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== Early life and education == | == Early life and education == | ||
⚫ | Robert Hilliard was born in New York City on June 25, 1925<ref name=Sanibel/> to Eda Hilliard, a Jewish French immigrant, and Russian immigrant Irving Hilliard. He was raised in a majority-Italian and Irish neighborhood, where he learned to defend himself against other boys and defend more vulnerable peers.<ref name=":1">{{Cite web |last=Williams |first=Roger |date=2024-11-07 |title=Resilience and redemption |url=https://naples.floridaweekly.com/articles/resilience-and-redemption/ |access-date=2024-12-21 |website=Naples Florida Weekly}}</ref> | ||
Robert Hilliard was born in New York City on June 25, 1925.<ref name=Sanibel/> | |||
⚫ | After WWII, Hilliard received his Bachelors from the ] in 1948. He earned two Master's degree at ]: a Masters of Arts (1949) and a Masters of Fine Arts (1950).<ref name=Sanibel/> His PHd. was from ] in 1959, an institution noted for their programs in journalism and the literary arts. In 1960, he followed with postgraduate work at ].<ref name=Sanibel/><ref name=":1"/> | ||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | =Military service and activism= | ||
⚫ | After WWII, Hilliard received his Bachelors from the ] in 1948. He earned two Master's degree at ]: a Masters of Arts (1949) and a Masters of Fine Arts (1950). |
||
⚫ | Hilliard was drafted into the U.S. army in February 1944, as a recent high school graduate at the age of 18. He was assigned to the Ninth Regiment of the ]. Having received instruction in ] and radio operation, he was responsible for serving in an advanced unit that would inform American command of the location of the enemy. He was soon wounded by ] fire, and later served during the bloody combat that took place at the ] in the ] in December 1944. He was wounded again in spring 1945 by flak from an 88mm German gun, and like many American troops, also suffered from ].<ref name="Sanibel" /> He received the Purple Heart for his service in the battle.<ref name=":1" /> | ||
== Activism == | |||
⚫ | |||
⚫ | Hilliard's belief in the ability of the media to affect public policy and his lifelong interest in racism and extremist groups may have been shaped by his activism during his Military service, where he was editor of a base newspaper and helped write and publish hundreds of letters hoping to affect American policy. In the immediate aftermath of the ], Hilliard was assigned to the 2nd Air Disarmament Wing, whose aim was to disarm the ].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Kiniry |first=Mike |date=2022-09-16 |title=Sanibel man tells untold story in 1945 |url=https://news.wgcu.org/2022-09-16/sanibel-man-tells-untold-story-in-1945 |access-date=2024-12-21 |website=WGCU PBS & NPR for Southwest Florida |language=en}}</ref> Hoping only to research a good story for a serviceman's newspaper he founded to provide news for allied troops, in May, 1945, he drove a jeep for miles to attend a concert put on by the newly liberated concentration camp survivors at the hospital at ]. He found himself driven to tears by the emaciated and sick survivors of ] and ], still on stretchers, without food, and wearing the cold, threadbare and inadequate striped uniforms they had formerly been issued as camp inmates. Hilliard and his partner Edward Herman, both Privates in the U.S. Army tried to buy food from the black market to supply refugees, but the supply was inadequate, and they lacked funds to make a significant improvement in the lives of the survivors. German citizens and American officers judged Hilliard and the survivors for buying food on the black market, despite their having few, if any other sources. Hilliard and his colleague discovered that significant quantities of the food being sent to the camps by the U.S. Military were routinely sold to the black market by American servicemen in charge of the camps.<ref name="Surviving"/><ref name="Sanibel" /><ref name="Surviving">Hilliard, Robert, ''Surviving the Americans'', (1979), New York, Seven Stories Press, pgs. 9, 192.</ref><ref name="Miracle">Hilliard, Robert, Speech Transcript of ''Displaced: Miracle at St. Otillien'', (Katz Jewish Community Center, Cherry Hill, New Jersey, 10 November 2002)</ref> | ||
