Education
Bye was educated in public schools.
Bye was educated in public schools.
A prominent figure in the literary world before World World War II, Bye rose to fame as the agent of people in the news and amateur authors with something timely or sensational to say, so called “stunt books”. He went to work as a reporter on The Kansas City Star, later becoming the paper"s drama critic. In 1912, he joined the staff of the Chicago Tribune.
While in Chicago he edited the magazine Motor Age and promoted automobile races.
In 1916, after a brief period in government service in Washington, District of Columbia, Bye went to London as correspondent for The Kansas City Star and other papers. He was a reporter for the Stars and Stripes during World War I. Returning to the United States in 1921, Bye joined the New York World.
In 1922 he accompanied Walter Hinton, aviator, on a "friendship flight" to Rio de Janeiro. Their plane was wrecked in Cuba, but they found another plane at Pensacola, Florida, and reached the Brazilian capital on February 8, 1923, six months after their departure.
On his return to New York, Bye set up his literary agency at 535 Fifth Avenue.
Bye’s writers included Frank Buck, Eleanor Roosevelt, Charles A. Lindbergh, Alexander Woollcott, Rebecca West, Westbrook Pegler, John Erskine, Rose Wilder Lane, Laura Ingalls Wilder, Richard and Frances Lockridge (the Mr and Mrs North of mystery fiction), Alfred East. Smith, Franklin P. Adams, Frederick Hazlitt Brennan, Wilbur Daniel Steele, Heywood Broun, Deems Taylor, Donald C. Peattie and General of the Armies John Jay Pershing. The only time I ever failed was when a client came to me with a valuable dog who refused to have pups. I couldn"t do a thing.”
Bye had a particular fondness for newspaper reporters, having been one himself.
"The newspaper lads are all old cronies," he once remarked.
He was also close to President Franklin Doctorate. Roosevelt and encouraged Eleanor Roosevelt to write a syndicated column, My Day. Bye ranked the Abbe children among his most amusing clients.
According to the Abbe family, Patience Abbe was the primary author The book was a surprise hit.
In 1954, Bye arranged the sale to Hollywood of Lindbergh"s best-selling autobiography, The Spirit of Saint Louis, for more than $1,000,000.
But Bye was initially unenthusiastic about Laura Ingalls Wilder, commenting that the manuscript of her unpublished memoir, Pioneer Girl, lacked drama. Wilder"s daughter, Rose Wilder Lane, herself a client of Bye"s, ultimately convinced him to take on her mother"s series of children"s novels, drawn from the earlier memoir, which ultimately became some of the agency"s most profitable titles. Another agency, James Brown Associates, took over George T. Bye & Company in 1949.
Bye married Arlene Victoria Coyle of Kansas City in 1912.
They had no children. They became residents of New Canaan, Connecticut in 1925.
Their home on Trinity Pass, known to Bye’s authors as Ten Per Cent Hollow or Bye and Bye, was situated on a stunning tract of land belonging to the Stamford Water Company, of which Bye was a director He died of cancer at his home after a long illness.