Local Obituaries

John Rothchild, Miami Beach financial writer and mountain climber, dies at 74

Denali, a wolf belonging to guide Michael Covington, and John Rothchild atop Little Bear in Colorado. Rothchild passed away Thursday at the age of 79.
Denali, a wolf belonging to guide Michael Covington, and John Rothchild atop Little Bear in Colorado. Rothchild passed away Thursday at the age of 79. John Rothchild

Sascha Rothchild is asked the same thing about once a month. The question has nothing to do with her book, her television series or anything else she’s done. It’s always about her dad.

“’We’re trying to contact your father and we can’t find him,’” Sascha recalled, impersonating the messenger. “That always made me happy the past couple years, that his work has lived on.”

While some would classify Sascha’s experience as a byproduct of being the daughter of a writer, it’s not that simple. Not many can claim to have a mastery of as many subjects as John Rothchild once had.

An authority on subjects as varied as Florida, finance and 14ers — the mountains 14,000 feet or higher that he would climb later in life — Rothchild died Thursday. He was 74 and a longtime resident of Miami Beach.

Born May 13, 1945, in Norfolk, Virginia, but raised in St. Petersburg, Rothchild attended Yale, where he earned a reputation for being an independent thinker.

“He never saw the need to go down the same path that many of his classmates went down,” said Beth Dunlop, a Miami writer and architecture critic, who met Rothchild when she was a freshman at Vassar in 1966.

Financial author and journalist John Rothchild died Thursday at the age of 79. He is survived by his wife, Susan, his sister, Melanie, his children, Chauncey, Berns and Sascha, and his grandchild Smith.
Financial author and journalist John Rothchild died Thursday at the age of 79. He is survived by his wife, Susan, his sister, Melanie, his children, Chauncey, Berns and Sascha, and his grandchild Smith. Sascha Rothchild

Rothchild’s writing career began to flourish in college, and he eventually worked his way up to being managing editor of the Yale Daily News. He later broke barriers when he hired Dunlop to write a story for him, making her one of the first women to be published in the storied paper.

The year after he graduated in 1967, Rothchild again displayed his penchant for taking a different path: He enrolled in the Peace Corps. He would spend two years in Ecuador before returning to the states in 1970 to begin his career in journalism.

Rothchild’s first job stateside was at the Washington Monthly, a politics magazine that focused on bureaucracy. There, he met longtime friend Taylor Branch.

“I was the straight man and John was the humorist,” Branch recalled. “He had a gift for whimsy. He was very funny.”

Rothchild left the publication in 1972. He moved to Everglades City before settling in Miami Beach in 1980.

His friendship with Branch spawned all sorts of adventures. Several people referred to Rothchild as daring but no story illustrated that quality more than getting captured with Branch in Venezuela while the two pursued a story on a Washington bomber.

“He brought out the best in me to want to write about at the end because once we survived, it was liberating to write how foolish we had been,” Branch said. “In a way, it was terrifying but it was also hilarious and John helped me see that.”

But Rothchild’s life wasn’t all international prisons and humor. After spending time as a columnist for Time and Fortune, Rothchild eventually moved to investment writing, authoring several books including “A Fool and His Money” and “One Up on Wall Street: How to Use What You Already Know to Make Money in the Market” with Peter Lynch.

“He communicated to people what they really needed to know about how to deal with money,” Dunlop said. “He was able to take complicated concepts and express them in a way that those who didn’t know the field of money or investing could truly understand.”

He’d also go on to help Marjory Stoneman Douglas craft her autobiography Voice of the River.” He wrote what some consider his best work: “Up for Grabs: A Trip Through Time and Space in the Sunshine State,” which Rothchild’s friend Cathy Leff called “a masterpiece.”

“If you really want to try to understand [Florida], where it came from, its DNA — that would be a very pivotal book to read,” Leff said.

John Rothchild wears a red armband to signify that he was hit by a motorist while cycling as he participates in the Ride of Silence on Key Biscayne.
John Rothchild wears a red armband to signify that he was hit by a motorist while cycling as he participates in the Ride of Silence on Key Biscayne. Charlotte Southern Miami Herald File

Rothchild would surprise everyone when he took up mountain climbing and cycling later in life. He sarcastically boasted of his ability to scale a 14,000-foot peak or, as he put it, “bagging a 14er” in a special to the Herald, claiming that his years of inactivity were actually his own form of training.

“In six countries, I’ve stood atop 63 peaks at 14,000 feet and beyond, including Argentina’s Aconcagua, highest in the world outside the Himalayas,” Rothchild wrote.

Rothchild’s survivors include his wife, Susan, his sister, Melanie, his children, Chauncey, Berns and Sascha, and his grandchild Smith. A memorial service will be held in New York City sometime this summer.

C. Isaiah Smalls II
Miami Herald
C. Isaiah Smalls II is a sports and culture writer who covers the Miami Dolphins. In his previous capacity at the Miami Herald, he was the race and culture reporter who created The 44 Percent, a newsletter dedicated to the Black men who voted to incorporate the city of Miami. A graduate of both Morehouse College and Columbia Graduate School of Journalism, Smalls previously worked for ESPN’s Andscape.
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