⚫ | Hilliard was drafted into the U.S. army in February 1944, |
||
=== |
===Writing letters=== | ||
Risking a court martial, and acting against the stated military policy of refraining from political activities while in the service, Hilliard and a few compatriots wrote and printed hundreds of letters which they hoped would be read by American citizens, and Congressmen informing them of the absence of food, medicine, and clothing available to the surviving concentration camp survivors. To escape an immediate court martial, the letters had to be sent in bulk to Edward Herman's brother Leonard Herman who had political connections, and a few other Americans who had consented to distribute them to those in power. The letters were all addressed "Dear Friend" as letters from servicemen could only be sent to family and friends. President Truman somehow was given one of the letters, but was skeptical of their authenticity.<ref name="Surviving"/><ref name="Sanibel" /> | |||
⚫ | In the immediate aftermath of the ], Hilliard was assigned to the 2nd Air Disarmament Wing, whose aim was to disarm the ].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Kiniry |first=Mike |date=2022-09-16 |title=Sanibel man tells untold story in 1945 |url=https://news.wgcu.org/2022-09-16/sanibel-man-tells-untold-story-in-1945 |access-date=2024-12-21 |website=WGCU PBS & NPR for Southwest Florida |language=en}}</ref> Hoping only to research a good story for a serviceman's newspaper he founded to provide news for allied troops, he drove a jeep for miles to attend a concert put on by the newly liberated concentration camp survivors at the hospital at ]. He found himself driven to tears by the emaciated and sick survivors of ] and ], still on stretchers, without food, and wearing the cold, threadbare and inadequate striped uniforms they had formerly been issued as camp inmates. Hilliard and his partner Edward Herman, both Privates in the U.S. Army tried to buy food from the black market to supply refugees, but the supply was inadequate, and they lacked funds to make a significant improvement in the lives of the survivors. German citizens and American officers judged Hilliard and the survivors for buying food on the black market, despite their having few other sources.<ref name="Sanibel" /><ref name="Surviving">Hilliard, Robert, ''Surviving the Americans'', (1979), New York, Seven Stories Press, |
||
Despite the urgency of the situation, Truman was highly skeptical and delayed the delivery of aid packages to the Displaced Person camps pending a thorough investigation of Hilliard and the claims made in the letters, and had the situation investigated by ], U.S. Immigration Commissioner, lawyer, and the Dean of the University of Pennsylvania Law School. After investigating Hilliard, and the situation in Germany, Harrison later confirmed in the ] of August 1945, that "displaced Jews are being held in unsanitary, barbed-wire camps, wearing hideous concentration camp garb or discarded German SS uniforms, with nothing being done for them by way of rehabilitation." The report continued, "One is led to wonder whether the German people, seeing this, are not supposing that we (Americans) are not following or at least condoning Nazi policy."<ref name="Surviving"/> After being convinced of the letters' authenticity by Harrison, Truman spoke immediately to General Eisenhower. Eisenhower sent a full Colonel to inform Hilliard and Edward Herman that the military would address the situation, but that he and Herman should refrain from writing any more letters, as they might end up assigned to a highly undesirable location like the frigid ]. Hilliard, with good reason, took the advice primarily as a threat, rather than a promise to help Holocaust survivors which would require a reversal of American policy. He and Herman continued to push their cause of informing the American public. On September 30, 1945, a ''New York Times'' headline announced "President Orders Eisenhower to End New Abuse of Jews . . . Likens Our Treatment to that of the Nazis".<ref name="Sanibel" /> | |||
