Pyle, Howard, 1906-1987

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Pyle, Howard, 1906-1987

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Pyle, Howard, 1906-1987

Pyle, John Howard

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Pyle, John Howard

Pyle, John.

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Pyle, John.

Pyle, John Howard, 1906-1987

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Pyle, John Howard, 1906-1987

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1906-03-25

1906-03-25

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1987-11-29

1987-11-29

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Biographical History

Governor of Arizona, 1950-1954.

From the description of Howard Pyle photograph collection, 1883-1987. (Scottsdale Public Library). WorldCat record id: 53073146

Government executives.

From the description of Reminiscences of Howard Pyle and Charles Masterson : oral history, 1967. (Columbia University In the City of New York). WorldCat record id: 122619735

9th governor of Arizona, president of the National Safety Council, 1959-1973, chairman of the OSHA National Advisory Committee, director of the Central Arizona Water Conservation District.

From the description of Howard Pyle collection, 1883-1987 (bulk 1935-1987). (Scottsdale Public Library). WorldCat record id: 25403799

Howard Pyle was born on March 25, 1906 in Sheridan, Wyoming. He held a number of positions early in his career, including staffer in the advertising department at the Arizona Republican; program director and vice president at the radio station KTAR, 1930 to 1950; and Pacific War correspondent for Arizona Broadcasting Service, NBC. He also was Governor of Arizona from 1951 to 1955. He was known for ordering a raid on the polygamous Arizona community in Short Creek in 1953. In 1955 he was appointed Deputy Assistant to the President for Intergovernmental Relations, to help encourage State and local governments to assume more responsibility for providing necessary public services. He resigned on January 31, 1959 to devote his time to his new position as President of the National Safety Council (a non-federal organization.) Pyle was also a member of the Joint Federal-State Action Committee from July 20, 1957 to January 31, 1959, and a member of the President's Committee for Traffic Safety from June 1, 1959 to January 1961. He was chairman of an advisory committee for the Occupational Safety and Health Administration at the Department of Labor from 1971 to 1975. He died on November 29, 1987 in Tempe, Arizona.

From the description of Pyle, Howard, 1906-1987 (U.S. National Archives and Records Administration). naId: 10573758

John Howard Pyle, ninth governor of Arizona, was born at Sheridan, Wyoming on March 25, 1906. He was the son of the Reverend Thomas Miller Pyle and Marie (Anderson) Pyle. On August 9, 1930, he married Lucile Hanna at Tempe, Arizona. Their two daughters were named Mary Lou and Virginia Ann. He held honorary doctoral degrees in Laws from the University of Redlands (1950) and in Humane Letters from Chapman College (1953).

After graduation from high school at Columbus, Nebraska in 1924, Pyle found employment as a radio singer at Lincoln, Nebraska until his family moved to Tempe. In 1930, following periods of activity as a railway timekeeper, a realtor, and an advertising writer with the Arizona Republican newspaper, Pyle was named program manager and vice president of the Phoenix area affiliate of the National Broadcasting Corporation, KTAR radio. In 1935 he organized the annual Grand Canyon Easter Sunrise broadcast. In the 1930's, he also began radio narrations of the Flagstaff (Arizona) All Indian Pow Wows.

Pyle was an NBC correspondent in the Pacific Theater of Operations in the Second World War, where he prepared a radio program comprising interviews with Arizonans in the military services in various combat zones. He also reported the Japanese surrender, the American occupation of Japan, and the World Security Conference at San Francisco.

In 1948, Pyle circulated nominating petitions for the office of Governor of Arizona but withdrew his candidacy before the primary election. In 1950, however, his campaign was successful. He was re-elected in 1952. As a part of his campaign of that year, he delivered the address What is Right for America at the Republican National Convention at Chicago, Illinois. Pyle was defeated in the gubernatorial race by former senator Ernest W. McFarland in 1954. Some analysts subsequently attributed his defeat to a raid conducted by state police, in that year, on a community of polygamists at Short Creek, Arizona. While Governor, Pyle was a de facto member of the Arizona Board of Regents of the University and State Colleges. He was also a Trustee of the University of Redlands.

A month after leaving the Governor's Office, Pyle was appointed an administrative assistant to President Dwight D. Eisenhower in the area of intergovernmental relations. He was soon promoted to deputy assistant for federal state relations. Among his duties were the publishing of an Administration newsletter among departmental and party leaders and planning for the President's committee on traffic safety.

Pyle left the White House in 1959 to assume the presidency of the National Safety Council. He described the Council's life saving accomplishments during his tenure as the most rewarding of experiences . He remained president until his retirement in 1973 and thereafter continued his appointment as a Director. In connection with his safety related activities, Pyle also became Chairman of the OSHA National Advisory Committee upon the passage of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970.

In 1980, Pyle was elected a director of the Central Arizona Water Conservation District, which was established by the same election to administer the distribution of waters brought to Arizona by the Central Arizona Project canal network. He remained in this directorship until his death at Tempe in 1987.

