After the death of President Roosevelt in April 1945, Boettiger was no longer so appreciated as publisher of the
Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Citing "irreconcilable differences," he resigned in June 1945. During the last war year, his wife had become essential to running the White House administratively for the ailing president. The couple looked for new challenges in the newspaper industry. With the financial assistance of powerful Democratic backers, led by department store magnate Walter Kirschner, Boettiger purchased a small advertiser, the
Phoenix Shopping News, in February 1946. He and Anna developed it into a daily newspaper, the
Arizona Times in May 1947, intending to create a leading left-wing newspaper. The project turned into a financial debacle that left the Boettigers bankrupt and their creditors angry and unpaid. By February 1948, Anna Boettiger took over the paper. In July 1948 the paper, which then had a payroll of 60, was sold to other investors; it failed the following year. The
Arizona Times project and failure put a strain on the family and the marriage. Boettiger and Anna divorced in August 1949, having cited mental cruelty and repeated humiliations. Boettiger went overseas while Anna took on new projects with her mother, including a joint radio program. On November 1, 1949, Boettiger married Virginia Daly Lunn in
The Hague. From July of that year, he was employed with Theodor Swanson Associates, public relations consultants, "in an advisory capacity for the Dutch government on the Indonesian question," as there was a popular movement for independence among the Indonesian people. He was not happy in that position, since he was essentially a reporter, not a publicist. One year later, on Halloween 1950, Boettiger committed
suicide by jumping from his seventh-floor room in the
Weylin Hotel in
New York City. He had been suffering from
depression. Elliott Roosevelt was asked to identify the corpse, which was cremated without ceremonies. His brother Wilfred explained that John Boettiger "threw everything he had into the paper [Arizona Times] and never was able to recover anything.....he had tried many times to free his mind from this defeat but nothing seemed to do any good." ==Legacy==