===Truman Directive and change=== | |||
Coming months after the surrender of Germany, the ],<ref name="Wyman">Wyman, David S., Preface to ''The Abandonment of the Jews: American and the Holocaust 1941-1945'', (1984), New York, Pantheon Publishing</ref> among other objectives, intended to set the United States as an example to the World by vastly increasing and expediting the admission of displaced |
Coming over seven months after the unconditional surrender of Germany, the ],<ref name="Wyman">Wyman, David S., Preface to ''The Abandonment of the Jews: American and the Holocaust 1941-1945'', (1984), New York, Pantheon Publishing</ref> among other objectives, intended to set the United States as an example to the World by vastly increasing and expediting the admission of displaced persons to the United States, and to open U.S. immigration to full use. It also requested that Great Britain allow 100,000 Jews to immigrate to ]. Great Britain never acted on this request. On October 21, 1945, 1,500 packages containing food, clothes and medicine arrived at St. Ottillien.<ref name="Morris">Morris, Rob, "A Place Called St. Ottilien", ''Untold Valor'', (co. 2006) Washington, D.C., Potomac Books, pg. 18-19</ref> The failure of supplies to be delivered prior to October had been partly the result of a U.S. Military and State Department policy to withhold the delivery of the supplies.<ref name="Morris" /> | ||
Hilliard and Herman also helped to change the policies restricting displaced persons from voluntarily leaving the camps, or being required to return to the countries in which they had formerly resided, where they had no homes, food, property, or the prospect of obtaining employment. Many had also been the victims of post-war violence at the hands of locals who blamed them for the war. At the time, in accordance with official American military policy, the camps were heavily surrounded by barbed wire and guarded by armed American servicemen instructed to shoot escapees, as had the German guards that previously guarded the camps. An American military guard shot an "inmate" of St. Ottilien trying to return to the camp after searching for food in a nearby village. The guard was not reprimanded by his superior officer as he was following orders. When pressed as to why the American Captain in charge of the guards allowed the "inmate" to be shot, the Captain replied with profanity, "He's only a...Jew. Thats what all Jews deserve!".<ref name=surviving2>Hilliard, Robert L., "The Survivors", ''Surviving the Americans'', (1977) First Edition, Seven Stories Press, New York, pg. 125-127, 192</ref><ref name="Sanibel">{{cite web|url=https://gotosanibelcaptiva.com/sanibel-resident-wwii-veteran-robert-hilliard-honored-with-documentary/|title=Robert Hilliard Honored With Documentary|website=gotosanibelcaptiva.com|date=10 August 2021 |access-date=21 December 2024}}</ref> | |||
⚫ | == Academic career == | ||
⚫ | From 1943 - 1964, |
||
He served for several decades at Emerson College in Boston, first as a Dean of Graduate studies beginning in 1980 and then as a Professor at Emerson beginning in 1984.{{cn}} | |||
⚫ | == Academic and broadcasting career == | ||
⚫ | From 1964 - 1980, he was Chief of Public Broadcasting at the ], in Washington D.C., and "was present for the signing of the ] in 1967".<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |title=Dr. Robert Hilliard on what he says are echoes from the past in today's extreme right wing politics |url=https://news.wgcu.org/podcast/gulf-coast-life/2024-08-05/dr-robert-hilliard-on-what-he-says-are-echoes-from-the-past-in-todays-extreme-right-wing-politics |access-date=2024-12-21 |website=WGCU PBS & NPR for Southwest Florida |language=en}}</ref> Simultaneously, he served from 1965 - 1978 as a Chairman of the Federal Interagency Media Committee. |
||
⚫ | From 1943 - 1964, Hilliard worked as a professional in theatre, radio and television, while serving in a variety of full-time academic roles. From 1950-1956, he was an instructor at ], and from 1956 - 1960, served as an assistant professor at ]. From 1960 - 1964, he was an associate professor at the ]. He served for several decades at Emerson College in Boston, first as a Dean of Graduate studies beginning in 1980 and then as a Professor at Emerson beginning in 1984.<ref name="Sanibel" /><ref name="Surviving"/> | ||
