Celeste Gold Broughton

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Born(1925-09-05)September 5, 1925
DiedMarch 6, 2022(2022-03-06) (aged 96)
Occupation(s)writer
socialite
Celeste Gold Broughton
Born(1925-09-05)September 5, 1925
DiedMarch 6, 2022(2022-03-06) (aged 96)
EducationVassar College (AB)
UNC Chapel Hill (MFA)
Occupation(s)writer
socialite
SpouseRobert Bain Broughton
Children2
Parent(s)John Daniel Gold
Daisy Hendley
RelativesPleasant Daniel Gold (grandfather)

Celeste Gold Broughton (September 5, 1925 – March 6, 2022) was an American writer and socialite. She was the daughter of the writer Daisy Hendley Gold and of the newspaper publisher John Daniel Gold Sr. Her father was the founder of the Wilson Times and her grandfather, Pleasant Daniel Gold, was the founder of the P.D. Gold Publishing Company. A debutante from one of the wealthiest families in Wilson, she attended Vassar College and followed in her family's footsteps pursuing journalism and writing. After graduating, she married Robert Bain Broughton, the son of Governor J. Melville Broughton. She and her husband went through a highly publicized divorce, which left her in financial ruin. She maintained ownership of the family's Raleigh mansion, Broughton House, but the house fell into ruin and was eventually sold off to pay debts. Broughton filed for bankruptcy and was involved in various court cases regarding her debt. She filed multiple lawsuits against the estate of her ex-husband.

West Nash Street Historic District, the neighborhood where Broughton grew up.

Celeste Gold Broughton was born in Wilson, North Carolina to John Daniel Gold, a newspaper publisher, and Daisy Hendley Gold, a writer and journalist.[1][2] She was named after her maternal grandmother, Celeste Rimmer Norris Hendley.[1] She is of Scotch-Irish, French, and English descent.[1] Broughton's father was the founder, editor, and publisher of the Wilson Times and one of the wealthiest men in Wilson.[3] Her mother was a poet and novelist who later worked as the managing editor of the Wilson Times. Broughton's paternal grandfather, Pleasant Daniel Gold, founded the family publishing company, P.D. Gold Publishing, and multiple newspapers.[4]

Broughton had one brother, John Daniel Gold Jr., and three stepsisters, Inez, Margaret, and Sarah Elizabeth, from her father's first marriage to Inez White.[1] She grew up at the family home, a Georgian Revival mansion on West Nash Street.[5][4]

Education and writing

Celeste Gold attended Vassar College, where she was a journalist for the Vassar Chronicle.[6][7] She reported on student life, college events, and local news including a 1944 Democratic youth rally for Franklin D. Roosevelt at Carnegie Hall.[8] Broughton was also a short story writer and published some of her stories through the college's literary magazine, Vassar Brew, including Diamond City.[9][10] She graduated from Vassar in 1946.[8] She received positive reviews for her creative writing abilities.[10] She later attended the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill's Graduate School of English.[3]

Marriage, family life, and divorce

Death

References

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