Jerome Irving Rodale (/ˈroʊdeɪl/;[1] August 16, 1898 – June 8, 1971) was a publisher, editor, and author who founded Rodale, Inc. in Emmaus, Pennsylvania, as well as Rodale Institute (formerly the Soil Health Foundation).
Jerome Irving Rodale | |
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Born | Jerome Irving Cohen (1898-08-16)August 16, 1898 New York City, U.S. |
Died | June 8, 1971(1971-06-08) (aged 72) New York City, U.S. |
Occupation |
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Known for | Organic gardening |
Spouse | Anna Andrews (m. 1927) |
Children | 3, including Robert and Ruth |
Rodale was an early advocate of sustainable agriculture and organic farming in the United States. As an author, his work included several magazines and books, including books featuring different authors, on the subject of health. He popularized the term "organic" as a term for growing food without pesticides. Rodale also published works on other topics, including The Synonym Finder.
On June 8, 1971, Rodale died after suffering a fatal heart attack while appearing as a guest on a segment, which never aired, for The Dick Cavett Show. Rodale was taken to Roosevelt Hospital Center and pronounced dead on arrival at age 72.
Rodale was born in Manhattan on August 16, 1898, the son of an Orthodox Jewish grocer who immigrated from Poland,[2] and raised in the tenements in the Lower East Side. Due to a poor relationship with his father, whose last name was Cohen (originally Lachofsky), he changed his surname to Rodale as an ode to his mother's maiden name, Rouda. He worked as an accountant for New York City from 1917-20 and worked for the Internal Revenue Service from 1920-21. Rodale and his brother, Joseph, co-founded Rodale Manufacturing, a maker of electrical equipment, in New York in 1923.[2] He married Anna Andrews in 1927; she died in 2000 at 95.[3] They had three children: Robert Rodale (1930–1990), Nina Rodale,[4] and Ruth Rodale.[5]
Rodale was already concerned with his health at this time, as he had 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[6] and invented an exercising device.[7] The Rodale brothers moved Rodale Manufacturing to Emmaus, Pennsylvania in 1930 to cut costs during the Great Depression. He founded Rodale Press in 1930, marketing books and magazines. Inspired by his encounter with the ideas of Albert Howard, he 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.[8][9][5] In 1942, Rodale Press started publishing Organic Farming and Gardening magazine, which promotes organic horticulture; it was later retitled Organic Gardening. In 1945, he wrote Pay Dirt, the first American book on organic gardening.[10] To Rodale, agriculture and health were inseparable. He felt that soil required compost and eschewed pesticides and synthetic fertilizers and that plants grown in such soil would help people stay healthier.
One of Rodale's most successful projects was Prevention magazine, founded in 1950, which promotes disease prevention rather than trying to cure it later.[8] It pioneered the return to whole grains, unrefined sweets, using little fat in food preparation, 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 opposed the consumption of milk and sugar, which he blamed for many diseases. He was not a vegetarian and frequently denounced vegetarianism.[11] Rodale once stated "I'm going to live to be 100, unless I'm run down by some sugar-crazed taxi driver."[12][13]
Rodale was also a playwright, operating the Cecilwood Theater in Fishkill, New York and the off-Broadway Rodale Theater at 62 East Fourth Street in the East Village of New York City. His plays included Toinette (1961) and The Hairy Falsetto (1964).[2][14]
Medical experts have described Rodale as a promoter of quackery.[15][16] For example, Rodale accused sugar of "causing criminals," and blamed various diseases including bronchitis and pneumonia on the consumption of bread. He also believed that consumers of cola drinks would become sterile.[16]
Rodale was an anti-vaccinationist.[17] He also made dubious claims about cancer. In his book Happy People Rarely Get Cancer (1970), Rodale said, "Negroes get less cancer than whites, for the Negro is a happy race. True, there is their problem of segregation, but the Negro race being what it is, I think a Negro sings just the same, and is not going to let segregation dampen his spirits as much as a similar problem would do to the white person."[17]
It was reported that Rodale took seventy food supplements every day. He was criticized for promoting unsubstantiated claims about vitamin supplements.[16] Stephen Barrett of Quackwatch commented that Prevention magazine was filled with "nonsense promoting dietary supplements... many articles contained therapeutic claims that would be illegal on product labels."[16]