⚫ | From 1964 - 1980, he was Chief of Public Broadcasting at the ], in Washington D.C., and "was present for the signing of the ] in 1967".<ref name=":0">{{Cite web |title=Dr. Robert Hilliard on what he says are echoes from the past in today's extreme right wing politics |url=https://news.wgcu.org/podcast/gulf-coast-life/2024-08-05/dr-robert-hilliard-on-what-he-says-are-echoes-from-the-past-in-todays-extreme-right-wing-politics |access-date=2024-12-21 |website=WGCU PBS & NPR for Southwest Florida |language=en}}</ref> Simultaneously, he served from 1965 - 1978 as a Chairman of the Federal Interagency Media Committee.<ref name="Sanibel" /><ref name="Surviving"/> | ||
In 2017, Hilliard served on the board of ], an NPR affiliate in Fort Myers, Florida.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Janssen |first=Mike |date=2017-11-21 |title='Made Possible By...' #3: Robert Hilliard on how public media enhances the public |url=https://current.org/2017/11/made-possible-by-3-robert-hilliard-on-how-public-media-enhances-the-public/ |access-date=2024-12-21 |website=Current |language=en-US}}</ref> | In 2017, Hilliard served on the board of ], an NPR affiliate in Fort Myers, Florida.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Janssen |first=Mike |date=2017-11-21 |title='Made Possible By...' #3: Robert Hilliard on how public media enhances the public |url=https://current.org/2017/11/made-possible-by-3-robert-hilliard-on-how-public-media-enhances-the-public/ |access-date=2024-12-21 |website=Current |language=en-US}}</ref> | ||
=== Extremism studies === | === Extremism studies === | ||
While serving as a professor at Emerson College in Boston, he collaborated with ] |
While serving as a professor at Emerson College in Boston, he collaborated with ] Professor Michael Keith, in writing ''Waves of Rancor: Tuning in the Radical Right''. He taught a class at Emerson known as "hate.com", which examined how hate groups target impressionable youth through websites, how they grow, and how they spread rage. Hilliard observed that hate groups build interest slowly with rock music and games, and initially avoid inflammatory rhetoric and epithets. The book was well-received and was read by ] during his presidency. In 1993, there were more than 300 extremist websites, though many scholars, including Holocaust author ], considered their number to be closer to 800. Hilliard both taught at Emerson and served as a Dean.<ref name="Emerson">"Examining Extremists Use of Net", ''Newsday (Suffolk Edition)'', 25 April 2000, pg. 45</ref> | ||
Hilliard has said that there is "open fascism" in the modern ], citing ] as an example.<ref name=":0" /> | Hilliard has said that there is "open fascism" in the modern ], citing ] as an example.<ref name=":0" /> | ||
== Personal life == | == Personal life == | ||
Hilliard wrote the musical ''Piccadilly'' in the late 1940s. The work |
Hilliard wrote the musical ''Piccadilly'' in the late 1940s. The work was first performed in December 2024. The musical details the lives of two G.I.s in London following World War II.<ref name=":1" /> | ||
Hilliard has lived on Florida's ] since 1998.<ref name="Sanibel" /> He and his wife, JoAnn, have two children.<ref name="Sanibel" /><ref name=":1" /> Hilliard is a member of non-profit Floridians for Democracy.<ref name=":0" /> |
Hilliard has lived on Florida's ] since 1998.<ref name="Sanibel" /> He and his wife, JoAnn, have two children.<ref name="Sanibel" /><ref name=":1" /> Hilliard is a member of non-profit Floridians for Democracy.<ref name=":0" /> A close observer of post-war Germany, he has been a strong critic of ], comparing him to ].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Hilliard |first=Robert |date=2017-07-20 |title=Commentary: The candidate and the president |url=https://www.news-press.com/story/opinion/contributors/2017/07/20/commentary-candidate-and-president/495715001/ |access-date=2024-12-21 |website=The News-Press |language=en-US}}</ref> | ||
