 8, 1971, New York City, New York, United States

People also search for
  
Robert Rodale, Laurence Urdang, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

Books
  
The synonym finder, Pay Dirt: Farming and Gard, The encyclopedia of commo, The health seeker, The king's English on horseback

Organizations founded
  
Rodale, Inc.

Tips for writers the essential writer s bookshelf j i rodale s synonym finder


Jerome Irving Rodale [surname accented on second syllable] (August 16, 1898 – June 8, 1971), was a publisher, editor, author, playwright and a founder of Rodale, Inc. who inadvertently earned a place in network television history by dying on-camera while guesting on a never-aired edition of The Dick Cavett Show.

Contents

J. I. Rodale Rodale Andrew Case

Rodale was an early advocate of returning to sustainable agriculture and organic farming in the United States. Rodale founded a publishing empire which included several magazines, and published many books—his own and those of others—on health. He also published works on a wide variety of other topics, including The Synonym Finder. Rodale popularized the term "organic" to mean grown without pesticides.

J. I. Rodale Rodale Andrew Case

Biography

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Rodale was born in New York City on August 16, 1898, the son of a grocer, and raised on the Lower East Side. His birth name was Cohen, but presuming it would be a handicap in business, he changed it to a non-Jewish-sounding one. He worked as an accountant for New York City 1917-1920, and worked for the Internal Revenue Service 1920-21. His brother Joseph and he co-founded Rodale Manufacturing, a maker of electrical equipment, in New York in 1923. He married Anna Andrews in 1927 and had three children: Robert Rodale (1930–1990), Nina Rodale (who married Robert Hale Horstman and then married Arthur Houghton), and Ruth Rodale. Rodale was already concerned with his health at this time, as he had frequent heart murmurs and had been rejected from the Army in World War I for bad eyesight. To improve his health, he read the works of Bernarr Macfadden and invented an exercising device.

J. I. Rodale How JI Rodale Started Organic Gardening Magazine Story

The Rodale brothers moved Rodale Manufacturing to Emmaus, Pennsylvania, in 1930 to cut costs during the Depression. He founded Rodale Press in 1930, marketing books and magazines. Inspired by his encounter with the ideas of Albert Howard, Rodale developed an interest in promoting a healthy and active lifestyle that emphasized organically grown foods, and established the Rodale Organic Gardening Experimental Farm in 1940. Rodale Press started publishing Organic Farming and Gardening magazine in 1942. Organic Farming and Gardening promotes organic horticulture; later, the magazine was retitled Organic Gardening. To Rodale, agriculture and health were inseparable. Healthy soil required compost and eschewing pesticides and synthetic fertilizers. Eating plants grown in such soil would then help humans stay healthier, he expounded.

One of Rodale's most successful projects was Prevention magazine, founded in 1950, which promotes practices preventing disease rather than trying to cure it later. It pioneered the return to whole grains, unrefined sweets, using little fat in food preparation, seldom eating animal products, folk cures, herbal medicines, and breastfeeding. It also promoted the consumption of higher than typical amounts of nutritional supplements and forgoing nicotine and caffeine.

Rodale was also a playwright, operating the Cecilwood Theater in Fishkill, New York, and the off-Broadway Rodale Theater. Rodale's plays included Toinette (1961) and The Hairy Falsetto (1964) .

Death

Rodale died of a heart attack at the age of 72 while participating as a guest on an early-evening taping of The Dick Cavett Show slated to be aired that same night, Tuesday, June 8, 1971. Rodale was still on stage, having finished his interview, and was seated on a couch next to the active interviewee, New York Post columnist Pete Hamill. Rodale had bragged during his just-completed interview on the show, "I'm in such good health that I fell down a long flight of stairs yesterday and I laughed all the way", "I've decided to live to be a hundred", and "I never felt better in my life!" He had also previously bragged, "I'm going to live to be 100, unless I'm run down by some sugar-crazed taxi driver."

According to Dick Cavett, Hamill noticed something was wrong with Rodale, leaned over to Cavett, and said, "This looks bad." According to others, Cavett asked, "Are we boring you, Mr. Rodale?" Cavett himself said that he "emphatically" did not recall saying this, but one of the two physicians in the audience did remember this. The physicians (an internist and orthopedic surgeon, both in residency) rushed onto the stage to try to revive Rodale with CPR, including mouth-to-mouth resuscitation. (During an appearance on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson that originally aired on February 5, 1982, Cavett stated "firefighters from across the street" also attended the patient.) Although the EKG continued to show cardiac activity, they were unsuccessful; Rodale was pronounced dead at Roosevelt Hospital The episode was never broadcast, although Cavett has described the story in public appearances and on his blog.

Legacy

After Rodale's death, his son Robert Rodale ran the publishing firm until his own death by car accident. That work included editing the high-circulation Prevention magazine. Robert Rodale had competed in the Olympics in rifle shooting and was inducted into the United States Bicycling Hall of Fame in 1991.

Granddaughter Maria Rodale is now chairman and CEO of Rodale, Inc. She attributes her interest in the organic food movement to growing up on America's first organic farm.

Books by J.I. Rodale

  • The Synonym Finder, 1978. ISBN 978-0-87857-236-6
  • How to Grow Vegetables and Fruits by the Organic Method, 1961. OCLC 171305
  • The Word Finder, 1947. ISBN 978-0-87857-138-3 OCLC 174829
  • The Encyclopedia of Organic Gardening. OCLC 5288851
  • Stone Mulching in the Garden.
  • Vegetables.
  • The Healthy Hunzas, 1948, Rodale Press, Emmaus, PA. 255 p.
  • Are We Really Living Longer?
  • Arthritis, Rheumatism, and Your Aching Back.
  • Cancer, Facts & Fallacies.
  • The Complete Book of Composting.
  • The Hairy Falsetto: A One-Act Farcical Social Satire.
  • Happy People Rarely Get Cancer.
  • The complete Book of Vitamins, 1966. OCLC 804785
  • The natural way to better eyesight 1966.
  • The Prostate 1967, Rodale Books, Inc., Emmaus, PA. D-739; Harald Taub, Designer and Editor; Sowers Printing Co., Lebanon, PA.
  • 1967: Sugar: The Curse of Civilization.
  • References

    J. I. Rodale Wikipedia