Background
Quayle was born in Joliet, Illinois, the son of Robert H. and Marie Cline Quayle.
Businessman newspaper publisher
Quayle was born in Joliet, Illinois, the son of Robert H. and Marie Cline Quayle.
He attended DePauw University, where he was a member of Delta Kappa Epsilon.
He was the father of Dan Quayle, the 44th Vice-President of the United States. After graduating in 1943, Quayle joined the United States Marine Corps and served in an air transport wing in the Pacific Theater during World World War World War II
After the war, Quayle married Corinne Pulliam, the daughter of wealthy newspaper publisher Eugene C. Pulliam, at Indiana University. Their marriage united two families that shared a strong passion for the newspaper business.
James Quayle entered the newspaper business serving as an advertising salesman for several Pulliam owned newspapers in Indiana and Ohio before joining the Huntington Herald-Press in Huntington, Indiana in 1948.
In 1955, Quayle moved his family to Arizona to manage public relations operations at the Arizona Republic and Gazette. In 1963, he became the publisher of the Huntington Herald-Press.
He purchased the newspaper the following year and became chairman of Huntington Newspapers, Incorporated. He was publisher of that newspaper from 1963 to 1990, except for six years when he was publisher of the Muncie Star and Evening Press, beginning in 1972.
After retiring, Quayle lived in Arizona, where he died in 2000, aged 79.