John Turner Sargent Sr. (June 26, 1924 – February 5, 2012) was president andCEO of theDoubleday and Company publishing house from 1963 to 1978, taking over from the previous president,Douglas Black. He led the expansion of the company from "a modest, family-controlled business to an industry giant with interests extending into broadcasting and baseball."[1] A socialite, he was active in New York's cultural circles.
John Turner Sargent was born probably onLong Island, New York and was raised inCedarhurst.[1] He was the son of Charles S. Sargent and his wife.[1] His paternal grandfather was botanistCharles Sprague Sargent, the first director of theArnold Arboretum atHarvard University.[1]
His father became successful in finance as a partner inHornblower & Weeks, a securities concern in New York. The young Sargent attended the privateSt. Mark's School and a year atHarvard College before enlisting in the Navy during World War II.[1]
In May 1953 Sargent marriedNeltje Doubleday, who was 18.[2] She was the granddaughter of the lateFrank N. Doubleday, who founded the Doubleday publishing company in 1897.[2] The couple had a daughter Ellen and sonJohn Turner Sargent Jr.
After they divorced in 1965, Neltje Doubleday Sargent moved with their children toWyoming. She remarried, bought a ranch, restored and operated the historicSheridan Inn, and established herself as an abstract painter.[1] In 2005 she received one of the annual Wyoming Governor's Art Awards.
Sargent remarried on December 21, 1985, to Elizabeth Nichols Kelly, the fiction and books editor ofCosmopolitan magazine. She brought her two children to the marriage.[3]
After the war, Sargent started working at Doubleday as a copywriter. He soon advanced to higher positions and had been there for years before his marriage to Neltje. He made his career in book publishing atDoubleday and Company, which he led through a major expansion and diversification. He ranged from editing the poetry ofTheodore Roethke to publishing bestsellers byStephen King and others; in the 1970s, he recruitedJackie Kennedy Onassis as an editor.[4]
In 1963 he became president andCEO of the Doubleday and Company publishing house. In the summer of 1972 his former wife Neltje Doubleday Kings led a shareholder effort to take the company public, but it was defeated. Her mother and brother supported Sargent in keeping the company privately held.[5]
While Sargent served as president and CEO until 1978, he led the company through a major expansion, expanding its publishing and diversifying its businesses. As reported by Bruce Weber,
By 1979, the year after he left the presidency and was made chairman, Doubleday was publishing 700 books annually. The company had bought a textbook subsidiary and the Dell Publishing Company, which included Dell paperbacks. It was operating more than a dozen book clubs, including the mammothLiterary Guild; more than two dozen Doubleday bookshops across the country; and four book printing and binding companies.[1]
Sargent also led the company's expansion into "radio and television broadcasting and film production."[1]
In 1978 Sargent became chairman of the company, serving until 1985.[6] Working in partnership withNelson Doubleday Jr., Sargent supported purchase of theNew York Mets.[1] When Doubleday was sold toBertelsmann during the Mets championship season of1986, he became chairman of the executive committee at Doubleday.[6]
Sargent was active in supporting literary and cultural institutions in the city. Deeply involved in its social life, he was described as a socialite and for years hosted a Christmas Eve party strictly for single people.[4]
Sargent was a trustee of theNew York Public Library, theNew York Zoological Society and theAmerican Academy in Rome.[3]
He died in 2012, aged 87, after recent years of frail health following a stroke.[1] He was survived by, among others, his wife Elizabeth, two children and grandchildren, and two stepchildren.
In 2005, theJohn Sargent Sr. First Novel Prize literary prize was established in his honor at theCenter for Fiction at theNew York Mercantile Library.
The award has been increased to $10,000; with $1,000 each for finalists on the shortlist. As of 2012, it is funded by Nancy Dunnan, a board member at the Center and non-fiction author. She has named it also for her father Ray Flaherty, a journalist with theChicago Tribune. It is now called the Flaherty-Dunnan First Novel Prize.[7]