Remembering David McCullough (September 2022 | Volume: 67, Issue: 4)

Remembering David McCullough

AH article image

Authors: Edwin S. Grosvenor

Historic Era: Era 10: Contemporary United States (1968 to the present)

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September 2022 | Volume 67, Issue 4

David McCullough got his start as a writer and editor at American Heritage. Simon & Schuster.
David McCullough got his start as a writer and editor at American Heritage from 1965 to 1970. Simon & Schuster

David McCullough recalled the moments that got him started “in the history business.” In 1965, he came across a spectacular photograph of the unveiling of the Statue of Liberty. Showing it to the editors of American Heritage, he was invited to write an article which was published in the February issue the following year as “Hail, Liberty!”

He joined the staff of our magazine and was researching in the Library of Congress when a curator pointed out a collection of photographs of the Johnstown Flood the research center had just acquired. In that disaster in 1889, an earthen dam failed and sent a mass of water downriver that crushed buildings and killed 2209 people.

“I grew up in that part of Pennsylvania and had heard about the Johnstown flood all my life,” McCullough later recalled. “I knew that a dam had broken, but, beyond that, I didn't know anything. I was astounded by the violence of what had happened and the drama of it.”

the johnstown flood
In telling the story of the Johnstown Flood, McCullough learned the importance of drama and human interest in writing history. 

McCullough felt that he had "stumbled upon a story that I thought was powerful, exciting, and very worth telling." In this issue, we reprint the account he wrote, "Run for Your Lives!” 

During the research for his Johnstown flood article, McCullough made another discovery. “I wanted to be able to read a really first-rate book about the incredible story behind the disaster at Johnstown in 1889, and I found there was no such book. I thought, ‘Well maybe you could write the book that you would like to read.’” 

After McCullough wrote about the Amoskeag Mills in American Heritage
After McCullough wrote about the Amoskeag Mills as American Heritage's Conservation Editor in 1970, parts of what had once been the world's largest textile mills were saved from planned demolition and were repurposed.

So, for the next three years, he worked on his first book at night and on weekends. The Johnstown Flood came out in 1968 and was a major success.

McCullough continued to work in a variety of roles at American Heritage, including as head of a department focusing on conservation and historic preservation. He wrote about such topics as an environmentalist struggling to save scenic West Virginia from strip mining, and the planned demolition of the Amoskeag Mills in New Hampshire, once the largest textile mill in the world.

He also worked as a book editor at American Heritage Publishing. Historian Douglas Brinkley recently wrote in the Washington Post about learning from McCullough when he edited his history of the United States.

“I first worked