== Honors == | == Honors == | ||
While with the U.S. military, Hilliard's decorations included but were not limited to the ], ], and ]. |
While with the U.S. military, Hilliard's decorations included but were not limited to the ], ], and ].<ref name="Sanibel" /><ref name="Surviving"/> | ||
=== Awards === | === Awards === | ||
⚫ | * Ohio Medical Education Network award<ref name=":1" /><ref name=Sanibel/> | ||
{{unref-section}} | |||
⚫ | * Broadcast Preceptor award<ref name=":1" /><ref name=Sanibel/> | ||
⚫ | * ], World Communications Year award<ref name=":1" /><ref name=Sanibel/> | ||
⚫ | * Ohio Medical Education Network award | ||
⚫ | * Phi Delta Kappa Annual award<ref name=":1" /><ref name=Sanibel/> | ||
⚫ | * Broadcast Preceptor award | ||
⚫ | * Cambridge Community television, Lifetime Achievement award, Emerson College<ref name=":1" /><ref name=Sanibel/> | ||
⚫ | * ], World Communications Year award | ||
⚫ | * Columbia Distinguished Alumni award<ref name=":1" /><ref name=Sanibel/> | ||
⚫ | * Phi Delta Kappa Annual award | ||
⚫ | * ] fellowship<ref name=":1" /><ref name=Sanibel/> | ||
⚫ | * Cambridge Community television, Lifetime Achievement award, Emerson College | ||
⚫ | * Columbia Distinguished Alumni award | ||
⚫ | * ] fellowship | ||
==Selected works== | ==Selected works== | ||
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* Poems of Love and War (2018), poetry collection<ref name=":1" /> | * Poems of Love and War (2018), poetry collection<ref name=":1" /> | ||
==== Media studies ==== | ==== Media studies (Many in Book form) ==== | ||
* {{Cite book |last1=Hilliard |first1=Robert L. |title=The Broadcast Century: A Biography of American Broadcasting |last2=Keith |first2=Michael C. |date=1997 |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-240-80262-6 |edition=2nd |location=Boston}} | * {{Cite book |last1=Hilliard |first1=Robert L. |title=The Broadcast Century: A Biography of American Broadcasting |last2=Keith |first2=Michael C. |date=1997 |publisher=] |isbn=978-0-240-80262-6 |edition=2nd |location=Boston}} | ||
* {{Cite book|last1=Hilliard |first1=Robert L. |last2=Keith |first2=Michael C.|title=Waves of Rancor: Tuning into the Radical Right|year=1999|publisher=]|location=New York City, Milton Park, Abingdon-on-Thames, Oxfordshire}} | * {{Cite book|last1=Hilliard |first1=Robert L. |last2=Keith |first2=Michael C.|title=Waves of Rancor: Tuning into the Radical Right|year=1999|publisher=]|location=New York City, Milton Park, Abingdon-on-Thames, Oxfordshire}} |
Latest revision as of 21:30, 14 January 2025
American veteran, holocaust activist, playwright, author, and communications professor For other uses, see Robert Hilliard (disambiguation).Robert L. Hilliard | |
---|---|
Born | (1925-06-25) June 25, 1925 (age 99) New York City, New York, U.S. |
Occupation |
|
Education |
|
Subject |
|
Years active | 1948–present |
Notable awards |
|
Spouse | Joanne Reese |
Robert L. Hilliard (born June 25, 1925, New York City) is an American World War II veteran, activist, and academic of communication studies. During and directly after World War II, he informed American citizens and politicians of the plight of concentration camp survivors, and of those survivors taken to an unequipped hospital which was formerly St. Ottillien Monastery in the district of Landsberg, Oberbayern Germany. After the war, he became an accomplished academic, playwright, author, and professor of communications and journalism.
Early life and education
Robert Hilliard was born in New York City on June 25, 1925 to Eda Hilliard, a Jewish French immigrant, and Russian immigrant Irving Hilliard. He was raised in a majority-Italian and Irish neighborhood, where he learned to defend himself against other boys and defend more vulnerable peers.
After WWII, Hilliard received his Bachelors from the University of Delaware in 1948. He earned two Master's degree at Case Western Reserve University: a Masters of Arts (1949) and a Masters of Fine Arts (1950). His PHd. was from Columbia University in 1959, an institution noted for their programs in journalism and the literary arts. In 1960, he followed with postgraduate work at Columbia Teachers College.
