Lives of Consequence
Victor Simpson ’63
International Journalist
During his career as a journalist, Victor Simpson ’63 enjoyed a rare vantage point on history, speaking candidly to Vatican insiders and four popes. As Rome Bureau Chief for the Associated Press, Simpson was responsible for directing coverage in Italy, including the Vatican. He joined The Associated Press in Newark, N.J., in 1967, where he worked the general desk and the foreign desk before being appointed news editor in Rome in 1972. Simpson covered the entire papacy of the late John Paul II, accompanying the well-traveled pope on most of his foreign trips.
During a flight with Pope John Paul II in 1988, Simpson was given the exclusive opportunity to hear the pope issue one of the strongest endorsements of his papacy, one supporting fellow Poles striking against communist authorities in the Gdansk shipyard.
Simpson described the experience in a retrospective article, "John Paul launched into a broadside against communist authorities and lent his full papal support to the strikes." The pope's statements as recorded by Simpson and printed on the front pages of newspapers around the world are considered a landmark in the pope's role in bringing down communism in Eastern Europe.
During his three decades overseas, Simpson also covered the Turkish invasion of Cyprus, the Israeli invasion of Lebanon, and Anwar Sadat's groundbreaking visit to Israel. Prior to retirement in 2013, he wrote about the Amanda Knox murder trial, the unprecedented retirement of Pope Benedict XVI -- for which he postponed his own retirement by a month so as not to miss the opportunity to cover another groundbreaking moment in history -- and the Conclave that selected Pope Francis.
A native of New York City, Simpson earned a B.A. in political science and economics from Hobart College. As a student he was active with WEOS-FM and was a member of the baseball team.
Simpson returned to campus in 2014 as a guest of the President's Forum Speaker Series, delivering a lecture, "Roman Holiday: 40 years as a foreign correspondent," in which he shared his insights about a career chronicling four papacies.