Jim McNamara / Washington Post
Patricia Buckley Bozell was born into a Catholic family whose fortune originated in Central and South American oil fields. Among her nine siblings were the late William F. Buckley Jr., who founded the National Review, and James L. Buckley, a former Conservative Party U.S. senator from New York.
Patricia Buckley Bozell, 81; conservative matriarch was co-founder of opinion journal
Jim McNamara / Washington Post
Patricia Buckley Bozell was born into a Catholic family whose fortune originated in Central and South American oil fields. Among her nine siblings were the late William F. Buckley Jr., who founded the National Review, and James L. Buckley, a former Conservative Party U.S. senator from New York.
Patricia Buckley Bozell, who was a matriarch of a prominent conservative family and helped start Triumph, an opinion journal of Roman Catholic orthodoxy, died Saturday at her home in Washington, D.C. She was 81 and had throat cancer.
Bozell was born into a Catholic family whose fortune originated in Central and South American oil fields. Among her nine siblings were the late William F. Buckley Jr., who founded the magazine National Review, and James L. Buckley, a former Conservative Party U.S. senator from New York.
Bozell was born into a Catholic family whose fortune originated in Central and South American oil fields. Among her nine siblings were the late William F. Buckley Jr., who founded the magazine National Review, and James L. Buckley, a former Conservative Party U.S. senator from New York.
FOR THE RECORD:
This article omitted Patricia Buckley Bozell's four daughters from the list of survivors.
FOR THE RECORD:
This article omitted Patricia Buckley Bozell's four daughters from the list of survivors.
FOR THE RECORD:
Bozell obituary: The obituary in Thursday's California section of Patricia Buckley Bozell, a member of a prominent conservative family who helped start the Catholic journal Triumph, listed six sons as her surviving children. She is also survived by four daughters. —
She married L. Brent Bozell Jr., a National Review editor with whom she launched Triumph in 1966. The magazine lasted nearly a decade, and as the second-in-command editor, Bozell helped shape its voice against legalized abortion and in favor of the traditional church in response to Vatican II reforms.
Among her 10 children was L. Brent Bozell III, who began the Media Research Center, a conservative watchdog group.
Bozell was less public than many in her family, but in March 1971 she attracted press attention with an attempted physical confrontation with radical feminist Ti-Grace Atkinson at a Catholic University forum.
Before an audience of 800, Atkinson said the Virgin Mary was more "used" than if she had participated in a sexual conception.
"I can't let her say that!" Bozell yelled as she ran toward Atkinson and tried to slap her. Her hand struck a microphone.
Afterward, Bozell told the Washington Post: "If it comes down to violence for social protest, I do believe in it if there's adequate provocation. I went in there, heard blasphemy and acted."
Patricia Lee Buckley was born April 23, 1927, in New York City and raised in Sharon, Conn., and Camden, S.C.
After an early education abroad, she graduated from the private Nightingale-Bamford School in New York.
She received her bachelor's degree from Vassar College in 1948 and married Bozell the next year. He died in 1997.
Since 1982, she had been a freelance editor at Regnery Publishing as well as at the National Review, American Spectator magazine and Communio: International Catholic Review.
With James R. Whelan, she was the co-author of "Catastrophe in the Caribbean: The Failure of America's Human Rights Policy in Central America" (1984).
Survivors include six sons, two brothers, two sisters, 24 grandchildren and 16 great-grandchildren.
She married L. Brent Bozell Jr., a National Review editor with whom she launched Triumph in 1966. The magazine lasted nearly a decade, and as the second-in-command editor, Bozell helped shape its voice against legalized abortion and in favor of the traditional church in response to Vatican II reforms.
Among her 10 children was L. Brent Bozell III, who began the Media Research Center, a conservative watchdog group.
Bozell was less public than many in her family, but in March 1971 she attracted press attention with an attempted physical confrontation with radical feminist Ti-Grace Atkinson at a Catholic University forum.
Before an audience of 800, Atkinson said the Virgin Mary was more "used" than if she had participated in a sexual conception.
"I can't let her say that!" Bozell yelled as she ran toward Atkinson and tried to slap her. Her hand struck a microphone.
Afterward, Bozell told the Washington Post: "If it comes down to violence for social protest, I do believe in it if there's adequate provocation. I went in there, heard blasphemy and acted."
Patricia Lee Buckley was born April 23, 1927, in New York City and raised in Sharon, Conn., and Camden, S.C.
After an early education abroad, she graduated from the private Nightingale-Bamford School in New York.
She received her bachelor's degree from Vassar College in 1948 and married Bozell the next year. He died in 1997.
Since 1982, she had been a freelance editor at Regnery Publishing as well as at the National Review, American Spectator magazine and Communio: International Catholic Review.
With James R. Whelan, she was the co-author of "Catastrophe in the Caribbean: The Failure of America's Human Rights Policy in Central America" (1984).
Survivors include six sons, two brothers, two sisters, 24 grandchildren and 16 great-grandchildren.
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