After the war, Lowell resigned from his government job and continued in journalism and published a number of books. He had a column in
The Washington Star, saying he wrote out of "an urgent sense of danger" due to the chaotic and uncertain nature the war had left the world in. He wrote his column until his failing health forced him to retire in 1956, and he died at age 76 in April 1960. He and his wife Berthe Knatvold (m. 1914) had one daughter together, Anne. ==Legacy==