Kennett Love


Kennett Farrar Potter Love was an American journalist for The New York Times.

Early life

Love was born in St. Louis, Missouri on August 17, 1924 to Mary Chauncey Love and John Allan Love, founder of Prudential Savings of St. Louis. His siblings are John, Cynthia, Nathalie, Mary, and Deborah.
He attended Princeton University, receiving an Associate in Arts degree, before serving as a pilot in the Navy Air Corps during World War II.
In 1946, he married Marie Felicite Pratt, a descendant of Charles Pratt, Pratt Institute founder, with whom he had two daughters, Mary and Suzanna, and two sons, John and Nicholas.
Love received a Bachelor of Arts degree from Columbia College in 1948.

Career

In 1948, after finishing college, Love began working as a reporter for The Hudson-Dispatch, a newspaper in Union City, New Jersey before joining The New York Times in 1948, working in the morgue before becoming a newspaper reporter in 1950.
As a foreign correspondent, his assignments included coverage of activities in the Middle East, East Africa, West Africa and Europe.
In 1953, Love wrote about the CIA-orchestrated plot to overthrow Iran’s democratically-elected prime minister. Love and a reporter for The Associated Press wrote about the decrees signed by Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi that called for Fazlollah Zahedi to replace Mohammad Mosaddegh. The release of the decrees, which helped legitimize the coup, was engineered by the CIA.
In 1954, when he was based in Cairo, Love wrote front-page articles about the discovery of a 50-foot boat that had been intended to convey the spirit of the pharaoh Cheops to the underworld.
In 1962, Love left The New York Times for the first national monthly news magazine, USA * 1: Monthly News & Current History, its editors included Lewis H. Lapham and Robert K. Massie.
Between 1963 and 1964, Love served as a Peace Corps Planner-Evaluator in Ethiopia, Morocco, Tunisia and in training centers in the United States.
Between 1964 and 1968, Love was an associate professor at Princeton University's School of Oriental Studies.
Between 1971 and 1973, Love was a professor of journalism at the American University in Cairo, and served as a Cairo correspondent for ABC News. Love was a correspondent and contributor for broadcaster CBS.
In 1974 Love began a career as a free-lance writer, editor and photographer.
In 1980, someone found a copy of Love’s 1960 term paper, for a professor at Princeton, in the sealed archives of Allen Dulles, and leaked it to CounterSpy, who accused Love of having been a CIA agent. He denied it.
In 1984, Love denied helping the CIA with the 1953 Iran coup, while working for The New York Times, suing Wall Street Journal reporter Jonathan Kwitny, until, at least, 1993.
Love was a contributor to the publications New York Times Magazine, Washington Monthly, and Middle East Journal, and others.
Love began research and interviews for a history of the 1953 coup in Iran.

Awards

Love's sister, Deborah, was the wife of Peter Matthiessen
In 1946, Love married Marie Felicite Pratt, later, his partner was Blair Seagram. Love was a descendant of Dr. Bernard Gaines Farrar.
Love was a sailor, who taught celestial navigation at the East Hampton Marine Museum. In 1983, sailed from Sag Harbor to Dark Harbor, Me., in an 18-ft. ketch-rigged open skiff. He made ocean voyages in the Mediterranean, Atlantic, Caribbean and Pacific in yachts.
Love designed several buildings, including a house in Sag Harbor and a house in East Hampton.
Love had two daughters, Mary Christy Love Sadron and Suzanna Potter Love; two sons, John and Nicholas; two sisters, Mary Lehmann and Nathalie Love; a niece, Rue Matthiessen Shaughnessy; a nephew, Alex Matthiessen; and five grandchildren.

Death

Love died on May 13, 2013 of a respiratory failure at his home in Southampton, New York, aged 88.