Everything about Edward Beale Mclean totally explained
Edward Beale McLean (
1889 –
1941) was the publisher and owner of the
Washington Post from
1916 until
1933.
Edward was born into a publishing fortune founded by his paternal grandfather
Washington McLean who owned the
Washington Post and the
Cincinnati Enquirer. He was the only child of
John Roll McLean and the former
Emily Truxtun Beale, the daughter of
Edward F. Beale and the former Emily Truxton. Emily was a hostess and socialite who was the inspiration for the character
Virginia Dare in the
1880 comic
novel, by
Henry Adams .
In 1908 he married
Evalyn Walsh, the only surviving child and sole heiress of mining millionaire
Thomas Walsh. Ned McLean purchased the
Hope Diamond for his bride on a whim. While the couple eloped, they did so with $200,000 in "pin" money for their honeymoon expenses, only to find part way through the honeymoon that they were broke and couldn't pay a hotel bill when in Paris. Their parents, happy that they hadn't done anything drastic, such as trying to buy the hotel, happily wired money. The couple eventually returned to Washington and finally settled in at the McLean family's country house 'Friendship' (now the
McLean Gardens Condominium
development) along Wisconsin Avenue to the south of the Tenleytown neighborhood of Washington, DC.
The McLeans had four children, three of whom became well known for their multiple marriages and divorces: Vinson Walsh McLean (an epileptic who died at the age of nine, following a traffic accident), Edward Beale McLean Jr, John Roll McLean II, and Emily Washington McLean (who later changed her name to Evalyn Walsh McLean and committed suicide at age 25). The couple, whose marriage was rent by infidelity and substance abuse (he was a spectacular alcoholic, while she was addicted to morphine), divorced in 1929. Ned McLean eventually became the common-law husband of
Rose Douras, a sister of the Hollywood film star
Marion Davies.
The McLeans' frivolous spending accelerated during their marriage and their inability to understand the basics of money management resulted in their virtual bankruptcy towards the end of their lives. Together, the couple wasted two family fortunes worth millions (billions in current cash value) by splurging on such exotic (some considered wasteful) things as a million-dollar birthday party for their dog, who was allowed to wear the Hope Diamond on his day of honor.
Following the
Wall Street Crash of 1929, McLean quickly fell into bankruptcy. It was at a bankruptcy auction in
1933 when the
Washington Post was purchased by a member of the
Federal Reserve's board of governors,
Eugene Meyer, who restored the paper's health and reputation.
The couple's notoriety is reflected by their appearance in
Cole Porter's title song to the 1934 musical,
Anything Goes:
» "When Missus Ned McLean (God bless her)
Can get Russian reds to "yes" her,
» Then I suppose
Anything goes."
McLean and his wife were avid supporters of
Warren G. Harding, whom they met through
Nicholas and
Alice Roosevelt Longworth. When Harding was elected President, he named Ned McLean to head up Harding's
inaugural committee.
A chronic
alcoholic given to prolonged periods of
binge drinking, Ned McLean suffered from ongoing psychiatric issues that affected his personality. Eventually, he was committed to a private mental facility near
Baltimore, Maryland, where he died in
1941.
The suburban community (
Census Designated Place) of
McLean, Virginia, is named for McLean's father
John Roll McLean.
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