Military service and activism
Hilliard was drafted into the U.S. army in February 1944, as a recent high school graduate at the age of 18. He was assigned to the Ninth Regiment of the 2nd Infantry Division. Having received instruction in morse code and radio operation, he was responsible for serving in an advanced unit that would inform American command of the location of the enemy. He was soon wounded by mortar fire, and later served during the bloody combat that took place at the Battle of the Bulge in the Ardennes Forest in December 1944. He was wounded again in spring 1945 by flak from an 88mm German gun, and like many American troops, also suffered from frostbite. He received the Purple Heart for his service in the battle.
Activism
Hilliard's belief in the ability of the media to affect public policy and his lifelong interest in racism and extremist groups may have been shaped by his activism during his Military service, where he was editor of a base newspaper and helped write and publish hundreds of letters hoping to affect American policy. In the immediate aftermath of the German surrender, Hilliard was assigned to the 2nd Air Disarmament Wing, whose aim was to disarm the German Air Force. Hoping only to research a good story for a serviceman's newspaper he founded to provide news for allied troops, in May, 1945, he drove a jeep for miles to attend a concert put on by the newly liberated concentration camp survivors at the hospital at St. Ottillien. He found himself driven to tears by the emaciated and sick survivors of Buchenwald and Dachau, still on stretchers, without food, and wearing the cold, threadbare and inadequate striped uniforms they had formerly been issued as camp inmates. Hilliard and his partner Edward Herman, both Privates in the U.S. Army tried to buy food from the black market to supply refugees, but the supply was inadequate, and they lacked funds to make a significant improvement in the lives of the survivors. German citizens and American officers judged Hilliard and the survivors for buying food on the black market, despite their having few, if any other sources. Hilliard and his colleague discovered that significant quantities of the food being sent to the camps by the U.S. Military were routinely sold to the black market by American servicemen in charge of the camps.
Writing letters
Risking a court martial, and acting against the stated military policy of refraining from political activities while in the service, Hilliard and a few compatriots wrote and printed hundreds of letters which they hoped would be read by American citizens, and Congressmen informing them of the absence of food, medicine, and clothing available to the surviving concentration camp survivors. To escape an immediate court martial, the letters had to be sent in bulk to Edward Herman's brother Leonard Herman who had political connections, and a few other Americans who had consented to distribute them to those in power. The letters were all addressed "Dear Friend" as letters from servicemen could only be sent to family and friends. President Truman somehow was given one of the letters, but was skeptical of their authenticity.
Despite the urgency of the situation, Truman was highly skeptical and delayed the delivery of aid packages to the Displaced Person camps pending a thorough investigation of Hilliard and the claims made in the letters, and had the situation investigated by Earl G. Harrison, U.S. Immigration Commissioner, lawyer, and the Dean of the University of Pennsylvania Law School. After investigating Hilliard, and the situation in Germany, Harrison later confirmed in the Harrison Report of August 1945, that "displaced Jews are being held in unsanitary, barbed-wire camps, wearing hideous concentration camp garb or discarded German SS uniforms, with nothing being done for them by way of rehabilitation." The report continued, "One is led to wonder whether the German people, seeing this, are not supposing that we (Americans) are not following or at least condoning Nazi policy." After being convinced of the letters' authenticity by Harrison, Truman spoke immediately to General Eisenhower. Eisenhower sent a full Colonel to inform Hilliard and Edward Herman that the military would address the situation, but that he and Herman should refrain from writing any more letters, as they might end up assigned to a highly undesirable location like the frigid Aleutian Islands. Hilliard, with good reason, took the advice primarily as a threat, rather than a promise to help Holocaust survivors which would require a reversal of American policy. He and Herman continued to push their cause of informing the American public. On September 30, 1945, a New York Times headline announced "President Orders Eisenhower to End New Abuse of Jews . . . Likens Our Treatment to that of the Nazis".
Truman Directive and change
Coming over seven months after the unconditional surrender of Germany, the Truman Directive of December 22, 1945, among other objectives, intended to set the United States as an example to the World by vastly increasing and expediting the admission of displaced persons to the United States, and to open U.S. immigration to full use. It also requested that Great Britain allow 100,000 Jews to immigrate to Mandatory Palestine. Great Britain never acted on this request. On October 21, 1945, 1,500 packages containing food, clothes and medicine arrived at St. Ottillien. The failure of supplies to be delivered prior to October had been partly the result of a U.S. Military and State Department policy to withhold the delivery of the supplies.
