Jon Meacham

Jon Meacham

Managing editor, Newsweek

Jon Meacham’s book American Gospel: God, the Founding Fathers, and the Making of a Nation, has become a bestseller since its publication in early 2006.

Newsweek’s managing editor since 1998, Meacham was named editor of the weekly newsmagazine in October 2006. In this position, he oversees all day-to-day editorial operations of Newsweek and Newsweek.com.

Meacham began his journalism career as a reporter with The Chattanooga Times from 1991-1992. He was an editor for two years at The Washington Monthly. After arriving at Newsweek in January 1995, he became National Affairs editor in June of that year, supervising coverage of politics and breaking news. In 1998, he edited Newsweek’s coverage of the Monica Lewinsky scandal and President Bill Clinton’s impeachment. That coverage was honored with a 1999 National Magazine Award for Reporting.

Meacham also has written cover stories on politics, religion, guns in America, race, and President Ronald Reagan’s death. He played a key role in editing coverage of the September 11, 2001 attacks, for which Newsweek received a National Magazine Award for General Excellence. The magazine won the same award again in 2003 for coverage of President Bush and the war in Iraq.

His books also include Franklin and Winston: An Intimate Portrait of an Epic Friendship, published in 2003, a chronicle of the wartime relationship between Roosevelt and Churchill. In 2001, he edited Voices in Our Blood: America’s Best on the Civil Rights Movement, a literary anthology of the most important non-fiction accounts of the 20th century battle against Jim Crow. He is working on a biography of Andrew Jackson and his White House circle.

Born in Chattanooga in 1969, Meacham is a graduate of The University of the South in Sewanee, Tenn. He is a communicant of St. Thomas Episcopal Church Fifth Avenue and serves on the Vestry of the 180-year-old parish. He also is a member of the Vestry of Trinity Church Wall Street and, in 2005, was awarded an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters degree from Yale University’s Berkeley Divinity School. Meacham lives in New York City with his wife, Keith, director of development at Harlem Day Charter School, and their two children.

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Jon Meacham

Managing editor, Newsweek

Jon Meacham’s book American Gospel: God, the Founding Fathers, and the Making of a Nation, has become a bestseller since its publication in early 2006. Newsweek’s managing editor since 1998, Meacham was named editor of the weekly newsmagazine in October 2006. In this position, he oversees all day-to-day editorial operations of Newsweek and Newsweek.com. more »

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November 14, 2006 6:20 PM

About Jon Meacham

For as long as I can remember, I have been endlessly curious about the past -- or, put more precisely, about how the things that are came to be the way they are. Southerners -- I am from Tennessee -- tend to be historically minded; as Faulkner noted long ago, the past is never dead; it isn't even past. And so from an early age I have loved all kinds of history, including the history of religious faith.

I grew up in the Episcopal Church, went to religious schools (including an Episcopal Montessori, which is rather redundant when you think about it) and consider myself a believing, middle-of-the-road American Protestant. I go to church every week, and I read the Daily Office (those are ancient sets of prayers composed for morning and evening). But beyond my own religious views, I am fascinated by the ways in which faith -- and its absence and its abuses -- has shaped the world in which we live.

I believe strongly -- totally -- in religious liberty and freedom of conscience; I think Thomas Jefferson was brilliantly on the mark when he said this: "Our particular principles of religion are a subject of accountability to our God alone; I inquire after no man's, and trouble none with mine; nor is it given to us in this life to know whether yours or mine, our friend's or our foes, are exactly the right." The best way forward through what George Eliot once called the "dim lights and tangled circumstance" of life is to talk and to listen, and to seek a culture in which people of sundry beliefs, or no belief at all, may live together peaceably and graciously. We have passions enough to stoke conflicts between people and between nations; the goal of "On Faith" and of our ongoing coverage of religion is to shed light rather than to generate heat, in the service of moving ahead toward what Churchill once called "the broad, sunlit uplands."




December 7, 2006 11:54 AM

Conveying That Faith Is A Most Ordinary Thing

My wife and I are at the very beginning of this particular journey.

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On Faith is an interactive conversation on religion moderated by Newsweek Editor Jon Meacham and Sally Quinn of The Washington Post. It is produced jointly by Newsweek and washingtonpost.com, as is PostGlobal, a conversation on international affairs. Please send your comments, questions and suggestions for On Faith to David Waters, its producer.