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Robert Turgot Brinsmade (1913–1994) was an American international lawyer who, among other things, practiced law in Caracas, Mexico City, New York, and Houston.

Career[edit]

1948 Venezuelan coup d'état

Brinsmade, in 1948, admitted that he collaborated in the overthrow of Acción Democrática, the Venezuelan political party that governed from 1945 to 1948, when it ended by a coup d'état. He believed that Rómulo Betancourt, who became president in 1945 by coup d'état, and Acción Democrática, intended to set up a Marxist form of government in Venezuela by force of arms, if necessary, and justified his actions, and indicated that his actions had the support of the U.S. government.[1] Brinsmade was roundly informed by Ambassador Walter J. Donnelly in 1948 that he had damaged long-standing U.S. interests by compromising its reputation for neutrality and abstention from political activities. The U.S. Department of State expressed "strong disapproval" of his involvement.[1][2]

1961 purchase of La Prensa

On May 11, 1961, Robert Turgot Brinsmade (né Robert Turgot Brinsmade; 1913–1994), an American international lawyer, purchased La Prensa and announced that he would restore it to a daily publication. Ed Castillo, who had been the managing editor since November 1959, remained in that role. Brinsmade remained owner and publisher of La Prensa until its demise in 1963.

Final issue and liquidation of La Prensa

The last issue of La Prensa, by then a bilingual tabloid, was published on January 31, 1963, just two weeks short of the paper's fiftieth anniversary. In a final blow, the Internal Revenue Service seized La Prensa's assets for back taxes and sold them at auction March 28, 1963.

Career[edit]

Brinsmade's bio[3]

In March 1962, Brinsmade ran into swindling charges over checks he had written against insufficient funds to La Prensa's printer, American Printers, Inc.,[i] of which James Fleming Moseley, Sr. (1921–1988), was business manager.

Selected publications[edit]

  • R. T. Brinsmade; El Derecho. Internacional y la Corte Suprema de Justicia de Colombia (pp. 271-285)
  • R. T. Brinsmade, "Análisis de nuestra situación petrolera," El Petróleo, February 1950, pps. 6–7
  • "The effect of the agrarian reforms upon the peon in San Luis Potosi" (masters thesis), University of Texas Press (1934); OCLC 678921925

Family[edit]

His father, Robert Bruce Brinsmade, PhD (1873–1936), was an American mining engineer, who through his work in mining, became a labor rights advocate and exponent of the economist Henry George.[4][5] Robert Turgot Brinsmade's maternal uncle, Harry Steenbock, PhD (1886–1967), was a biochemistry professor at the University of Wisconsin, inventor, and one of the discoverers of vitamins D, A and B.

Robert Turgot Brinsmade married three times. He was a widower from his 1939 marriage to Mollye Catherine Johnson (maiden; 1920–1952) and a 1955 divorcee from his 1953 marriage to Ruth Elizabeth Ericsson (maiden; born 1914) — who had been, in 1941, selected in New York by John Robert Powers to be a Miss Subways model, which drew 258 marriage proposals, all of which she rejected.[6] In 1961, he married Suzanne Joy Metz (maiden; born 1934) in Mexico City after having spent time in Caracas, Venezuela, as owner and publisher of the newspaper La Calle ("The Street"). Brinsgate and his wife settled in Houston.[7] He had been a founding shareholder in 1948 in Sivensa (Siderúrgica Venezolana, S.A.), a Venezuelan steel company.[ii]

References[edit]

Notes
  1. ^ American Printers was incorporated in 1931 by Robert Bruce Brough (1894–1957), Harry Trumbo Swimme (1892–1966), and Ruth May Polian (1893–1966). In February of 1938, it was sold to Bert Edwin Scott (1880–1961), Clester Wade Hornsby (1902–1962), and Elmer Reginald Crumrine, Sr. (1903–1975), who, at the time were operating as Service Printing Co. Crumrine became president. The original building was located at 419 West Myrtle Street, San Antonio. A second plant was added at 120 Villita Street, the site of the former Blue & Blue Printers, which before 1949, was owned by Thomas Brady Blue (1885–1949) and wife, Haddy Blue, (née Hattie Marguerite Tummins; later known as Haddy Vaughan; 1899–1986). Blue and Blue Printers was the successor of Sigmund Press. In 1963, William A. Pittenger (1915–2006) was president and, in December of 1963, Moseley became Vice President and Director of Sales and Estimating; Luther Henry (Tex) Beneke (1913–1986), Sales Manager; and William Lester Smith (1907–1972), Superintendent of Production.

  2. ^ Siderúrgica Venezolana, S.A., (Sivensa) was founded in 1948 with initial capital of two million bolívars; its largest shareholder was Miles Meyer Sherover (1896–1976), other shareholders included Robert T. Brinsmade, Warren William Smith (1865–1956), Oscar Augusto Machado (1890–1966), and Carlos Morales. Its objective was to produce steel rods, wire, profiles, and other steel products.

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Inline citations
  1. ^ a b "Exporting Rhetoric, Importing Oil: United States Relations With Venezuela," by Bethany Aram, PhD, World Affairs, Vol. 154, No. 3, Winter 1992, pps. 94–106
  2. ^ "Telephone Conversation between Andrew J. Higgins and George C. Carey discussing Brinsmade's offer to provide information on Venezuela," FOIL, Declassified Records of the State Department, December 21, 1948
  3. ^ Marquis Who's Who; OCLC 4778770918
  4. ^ "News Notes and Personals," Land and Freedom Vol. 37, No. 4, July–August 1937, pg. 134; OCLC 9777687
  5. ^ "Brinsmade, Robert Bruce," Who's Who on the Pacific Coast, Franklin Harper (ed.) (né Franklin C. Harper), Los Angeles: Harper Publishing Company (1913), pg. 70; OCLC 7360872
  6. ^ "Miss Subways of '41, Meet Miss Subways of '71," by Enid Nemy, New York Times, December 8, 1971
  7. ^ "New Face is Added to Marital Blitz," Philadelphia Enquirer, May 21, 1961

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