Gardner Cowles Sr.


Gardner Cowles Sr. was an American banker, publisher, and politician. He was the owner of The Des Moines Register and the Des Moines Tribune.

Biography

Cowles father was a descendant of Hannah Bushoup of Hartford, Connecticut, and John Cowles of Gloucestershire, England.
His father William Fletcher Cowles was a Methodist minister; his mother Maria Elizabeth LaMonte was a widow with three prior children. Gardner had a younger brother named LaMonte.
After graduating from college, Cowles settled in Algona, Iowa, becoming superintendent of schools there and acquiring partial ownership of the Algona Republican newspaper. Becoming a businessman, he was a stockholder and officer in ten area Iowa banks and also a large-scale farmer.
Cowles served as a Republican in the Iowa General Assembly from 1899 to 1903 as representative from Kossuth County.
In 1903, he and Harvey Ingham purchased the Des Moines Register and Leader; the name became The Des Moines Register in 1915. Moving to Des Moines, Cowles also acquired the Des Moines Tribune in 1908. Under the ownership of the Cowles family, the Register became Iowa's largest and most influential newspaper, eventually adopting the slogan "The Newspaper Iowa Depends Upon." Newspapers were distributed to all four corners of the state by train and later by truck as Iowa's highway system was improving.
Cowles was a delegate to the 1916 Republican National Convention. In 1932 he served in the administration of President Herbert Hoover. He was an advocate of progressive Republicanism.
Before his death he established the Gardner Cowles Foundation to support Iowa colleges and charities; one of his gifts was a library building at Drake University.
Cowles' oldest son Russell was a well-known landscape painter; his sons John Cowles Sr. and Gardner "Mike" Cowles Jr. co-founded Look magazine and ran the Cowles Media Company.