Hilliard and Herman also helped to change the policies restricting displaced persons from voluntarily leaving the camps, or being required to return to the countries in which they had formerly resided, where they had no homes, food, property, or the prospect of obtaining employment. Many had also been the victims of post-war violence at the hands of locals who blamed them for the war. At the time, in accordance with official American military policy, the camps were heavily surrounded by barbed wire and guarded by armed American servicemen instructed to shoot escapees, as had the German guards that previously guarded the camps. An American military guard shot an "inmate" of St. Ottilien trying to return to the camp after searching for food in a nearby village. The guard was not reprimanded by his superior officer as he was following orders. When pressed as to why the American Captain in charge of the guards allowed the "inmate" to be shot, the Captain replied with profanity, "He's only a...Jew. Thats what all Jews deserve!".
Academic and broadcasting career
From 1943 - 1964, Hilliard worked as a professional in theatre, radio and television, while serving in a variety of full-time academic roles. From 1950-1956, he was an instructor at Brooklyn College, and from 1956 - 1960, served as an assistant professor at Adelphi University. From 1960 - 1964, he was an associate professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He served for several decades at Emerson College in Boston, first as a Dean of Graduate studies beginning in 1980 and then as a Professor at Emerson beginning in 1984.
From 1964 - 1980, he was Chief of Public Broadcasting at the Federal Communication Commission, in Washington D.C., and "was present for the signing of the Public Broadcasting Act in 1967". Simultaneously, he served from 1965 - 1978 as a Chairman of the Federal Interagency Media Committee.
In 2017, Hilliard served on the board of WGCU, an NPR affiliate in Fort Myers, Florida.
Extremism studies
While serving as a professor at Emerson College in Boston, he collaborated with Boston College Professor Michael Keith, in writing Waves of Rancor: Tuning in the Radical Right. He taught a class at Emerson known as "hate.com", which examined how hate groups target impressionable youth through websites, how they grow, and how they spread rage. Hilliard observed that hate groups build interest slowly with rock music and games, and initially avoid inflammatory rhetoric and epithets. The book was well-received and was read by Bill Clinton during his presidency. In 1993, there were more than 300 extremist websites, though many scholars, including Holocaust author Eli Wiesel, considered their number to be closer to 800. Hilliard both taught at Emerson and served as a Dean.
Hilliard has said that there is "open fascism" in the modern American political right, citing Project 2025 as an example.
Personal life
Hilliard wrote the musical Piccadilly in the late 1940s. The work was first performed in December 2024. The musical details the lives of two G.I.s in London following World War II.
Hilliard has lived on Florida's Sanibel Island since 1998. He and his wife, JoAnn, have two children. Hilliard is a member of non-profit Floridians for Democracy. A close observer of post-war Germany, he has been a strong critic of Donald Trump, comparing him to Adolf Hitler.
Honors
While with the U.S. military, Hilliard's decorations included but were not limited to the Purple Heart, Combat Infantry Badge, and Commendation Ribbon.
Awards
- Ohio Medical Education Network award
- Broadcast Preceptor award
- Kappa Delta Pi, World Communications Year award
- Phi Delta Kappa Annual award
- Cambridge Community television, Lifetime Achievement award, Emerson College
- Columbia Distinguished Alumni award
- Goethe Institute fellowship
Selected works
Books
- Hilliard, Robert L. (1996). Surviving the Americans: The Continued Struggle of the Jews After Liberation. New York: Seven Stories Press., memoir
- Hilliard Robert, L., Phillipa, fiction, (2010) Parlance Publishing
- Hilliard, Robert L. Selected Plays by Robert Hilliard, Volume 1. (2021) Parlance, ISBN 9780984248964
- Poems of Love and War (2018), poetry collection
Media studies (Many in Book form)
- Hilliard, Robert L.; Keith, Michael C. (1997). The Broadcast Century: A Biography of American Broadcasting (2nd ed.). Boston: Focal Press. ISBN 978-0-240-80262-6.
