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John "Archie" Armstrong Chaloner (né Chanler; October 10, 1862 – June 1, 1935) was an American writer and activist, known for his catch phrase "Who's looney now?".
brothers and a cousin, John Armstrong Chaloner, aged thirty-four, was insti-tutionalized at Bloomingdale Asylum. Until his dramatic escape in No-vember 1900, he would spend almost four years as a private - and most involuntary - patient. Throughout his enforced stay, and indeed until the end of his life, Cha-
Chaloner, John Armstrong. by Paul I. Chestnut, 1979; Revised by SLNC Government & Heritage Library, June 2023. 11 Oct. 1862–1 June 1935. John Armstrong Chaloner, author, industrialist, and philanthropist, was born in New York City in the home of his maternal ancestors, the prominent Astor family.
John Armstrong Chaloner (1862-1935) was a celebrity and writer known for coining the catchphrase “Who’s looney now?” in the aftermath of psychiatric experiments and own legal troubles regarding his sanity.
John Armstrong Chaloner (October 10, 1862 - June 1, 1935) was an American philanthropist, an heir of an Astor-related family (being a great-great grandson of John Jacob Astor), as well as a poet and author.