1893 - 1961
By: Antonio Melville | Date Added:
Dorothy Thompson, (born July 9, 1893, Lancaster, N.Y., U.S.—died Jan. 30, 1961, Lisbon, Port.), American newspaperwoman and writer, one of the most famous journalists of the 20th century. The daughter of a Methodist minister, Thompson attended the Lewis Institute in Chicago and Syracuse University in New York (A.B., 1914), where she became ardently committed to woman suffrage. After World War I she went to Europe as a freelance correspondent and became famous for an exclusive interview with Empress Zita of Austria after Emperor Charles’s unsuccessful attempt in 1921 to regain his throne. In 1925 she became head of the Berlin bureau of the New York Evening Post and met the novelist Sinclair Lewis. She married him in London in 1928 (her second of three marriages). On their return to America, Thompson led a domestic life for a few years but, back in Europe, she began reporting about the Nazi movement, infuriating Adolf Hitler so much that, by his own personal order in 1934, she became the first American correspondent to be expelled from Germany. In 1936, for the New York Herald Tribune, she began her newspaper column “On the Record,” which became hugely popular and eventually was syndicated to as many as 170 daily papers (1941–58). On network radio and in popular speeches, she warned against Hitler, and Time magazine rated her the country’s second most popular woman (after Eleanor Roosevelt). Thompson wrote many books, including New Russia (1928), I Saw Hitler! (1932), Refugees: Anarchy or Organization (1938), Let the Record Speak (1939), and The Courage to Be Happy (1957). In her final years, she continued to write a monthly column for the Ladies’ Home Journal. She was president of the American PEN club from 1936 to 1940. In 1941, Thompson wrote "Who Goes Nazi?" for Harper's Magazine. She was a keynote speaker at the Biltmore Conference, and by war's end was regarded as one of the most effective spokespersons for Zionism. Thompson switched her views round radically after a trip to Palestine in 1945, and ran into difficulties, including accusations of anti-Semitism, which she strongly rebuffed, after being warned that hostility toward Israel was, in the American press world, "almost a definition of professional suicide". She eventually concluded that Zionism was a recipe for perpetual war. Thompson died 1961, aged 67, in Lisbon, Portugal and is buried in the Town cemetery, Barnard, Vermont.
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