The Oxford Encyclopedia of Food and Drink in America noted that the agricultural establishment "dismissed Rodale as a quack, crank, a gadfly, and a manure-pile worshiper."[18]
On June 8, 1971, Rodale died of a heart attack at the age of 72 while a guest on an early-evening taping of The Dick Cavett Show. The episode was slated to be aired later that evening. Rodale had stated 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!"[19] He had also previously said, "I'm going to live to be 100, unless I'm run down by some sugar-crazed taxi driver."[12][20] Rodale's last interaction with Cavett before dying was "offering the host his special asparagus boiled in urine".[21]
After his interview, Rodale remained onstage and was seated on a couch beside the next interviewee, New York Post columnist Pete Hamill. According to Dick Cavett, Hamill noticed that Rodale had appeared to lose consciousness and leaned over to Cavett and said, "This looks bad." Cavett is then said to have quipped, "Are we boring you, Mr. Rodale?" Cavett himself has "emphatically" denied any memory of saying this, though others who were in the studio have recalled it. Shortly thereafter, Cavett asked if there were any doctors in the audience. An internist and orthopedic surgeon, both in residency, rushed onto the stage and tried to revive Rodale with cardiopulmonary resuscitation. During an appearance on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson that originally aired February 5, 1982, Cavett said that "firefighters from across the street" also came to Rodale's aid. Although an electrocardiogram continued to show cardiac activity, Rodale could not be revived and was pronounced dead on arrival at Roosevelt Hospital.[22][23] The episode was never broadcast, although Cavett described the story in public appearances and on his blog.[19]
After Rodale's death, his son Robert Rodale ran the publishing firm until his own death in a car accident in 1990.[8] That work included editing the high-circulation Prevention magazine. Robert had competed in the Olympics in rifle shooting and was inducted into the United States Bicycling Hall of Fame in 1991.[24]
Rodale's granddaughter Maria Rodale became chairman and CEO of Rodale, Inc. She attributes her interest in the organic food movement to growing up on America's first certified organic farm.[25] In October 2017, New York media giant Hearst announced it would acquire the magazine and book businesses of the 90-year-old Rodale Inc. for an undisclosed sum.
The engagement of Miss Nina Rodale to Robert Hale Horstman was announced today by the prospective bride's parents ...
JI Rodale, Whose enthusiasm for organic farming (avoiding chemical fertilizers) brought him fame and fortune in recent years through his and books, ...
On September 20, 1990, Bob Rodale was killed in a traffic accident in Russia. He was there to develop plans for a long-term joint venture agreement. The first project completed was Novii Fermer, a Russian magazine devoted to sustainable agriculture. Upon Bob's death, his wife, Ardath, became Chief Executive Officer/Chairman of the Board.
'I'm going to live to be 100,' says the author of Natural Health, Sugar and the Criminal Mind, 'unless I'm run down by a sugar-crazed taxi driver.' ...
Organic-food crusader Jerome Rodale once boasted, "I will live to be 100 unless I'm run down by a sugar-crazed taxi driver." ...
J.I. Rodale, playwright, editor, author and publisher, has bought the three-story structure at 62 East Fourth Street to convert it into an intimate playhouse, theatre workshop and acting school.
I brought out the next guest, Pete Hamill, whose column ran in the New York Post. Rodale moved 'down one' to the couch. As Pete and I began to chat, Mr. Rodale suddenly made a snoring sound, which got a laugh. Comics would sometimes do that for a laugh while another comic was talking, pretending boredom. His head tilted to the side as Pete, in closeup as it happened, whispered audibly, 'This looks bad.' The audience laughed at that. I didn't, because I knew Rodale was dead. To this day, I don't know how I knew. I thought, 'Good God, I'm in charge here. What do I do?' Next thing I knew I was holding his wrist, thinking, I don't know anything about what a wrist is supposed to feel like.
Organic-food crusader Jerome Rodale once boasted, "I will live to be 100 unless I'm run down by a sugar-crazed taxi driver." ...
Robert Rodale, an exponent of organic farming and the head of a publishing empire whose magazines dealt with subjects like gardening, health and fitness, died yesterday in an automobile accident in Moscow. He was 60 years old and lived in Emmaus, Pa.
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