Odd McIntyre: The Man Who Taught America About New York
For millions of people, their only knowledge about New York City was O.O. McIntyre’s daily column about life in the Big Apple
- By Greg Daugherty
- Smithsonian.com, April 25, 2011, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
What few of McIntyre’s out-of-town readers might have realized was that his New York often bore about as much resemblance to the real city as a Busby Berkeley musical. “Accuracy was his enemy and glamor was his god,” the New York Times observed in its obituary of him. “His map of New York came from his own imagination, with Hoboken next to Harlem if it suited his fancy, as it often did.”
Even fewer readers could have known that for much of his life, McIntyre suffered from a set of phobias that were remarkable in both number and variety. Those included a fear of being slapped on the back or having someone pick lint off his clothing. He was terrified that he might drop dead in the street. He disliked crowds and often preferred not to leave his Park Avenue apartment at all, except for nightly rides around the city, hunched in the back of his chauffeured blue Rolls-Royce. Further complicating his work as a reporter, he was deathly afraid of the telephone.
In many ways the name “Odd,” which he inherited from an uncle, could hardly have been more fitting. Among other things, he wrote mostly in red ink, owned 30 pairs of pajamas for wearing during the day and another 30 for the night, and loved to sprinkle himself with perfume. One interviewer counted 92 bottles on his bureau. Rival gossip columnist Walter Winchell wasn’t alone in calling him “the Very Odd McIntyre.”
McIntyre and his wife, Maybelle, were childless but owned a succession of dogs, including a Boston terrier named Junior and another named Billy, whose exploits were chronicled in endless detail. “I have often thought my friend O. O. McIntyre gave more space in his column to his little dog than I do to the U. S. Senate,” Will Rogers once wrote. “But it just shows Odd knows human nature better than I do. He knows that everybody at heart loves a dog, while I have to try and make converts to the Senate.” Billy was the subject of such classic McIntyre fare as “To Billy in Dog Heaven,” which supposedly elicited more mail than any other of his columns.
McIntyre died on February 14, 1938, days shy of his 54th birthday, apparently of a heart attack. His biographer and longtime editor, Charles B. Driscoll, speculated that he could have lived a lot longer had he not been afraid of doctors.
His death and the return of his body to Ohio were national news. Before his burial on a hillside overlooking the Ohio River, his remains lay in state at a Gallipolis mansion he and his wife had bought, renovated and furnished for their eventual return. McIntyre had written about the home but never set foot in it during the five years he owned it.
Today, a century after his arrival in New York, Odd McIntyre may be best known as the name of a cocktail—a mix of lemon juice, triple sec, brandy and Lillet. The O. O. McIntyre Park District in Gallia County, Ohio, bears his name, as does a journalism fellowship at the University Missouri. His name also concludes the official poem of the state of Oklahoma, which honors his friend Will Rogers: “Well, so long folks, it’s time to retire/I got to keep a date with Odd McIntyre.” But that’s about it.
McIntyre’s return to obscurity would probably not surprise him. “I am not writing for posterity nor do I believe anything I write will live for more than a week or so after publication,” he once insisted. “I have found satisfaction in entertaining people a little every day.”
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Comments (4)
This weekend I purchased an old scrapbook at a local antique store in Escondido, CA and found a short typewritten letter dated Feb 12, 1931, from "O. O. McIntyre" to " My Dear Mr. Barnes. The return address was 290 Park Avenue and was signed personally. It was such a nice letter, I wanted to see if I could identify O. O. McIntyre. Based on this article, I think this is the same person. Below is the letter in its entirety:
My Dear Mr Barnes:-
Thank you for your nice letter. It was very kind of you to let me know of your interest in my writings and I am deeply appreciative. Again thank you and be assured of my good wishes and to Mrs Barnes my lowest bow. Yours truly, O.O. McIntyre.
What a gentleman!
Posted by Timarie Bixler on January 6,2012 | 10:28 AM
The O. O. McIntyre article sounds like a summation with several direct quotes from The Life of O.O. McIntyre (The Greystone Press, N.Y., 1938) which I'm current reading. Good book. Good article.
Posted by Paul Roy on October 31,2011 | 11:11 AM
This is a good story on a very talented man with all his little phobias. It makes him greater than the sum total of all his fears.
Posted by Patricia M. Morgan on May 11,2011 | 06:42 PM
Wonderful article. I live in Gallipolis, Ohio,2 blocks from "Gatewood" the home of O.O. McIntyre and pass it each day on my way to work. I am the director of the Gallia County Historical Society. At the society we have quite a few items of Odd on display and may of his articles "New York Day By Day" so I am familiar with the life of Odd and Maybelle. This article showed me a different side, the New York side. I enjoyed this, and will pass it on to others in Gallipolis. Thank You.
Posted by MaryLee Marchi on April 26,2011 | 08:07 PM