- Hilliard, Robert L.; Keith, Michael C. (1999). Waves of Rancor: Tuning into the Radical Right. New York City, Milton Park, Abingdon-on-Thames, Oxfordshire: Routledge Publishing.
- Hilliard, Robert (2000). Writing for Television, Radio, and New Media. Wadsworth.
- Hilliard, Robert L.; Keith, Michael C. (2003). Dirty Discourse: Sex and Indecency in American Radio. Ames, Iowa: Iowa State Press. ISBN 978-0-8138-2409-3.
- Hilliard, Robert L.; Keith, Michael C. (2005). The Quieted Voice: The Rise and Demise of Localism in American Radio. Southern Illinois University Press. ISBN 0813824095.
Articles
- Hilliard, Robert L. (1956). "The Integration of the Negro Actor on the New York Stage". Educational Theatre Journal. 8 (2): 97–108. doi:10.2307/3203866. ISSN 0013-1989. JSTOR 3203866.
- Hilliard, Robert L. (1957). "Desegregation in Educational Theatre". The Journal of Negro Education. 26 (4): 509–513. doi:10.2307/2293512. ISSN 0022-2984. JSTOR 2293512.
- Hilliard, Robert L. (1958-11-01). "Television and Education". The Journal of Higher Education. 29 (8): 431–470. doi:10.1080/00221546.1958.11779578. ISSN 0022-1546.
- Hilliard, Robert L. (1962-11-01). "The Organization and Control of Educational Television". Peabody Journal of Education. 40 (3): 170–181. doi:10.1080/01619566209537110.
- Hilliard, Robert L. (1963-06-01). "Dramatic Arts Production on Television: Practices and attitudes in the Southeast". Southern Journal of Communication. 28 (4): 285–287. doi:10.1080/10417946309371698.
References
- ^ "Robert Hilliard Honored With Documentary". gotosanibelcaptiva.com. 10 August 2021. Retrieved 21 December 2024.
- ^ Williams, Roger (2024-11-07). "Resilience and redemption". Naples Florida Weekly. Retrieved 2024-12-21.
- Kiniry, Mike (2022-09-16). "Sanibel man tells untold story in 1945". WGCU PBS & NPR for Southwest Florida. Retrieved 2024-12-21.
- ^ Hilliard, Robert, Surviving the Americans, (1979), New York, Seven Stories Press, pgs. 9, 192.
- Hilliard, Robert, Speech Transcript of Displaced: Miracle at St. Otillien, (Katz Jewish Community Center, Cherry Hill, New Jersey, 10 November 2002)
- Wyman, David S., Preface to The Abandonment of the Jews: American and the Holocaust 1941-1945, (1984), New York, Pantheon Publishing
- ^ Morris, Rob, "A Place Called St. Ottilien", Untold Valor, (co. 2006) Washington, D.C., Potomac Books, pg. 18-19
- Hilliard, Robert L., "The Survivors", Surviving the Americans, (1977) First Edition, Seven Stories Press, New York, pg. 125-127, 192
- ^ "Dr. Robert Hilliard on what he says are echoes from the past in today's extreme right wing politics". WGCU PBS & NPR for Southwest Florida. Retrieved 2024-12-21.
- Janssen, Mike (2017-11-21). "'Made Possible By...' #3: Robert Hilliard on how public media enhances the public". Current. Retrieved 2024-12-21.
- "Examining Extremists Use of Net", Newsday (Suffolk Edition), 25 April 2000, pg. 45
- Hilliard, Robert (2017-07-20). "Commentary: The candidate and the president". The News-Press. Retrieved 2024-12-21.
- Smith, Reed (2006-01-01). "The Quieted Voice: The Rise and Demise of Localism in American Radio by Robert L. Hilliard and Michael C. Keith Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 2005. 243 pp". American Journalism. 23 (1): 130–131. doi:10.1080/08821127.2006.10678000. ISSN 0882-1127.
- 1925 births
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