Despite its problems, the geyser was his personal favorite among his many contributions to the City. George Thomas Delacorte, Jr. He attended Boys High School and went to Harvard before transferring to Columbia, where he graduated in By that time, he was married and brought his baby son, Albert, to the ceremony. He was determined not to follow in the footsteps of his lawyer father and went to work for a small publishing company as advertising director for the magazine Snappy Stories.
In , he founded Dell Publishing Co. Dell began operation in a one-room office on West 23rd Street with George and a staff of two. But there was a gimmick. To the delight of generations of children, his pulp magazines were soon joined by comic books—featuring Woody Woodpecker, Bugs Bunny, and Walt Disney characters such as Mickey Mouse and Pluto.
Dell was soon selling million comic books a year, with Walt Disney comics alone sometimes accounting for three million copies a month. In Dell had formed its hardback division, Delacorte Press, principally to assure a continuing supply of material for its paperback imprints. Women are more loyal. Women of course have their shortcomings.
George Delacorte with Mayor Koch at an award dinner. George Delacorte did not forget his alma mater, Columbia University. His gifts included the ornamental iron gates at Broadway and th Street; landscaping of College Walk and the great lawn at South Field; and new dormitories. Delacorte Center for Magazine Journalism. His other charitable interests included yearly gifts to Columbia Medical School and Old Masters paintings and maintenance funds to the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
A widower, George remarried in His second wife, Valerie Pascal, was the widow of Gabriel Pascal, a movie producer. In his later years, George remained vigorous—and mischievous. Delacorte also built the majestic fountains at City Hall and Columbus Circle, along with the geyser at the tip of Roosevelt Island.
The foot geyser provoked outrage as well as admiration. Its giant jet threw polluted water from the East River into the air, forcing him to chlorinate it. But the chlorine harmed nearby trees that residents had planted to improve their view, producing further complaints.
Delacorte said he liked to see something for his money, and refused to serve on boards of museums, schools or hospitals.
If you feed them you just keep them in the same strata. He founded Dell Publishing in at age He sold more than 30 million every month. Their books were then printed in paperback by Dell. Delacorte, a graduate of Columbia University, also presented several large gifts to his alma mater over the years.
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