Ivy
Ledbetter Lee State Historical Marker Located at
the Polk County Courthouse, Rockmart, Ga. (text)
IVY LEDBETTER LEE FOUNDER
OF MODERN PUBLIC RELATIONS 1877
- 1934 Ivy Ledbetter Lee, public
relations expert, author, lecturer, and philanthropist, was born July 16, 1877,
near Cedartown. He attended Emory College for two years and then went to Princeton,
where he earned his A.B. in 1898, paying his way by working on university and
New York newspapers. In January, 1899, he arrived in New York "with a raincoat,
a diploma, and five dollars," and found work as a reporter. In
1904 pursuing his idea that Big Business needed better public relations, he opened
a counseling office in New York. By 1915 he had begun a lifetime association as
John D. Rockefeller's publicity counsel, especially in Rockefeller's widespread
benevolences. Among Lee's other clients were the Pennsylvania Railroad and Bethlehem
Street, as well as numerous charities and churches to which he donated his services. The
founder of the profession of Public Relations, Ivy Lee, a Georgia gentleman who
described himself as a "physician to corporate bodies," believed that
corporations should not conceal the truth from the press and that business leaders
should not shun publicity. His principles helped to make American business more
public-spirited and humanitarian. He died of a brain tumor in New York City, Nov.
8, 1934. 115-7
GEORGIA HISTORICAL COMMISSION 1965 ©
Carl Vinson Institute of Government, The University of Georgia
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