In Appreciation: Priscilla Buckley, 1921 to 2012

SHARON — There are lots of Buckleys, many of them famous, so many of them that you can choose your favorite, the way people used to do with The Spice Girls. Maybe your favorite is William F., famous conservative and Catholic, founder and editor of National Review and host and founder of Firing Line, author of countless spy thrillers. Maybe your favorite is Chris Buckley, author of countless hilariously funny novels and books (including one made into the movie “Thank You For Smoking”).Or perhaps you would choose James Buckley, former senator and judge and now a dapper, gentlemanly presence in Sharon, often seen at The Woodland restaurant or exercising at the gym in Millerton.My favorite was Priscilla, of course. Of course? I’ve worked in publishing all my life so of course she would be my hero. In her quiet, elegant way, she was one of the great women of 20th century journalism. Maybe you’ve never heard of her, or maybe you don’t understand all that she accomplished. I didn’t, until I read her memoir, “Living It Up at National Review,” about her years as an editor at her younger brother’s magazine. Once I read that book, I decided I had to meet Miss Buckley. And when I did, I wasn’t disappointed. Over the years I would sometimes see her and say hello when she was lunching at The Woodland. Once she was kind enough to join me for lunch at the coffee shop in the Sharon shopping plaza. Mostly, I spoke with her on the telephone; sadly, it was often after a member of her family or one of her good friends had passed away. Miss Buckley was the kind of person who took care of things, promptly and efficiently and with quiet perfection. When she brought an obituary to us at The Lakeville Journal, we never changed so much as a comma. And when asked for more details, she could recite quickly and perfectly the names of all her (many) nieces and nephews. She was a very gentle, soft-spoken person, and was so down-to-earth it was hard sometimes to reconcile her life here (including weekly visits to the hair salon in the Sharon shopping plaza) with a childhood spent in Paris, London, New York and of course on the family estate here, called Great Elm. It was also hard to reconcile that demure presence with the woman she was at National Review. Journalists will often say of an editor, in hushed awe, “I can’t imagine turning copy in late to him/her.” Priscilla Buckley was one of those editors, a person of high standards and expectations. It would be hard to imagine missing a deadline she had set.Not only did she get National Review out on time (and in pre-computer days, when copy could not be trapped and prepared minutes before deadline) — she managed to get her brother and her boss, the globetrotting and no-doubt overscheduled William F. Buckley Jr. to turn in his copy on time.Once I said to her, “I picture you as being the only person in the world who could say to William F. Buckley, ‘I know you’re getting on the Concord at 6 tonight to fly to Paris and meet the president of France, but I need your column before you go.’ And have him listen to you.”She laughed in a soft, crinkles-at-the-corners-of-her-eyes kind of a way, and said, “Yes, that’s sort of what it was like.” Well, she said it more articulately but that was the spirit of her answer.The New York Times, in its feature article on Miss Buckley published after her death on March 25, referred to “her sustained velvet-gloved sway” at National Review, which the article said was “long known among its denizens as Miss Buckley’s Finishing School for Young Ladies and Gentlemen of Conservative Persuasion.”If you read any of Miss Buckley’s books, it becomes clear that part of that strength and self-assurance came from her position as one of the first four in a family of 10 children; she and her siblings James, John and Alouise were known as “the top four.” William (or Billy, as he was known back then) was the oldest of the youngest generation. He may have held sway over the youngsters who arrived at Great Elm after him; he may have been strong-willed and unpredictable with other people that he loved. But as he and his own son, Christopher, made clear in many interviews, they always did whatever “Aunt Pitts“ told them to do.In recent years, The Lake­ville Journal published several interviews with members of the Buckley family. Although anyone with a real interest in the family and in the history of Great Elm should read the books and stories written by the talented Buckley family writers, we hope these articles will serve as an introduction to one of the most important and certainly most interesting families in the history of the town of Sharon.

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