In addition to his official and professional posts, Governor Pyle was active in civic affairs and occupied numerous chairmanships and directorships in community service and philanthropic organizations, including the Western Governors' Conference, the Tempe Historical Society, the Tempe St. Luke's Hospital, the Arizona Boys' Ranch, Tempe's Chamber of Commerce and United States Bicentennial Committee, and the Phoenix Stock Show.

SOURCES:

Carr, Janelle Howard Pyle 1981, Pyle Collection, Box 103, Folder 4.

Gryder, Robert John Howard Pyle, 1951-55, in John Myers, ed. The Governors of Arizona, 1912-1990 (Phoenix, Arizona: Heritage Publishers, Inc.) 1989.

Howard Pyle, Pyle Collection, Box 25, Folder 1.

Howard Pyle: The Man Behind Arizona's Best Known Voice, unattributed pamphlet, Pyle Collection, Box 99, Folder 5.

From the guide to the Howard Pyle Photograph Collection, 1883-1987, 1935-1987, (Arizona State University Libraries Arizona Collection)

John Howard Pyle, ninth governor of Arizona, was born at Sheridan, Wyoming on March 25, 1906. He was the son of the Reverend Thomas Miller Pyle and Marie (Anderson) Pyle. On August 9, 1930, he married Lucile Hanna at Tempe, Arizona. Their two daughters were named Mary Lou and Virginia Ann. He held honorary doctoral degrees in Laws from the University of Redlands (1950) and in Humane Letters from Chapman College (1953).

After graduation from high school at Columbus, Nebraska in 1924, Pyle found employment as a radio singer at Lincoln, Nebraska until his family moved to Tempe. In 1930, following periods of activity as a railway timekeeper, a realtor, and an advertising writer with the Arizona Republican newspaper, Pyle was named program manager and vice president of the Phoenix area affiliate of the National Broadcasting Corporation, KTAR radio. In 1935 he organized the annual Grand Canyon Easter Sunrise broadcast. In the 1930's, he also began radio narrations of the Flagstaff (Arizona) All Indian Pow Wows.

Pyle was an NBC correspondent in the Pacific Theater of Operations in the Second World War, where he prepared a radio program comprising interviews with Arizonans in the military services in various combat zones. He also reported the Japanese surrender, the American occupation of Japan, and the World Security Conference at San Francisco.

In 1948, Pyle circulated nominating petitions for the office of Governor of Arizona but withdrew his candidacy before the primary election. In 1950, however, his campaign was successful. He was re-elected in 1952. As a part of his campaign of that year, he delivered the address What is Right for America at the Republican National Convention at Chicago, Illinois. Pyle was defeated in the gubernatorial race by former senator Ernest W. McFarland in 1954. Some analysts subsequently attributed his defeat to a raid conducted by state police, in that year, on a community of polygamists at Short Creek, Arizona. While Governor, Pyle was a de facto member of the Arizona Board of Regents of the University and State Colleges. He was also a Trustee of the University of Redlands.

A month after leaving the Governor's Office, Pyle was appointed an administrative assistant to President Dwight D. Eisenhower in the area of intergovernmental relations. He was soon promoted to deputy assistant for federal state relations. Among his duties were the publishing of an Administration newsletter among departmental and party leaders and planning for the President's committee on traffic safety.

Pyle left the White House in 1959 to assume the presidency of the National Safety Council. He described the Council's life saving accomplishments during his tenure as the most rewarding of experiences . He remained president until his retirement in 1973 and thereafter continued his appointment as a Director. In connection with his safety related activities, Pyle also became Chairman of the OSHA National Advisory Committee upon the passage of the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970.

In 1980, Pyle was elected a director of the Central Arizona Water Conservation District, which was established by the same election to administer the distribution of waters brought to Arizona by the Central Arizona Project canal network. He remained in this directorship until his death at Tempe in 1987.

In addition to his official and professional posts, Governor Pyle was active in civic affairs and occupied numerous chairmanships and directorships in community service and philanthropic organizations, including the Western Governors' Conference, the Tempe Historical Society, the Tempe St. Luke's Hospital, the Arizona Boys' Ranch, Tempe's Chamber of Commerce and United States Bicentennial Committee, and the Phoenix Stock Show.

From the guide to the Howard Pyle Collection, 1883-1987, 1935-1987, (Arizona State University Libraries Arizona Collection)

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External Related CPF

https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n93045685

https://catalog.archives.gov/id/10573758

https://viaf.org/viaf/28743051

https://www.wikidata.org/entity/Q880745

https://www.worldcat.org/identities/lccn-n93045685

https://id.loc.gov/authorities/n93045685

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eng

Latn

Subjects

Easter service

Government executives

Governor

Governors

Land use, Rural

Leases

Legal instruments

Manuscripts

Polygamy

Rent

Traffic safety

Water resources development

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Places

Isleworth (London, England)

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Arizona

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United States

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England

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Grand Canyon (Ariz.)

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Phoenix (Ariz.)

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Luke Air Force Base (Ariz.)

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United States

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Central Arizona Water Conservation District

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Colorado City (Ariz.)

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Arizona

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England--Isleworth (London)

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<conventionDeclaration><citation>VIAF</citation></conventionDeclaration>

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Identity Constellation Identifier(s)

w69w0dqz

3612253