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Kluge Prize | Gershwin Prize | Fiction Prize
Living Legend
Katharine Graham
Awarded: April 2000
(June 16, 1917 - July 17, 2001)
Katharine Graham was born to one of the most influential families in the nation. Her father bought the Washington Post in 1933 at a bankruptcy sale and the job of running the paper fell to her husband, Philip. After his suicide in 1963, Graham transformed the daily into one of the powerhouses of journalism. She published the Pentagon Papers, which revealed U.S. bungling in Southeast Asia. She okayed the investigation of a break-in at the Watergate, toppling the President of the United States. Graham won a Pulitzer at the age of 80 for her memoirs, “Personal History.”
Related Library Resources
- Read information from the Serial and Government Publications Division about American Women.
- The Newspaper and Current Periodical Reading Room at the Library of Congress
- View the online exhibition "Women Come to the Front: Journalists, Photographers and Broadcasters During World War II."
Last Updated: Friday, 26-Sep-2008 18:46:22 EDT