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Lee Edwards, Historian of the Conservative Movement, Dies at 92

Lee Edwards, a self-described “cradle conservative” who participated in key moments in the modern conservative movement and then became its all but official historian, writing flattering books about the Heritage Foundation, Ronald Reagan, William F. Buckley Jr. and other subjects, died on Dec. 12 at his home in Arlington, Va. He was 92.

His daughter Elizabeth Edwards Spalding said the cause was aggressive pancreatic cancer, which had been diagnosed in June.

Mr. Edwards’s father, Willard Edwards, was a star political reporter for the anti-New Deal Chicago Tribune. Joseph McCarthy and Richard Nixon were regular guests at the family home outside Washington.

Lee Edwards went on to help found Young Americans for Freedom, a conservative youth organization that grew out of a weekend retreat at the Connecticut estate of Mr. Buckley, the founder of National Review magazine. He worked as a press aide on Barry Goldwater’s 1964 presidential campaign and participated in the drafting of “Mandate for Leadership,” a 1980 policy blueprint compiled by the Heritage Foundation, the conservative think tank, that the Reagan administration embraced. “Mandate for Leadership” served as an inspiration for Project 2025, the Heritage document meant to guide the second Trump presidency.

Mr. Edwards was the author of more than a dozen books, which he called a “canon” of modern conservative history. Among them were biographies of Mr. Goldwater and Edwin Meese III, Mr. Reagan’s attorney general.

But he was neither a conservative thought leader nor a political adviser to conservative candidates. He was largely a promoter of others’ ideas, and his books mainly addressed the faithful.

“His books were court history, with the exception of the Goldwater book, which had information others didn’t,” said Sam Tanenhaus, the author of a forthcoming Buckley biography. He was, Mr. Tanenhaus added, “a keeper of the flame and spreader of the gospel among the young generation Buckley and others were keen to recruit.”

His Reagan biography, first written in 1967 and updated in 1981, was called “hagiographic” by Nicholas von Hoffman in The New York Review of Books.

In 1960, Mr. Edwards was one of about 90 young conservatives who gathered at Mr. Buckley’s estate in Sharon, Conn., to found Young Americans for Freedom. Mr. Edwards was almost sent packing by a motion to exclude anyone over 27 — he was on the cusp of 28 — but the measure was voted down. The weekend produced the Sharon Statement, a manifesto that proclaimed the values of individual liberty, free markets and anti-communism.

Mr. Edwards became editor of the organization’s magazine, The New Guard, in 1961. Under his leadership, the magazine championed Mr. Goldwater — who had voted against the Senate censure of Mr. McCarthy in 1954 and would go on to vote against the Civil Rights Act of 1964 — while lacerating liberal Republicans like Gov. Nelson Rockefeller and Senator Jacob Javits of New York.

As deputy director of public relations for Mr. Goldwater’s presidential campaign against President Lyndon B. Johnson, Mr. Edwards was privy to its inner workings, including the details behind self-inflicted wounds like calling to make Social Security voluntary and declaiming that “extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice.”

Mr. Goldwater lost by a landslide, with less than 40 percent of the popular vote, and Mr. Edwards elaborated on that loss in “Goldwater: The Man Who Made a Revolution” (1995). A Washington Post reviewer, John B. Judis, wrote that Mr. Edwards was “meticulously evenhanded in recounting Goldwater’s life.”

Mr. Edwards embraced the view that Mr. Goldwater’s drubbing was but a speed bump on the road to the triumph of conservative ideas and values in America. That view was borne out in the 1980 election of Ronald Reagan and the Republican triumph in the House elections of 1994, when the party won a majority after a gap of 40 years.

Mr. Goldwater, Mr. Edwards wrote, “laid the foundation for a political revolution and led a generation of conservatives to understand that theirs was a winning as well as a just cause.”

(An alternative analysis is that Republican successes since the 1960s had less to do with the persuasive power of conservative ideas about small government, free enterprise and hawkish foreign policy than with the defection of white Southern Democrats over national civil rights laws, gradually followed by white non-college-educated voters in the Midwest and elsewhere.)

Between the Goldwater and Reagan eras, Mr. Edwards ran a Washington public relations firm that zigged when the dominant culture zagged. He headed Americans for Agnew, a group meant to ensure that Spiro T. Agnew, President Nixon’s embattled vice president, remained on the ticket in 1972. And he was the spokesman for Friends of the F.B.I., formed to rally around the bureau’s director, J. Edgar Hoover.

Willard Lee Edwards was born on Dec. 1, 1932, in Chicago, the only child of Willard and Leila (Sullivan) Edwards. His father moved the family to suburban Maryland to cover national politics. His mother, who volunteered in Senator McCarthy’s office, also worked as a teacher.

Mr. Edwards graduated from Duke University with a B.A. in English. After two years in the Army, he went to work as press secretary for Senator John Marshall Butler, Republican of Maryland.

In 1965 he married Anne Stevens, whom he had met when she was president of the New York Young Women’s Republican Club. She died in 2022. In addition to their daughter Ms. Spalding, he is survived by another daughter, Catherine Marie O’Connor, and 11 grandchildren.

During the Reagan presidency, Mr. Edwards sought to be named director of the Voice of America radio network, but he was passed over.

He returned to graduate school at age 48, and in 1986 he earned a Ph.D. in world politics from the Catholic University of America in Washington. He then became an adjunct professor of politics at the university.

In the mid-1980s, Mr. Edwards was hired as senior editor of World & I, a magazine in Washington owned by the Rev. Sun Myung Moon’s Unification Church. He apparently won the job, he wrote in a 2017 memoir, “Just Right,” after his photograph was forwarded to Mr. Moon, “who prided himself on being able to determine the character and the ability of someone by looking at the person’s photo.”

In 1990, Mr. Edwards and the diplomat Lev Dobriansky founded the Victims of Communism Memorial Foundation, which in 2007 erected a monument in Washington near Union Station.

He was named distinguished fellow in conservative thought at the Heritage Foundation in 2002 after writing an authorized history of the foundation in 1998. (A son-in-law was director of the division that hired him.)

Mr. Edwards was sometimes frustrated that his many books won little attention from the mainstream media or were dismissed as mere partisan history. Noting in his memoir that reviewers invariably mentioned his Heritage job — as a way, he believed, to impugn his objectivity — he wrote, “I am certain that the same publications did not bring up the liberalism of Arthur Schlesinger Jr. and Robert Dallek when reviewing their glowing books about F.D.R. and John F. Kennedy.”

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