Robert E. Hillard

Robert E. Hillard (November 17, 1917 - March 15, 2000), together with his friend and business partner Alfred Fleishman, established Fleishman-Hillard in St. Louis, Missouri in 1946.

Born and raised in Saint Paul, Minnesota, Hillard was a Phi Beta Kappa and a summa cum laude journalism graduate of the University of Minnesota. He went to work after graduation in 1939 as a reporter for the Des Moines Register and Tribune, after which he moved to the old St. Louis Star-Times.

Hillard served as a U.S. Navy Lieutenant in the Pacific during World War II. Shortly after the war, he and Fleishman decided to go into business together – the two having met years earlier when Hillard covered the civil courts for the Star-Times, while Fleishman served as deputy court clerk. The firm's first offices were in modest quarters above a St. Louis Woolworth's store.

In the early years, Hillard served as the thinker, strategist, writer, and office manager for the venture while Fleishman focused on working in the community and building the business. Union Electric (now Ameren UE of St. Louis) and Anheuser-Busch were its first clients.

Hillard stepped down as the firm's CEO in 1974, but remained active with the company and its clients until his retirement in 1982. His civic activities included presidency of the Urban League of St. Louis, as well as active involvement with the Health and Welfare Council of Metropolitan St. Louis and the Logos School.

In 1996, Hillard and Fleishman received special lifetime achievement awards from the influential industry publication, Inside PR (now The Holmes Report.) In 1998, Hillard received a special distinguished Alumni Award from the Minnesota Daily, the University of Minnesota newspaper which he served as editor-in-chief in 1938-39.

In the years following his retirement, Hillard remained active in preserving the culture of the firm he co-founded, serving as Fleishman-Hillard’s unofficial company historian and writing a column for the firm’s employee newsletter.

Hillard died in March 2000 at his home in the small town of Caledonia, Missouri. He was 82.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.