Otto Scott

Otto Scott (May 26, 1918 May 5, 2006) was a journalist and author of corporate histories who also wrote biographies on notable figures such as the abolitionist John Brown, James I of England and Robespierre.

Early life

Otto Joseph Scott was born Otto Scott-Estrella, Jr. in New York City and was the son of a broker. Constantly troubled in his youth, he was unable to complete high school, yet with his initiative he was able to get work as a reporter for a newspaper in Fort Eustis, Virginia when he was 16 years old. He then worked for United Features Syndicate and the San Diego Union. When World War II broke out, he joined the United States Merchant Marine.

After the war, Scott worked in the advertising industry, then became editor of a manufacturing trade journal, Rubber World. In the course of his assignments, he interviewed Paul Blazer, the chairman of Ashland Oil, in Ashland, Kentucky, and was invited to write the history of the company. "He changed my life because he gave me a new trade," Scott says of the company chairman. "I didn't know I could write a book." From this beginning he worked on books in his later years detailing the corporate histories of Raytheon, Black & Decker and Arch Mineral Corporation.

Later life and conversion to Christianity

After writing biographies on notable figures in history, a major event occurred in his life which was his conversion to Christianity. Not a regular churchgoer by any stretch of the imagination, Otto said in an interview for Insight Magazine that he read the Four Gospels in one night and was converted shortly thereafter.

In his later years, he worked for Chalcedon Foundation and went on to publish his own newsletter The Compass which commented on events in history and present-day cultural affairs.

After suffering a fall in 2004 at his home near Portsmouth, New Hampshire, Otto returned to Federal Way, Washington to spend the last years of his life. He died in Issaquah, Washington on May 5, 2006.

According to scholars Edward Sebesta and Euan Hague, however, Scott's contributions as a historian and activist were closely linked to Neo-Confederate Christian activists, and his ideological opposition to the historic abolitionist, civil rights, and anti-apartheid movements is a matter of record.[1] Scott's hostility toward the abolitionist John Brown is particularly evident in his work, The Secret Six: John Brown and the Abolition Movement. While Scott was clearly a capable scholar, this work shows no primary research and a naked dependence upon the earlier anti-Brown biography by James C. Malin, a work that has long been discredited by Brown scholars.[2]

Otto Scott is credited for inventing the phrase, made popular by President Richard Nixon, "the silent majority". Otto Scott wrote a speech for the CEO of Ashland Oil, "The Silent Majority", delivered to the Chicago Men's Club (May 23, 1968).

Career highlights

Family

Otto Scott was married three times. His last wife was Anna Barney Scott. Otto Scott had four daughters from his three marriages.

References

  1. Edward H. Sebesta and Euan Hague, "The U.S. Civil War as a Theological War: Confederate Christian Nationalism and the League of the South," Canadian Review of American Studies 32:3 (2002): 267./
  2. This paragraph is contributed by Brown biographer, Louis A. DeCaro Jr., Ph.D. "For the record, I find Scott's work on Brown of little value, being nothing more than an ideological screed, albeit expertly prepared--the extreme opposite of Leftist portrayals that merely use Brown to advance that agenda. To my knowledge, no serious John Brown biographer or student would ever consult Scott's work, except in studying the most recent installment to the long-line of anti-Brown labors, most of them emanating from romancers of the Old South and the Confederacy." L. DeCaro Jr. to Wikipedia, Aug. 23, 2008.

Contemporary Authors Online, Gale, 2002

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, March 01, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.