Gilbert M. Grosvenor Reflects on 50 Years at National Geographic

Jan 27 2023

Clock icon WHEN:

Jan 27, 2023 at 2:00pm

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Ballroom

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Cecily Scott Martin

[email protected]

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Special Event

Registration/tickets required

Gilbert Grosvenor, the former Chairman of the National Geographic Society and Editor of its magazine, will speak in a question and answer session on Friday, Jan. 27 at 2 p.m. in the Ballroom.

Grosvenor will reflect on his career and the evolution of journalism over the last six decades. The event is sponsored by the History and Heritage Committee of the National Press Club. Grosvenor will be interviewed by his brother, Edwin S. Grosvenor, Editor of American Heritage Magazine. The Grosvenor family’s involvement in the National Press Club goes back over 100 years. Gil’s grandfather, Gilbert H. Grosvenor, the Geographic’s long-time Editor and first full-time employee, was a member of the Club at least since 1914. Gil Grosvenor was photographed voting in a Club election with his father and grandfather in 1956.

Grosvenor recently published A Man of the World: My Life at National Geographic which describes audacious feats of exploration, from the successful hunt for the Titanic to Jane Goodall's field studies. Offering a rare portrait of one of the world's most iconic media empires, this revealing autobiography makes an impassioned argument to know―and care for―our planet.

Though his career path had been paved by four generations of his family before him, Gilbert M. Grosvenor left his own mark on the National Geographic Society, founded in 1888 and recognized the world over by its ubiquitous yellow border.

In his book, Grosvenor shows us what it was like to "grow up Geographic" in a family home where explorers like Robert Peary, Louis Leakey, and Jane Goodall regularly crossed the threshold. As staff photographer, editor in chief and then president of the organization, Grosvenor oversaw the diversification into television, film, books, as well as its flagship magazine, which under his tenure reached a peak circulation of nearly 11 million. He also narrates the shift from a nonprofit, family-focused enterprise to the more corporate, bottom-line focused world of publishing today.

For Grosvenor, running National Geographic wasn’t just a job. It was a legacy, motivated by a passion not just to leave the world a better place, but also to motivate others to do so, too.

Three generations of the Grosvenor family vote in the National Press Club election on December 14, 1956. Standing, left to right, are Gilbert H. Grosvenor, Chairman of the Society at the time, his son, Melville Bell Grosvenor, then President and Editor of the National Geographic Magazine, his son, Gilbert M. Grosvenor, on the magazine’s illustration staff, and Frank Holeman, President of the National Press Club.