A Tribute To Katharine Graham
Katharine Graham, chairman from the executive committee in the Washington Post Company and the author of non-public History, a memoir that she received the 1998 Pulitzer Prize for Biography, died July 17 when he was 84.
Graham, who have been dubbed “one extremely powerful women in American media,” and “one from the twentieth century’s most effective and interesting women,” served as chairman from the board with the Washington Post Company for 20 years previous to becoming chairman of the executive committee in September 1993. She held other titles like ceo and president after in the role of the publisher of your Washington Post newspaper from 1969 to 1979.
Graham will be sorely missed in Washington and on the country.
“It seems unthinkable that wont be there anymore,” said writer Sally Quinn inside of a recent CNN interview.
Ben Bradlee, Second in command on the Washington Post Company, said, “She stood a large amount of fun and created others have got a wide range of fun while doing so.”
Quinn, who described Graham as “Kay,” the name she was recognized by many by, also said, “She worked harder than anyone I ever knew.”
Graham was created on June 16, 1917, in Nyc to Agnes Ernst Meyer and Eugene Meyer, who purchased The Washington Post in the bankruptcy sale in 1933.
She graduated in the University of Chicago in 1938 and worked to be a reporter for that San francisco bay area News before joining the staff of The Washington Post. She married Philip Graham in 1940, plus 1945 left the Post to increase her group of four children.
After her husband committed suicide in 1963, