MARVIN BRECKINRIDGE PATTERSON
When World War II broke out in 1939, freelance photojournalist Marvin
Breckinridge Patterson (b. 1905) took the first pictures of a London air-raid
shelter. She was, however, new to radio when friend Edward R. Murrow hired
her as the first female staff broadcaster in Europe for CBS. Before her
marriage to an American diplomat ended her career in May 1940, Patterson
broadcast fifty times from various locations in Europe, including Berlin.
One of only a handful of American women in Europe working in radio,
Patterson was among the first correspondents to use a new short-wave transmitter
to broadcast on location. Of her early broadcasts, Murrow told Patterson:
"Your stuff so far has been first-rate. I am pleased, New York is pleased,
and so far as I know the listeners are pleased. If they aren't to hell
with them."
Patterson willingly resigned from CBS upon marrying Jefferson Patterson,
but hoped to resume her original career in photojournalism. Claiming that
her activities would compromise her husband's work in Berlin, the United
States Department of State barred her from publication. Even Patterson's
unofficial efforts to document prisoner-of-war camps while in the company
of her husband ended when German officials objected. Frustrated in her
efforts to pursue a separate career, Patterson devoted her energies to
the role of diplomatic spouse.
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Frontier Nursing Service
Documented
[Marvin Breckinridge at work,
Middle Fork, Kentucky River,
Leslie County, Kentucky], c. 1930
Courtesy of Marvin Breckinridge
Patterson (21.1) |
Early Career in Photojournalism
Marvin Breckinridge,
"A Frontier Nurse Rides Through the Rain,"
(one)
(two)
LIFE,
June 14, 1937,
pp. 32-33
Courtesy of Marvin Breckinridge
Patterson (21.2) |
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London When War Was Declared
[image not available online]
Letter from Marvin Breckinridge to
Isabella Breckinridge,
September 17, 1939
Courtesy of Marvin Breckinridge Patterson (22)
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First English Air-Raid
Shelter Photographs
Marvin Breckinridge,
[Savoy Hotel guests in shelter],
September 3, 1939
Courtesy of Marvin Breckinridge
Patterson (24) |
A Nation Prepared
for War
Marvin Breckinridge,
[Volunteer air-raid wardens], 1939
Courtesy of Marvin Breckinridge
Patterson (24.1) |
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A New Career at the
Microphone
[Marvin Breckinridge],
Amsterdam, c. 1940
Courtesy of Marvin Breckinridge
Patterson (26) |
The Altmark Controversy
[image not available online]
Cable from Marvin Breckinridge to CBS office,
New York, February 22, 1940
Courtesy of Marvin Breckinridge Patterson (28)
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Eyewitness to a Nazi
Burial
Marvin Breckinridge,
[Funeral of Altmark seamen],
February 1940
Courtesy of Marvin Breckinridge
Patterson (29) |
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Live Interview with Altmark Captain
[image not available online]
Marvin Breckinridge, radio script, February 19, 1940
Courtesy of Marvin Breckinridge Patterson (30)
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State Department Disapproval of Publication
[image not available online]
Letter from Jefferson Patterson to G. Howland Shaw, October 6,
1941;
letter from G. Howland Shaw to Jefferson Patterson, October 13,
1941
Courtesy of Marvin Breckinridge Patterson (31a and 31b)
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German Censors Recorded Every Word
[image not
available online]
Marvin Breckinridge, radio script, February 8, 1940
Courtesy of Marvin Breckinridge Patterson (32)
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Wartime Wedding, June 1940
The bride and groom telephone
their families in the U.S.
Wedding photographs, June 1940
Courtesy of Marvin Breckinridge
Patterson (121) |
Marriage Meant Career Crossroads
[image not available
online]
Wedding Poem, June 1940
Courtesy of Marvin Breckinridge Patterson (121.1)
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Official CBS Correspondent
Press credential
for Marvin Breckinridge,
December
6, 1939
Courtesy of Marvin Breckinridge
Patterson (123) |
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Breckinridge Used Human Details to Illuminate
War Stories
[image not available online]
Marvin Breckinridge, notebook, c. 1939
Courtesy of Marvin Breckinridge Patterson (133)
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Breckinridge at Work
in Holland
[Marvin Breckinridge],
c. 1940
Courtesy of Marvin Breckinridge
Patterson (124) |
Press Credentials for Overseas Assignments
Press passes for France and Germany;
Black Star identity card, c. 1940
Courtesy of Marvin Breckinridge
Patterson (134a-d) |
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