John Jeffry Louis, Junior. was an American businessman and diplomat.
Background
John Jay Louis, Junior., was born in Evanston, Illinois to Chicago advertiser John Jeffry Louis and Johnson Wax heiress Henrietta Johnson Louis. He grew up in the Chicago area. Entering business in 1951, John Jay Louis, Junior. started in his father"s advertising firm, Needham, Louis, and Brorby.
Education
Dartmouth College; Williams College.
Career
He served as the United States Ambassador to the United Kingdom. During the Second World War, he served in the United States Army Air Forces (1943–1945), where he was a second lieutenant and pilot. After the war, he received a bachelor of arts degree from Williams College and a master in business administration from the Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth College in 1949.
He then joined South Carolina (U.S.) South Carolina (U.S.) Johnson was the successor company of his great-grandfather"s company, Johnson Wax.
At South Carolina (U.S.) Johnson, Louis, Junior. was director of international marketing until 1961. From 1961 to 1968, he was chairman of KTAR Broadcasting in Phoenix, Arizona, until it merged with a local billboard company to form Combined Communications Corporation.
He then served as chair of the merged company. In 1979, Combined Communications merged with Gannett, and Louis, Junior. joined Gannett.
His first diplomatic work was in the ceremonial role of Special Ambassador in 1972 at an independence celebration in Gabon, during the presidency of Richard Nixon.
More substantially, he was nominated to the post of United States Ambassador to the United Kingdom by President Ronald Reagan on March 27, 1981. He served in that post until his resignation on September 19, 1983. In his resignation, Ambassador Louis expressed optimism about the quality of relations with the United Kingdom and the government of Margaret Thatcher, yet stated his desire to return to corporate and philanthropic pursuits.
Louis, Junior. served as a trustee of Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois where he also had a building, Louis Hall named for his father, Louis, who had also been a trustee of the university.
The building, which houses Northwestern"s professional production and post-production facilities for the Department of Radio/Television/Film as well as public radio WNUR 89.3 FM and a classroom/lab for the Medill School of Journalism still exists on Northwestern"s South end of campus today near Norris University Center. On February 15, 1995, former Ambassador Louis died in his home in Winnetka, Illinois, at age 69.
Johnson and Gannett, as well as the Northwestern University board of trustees.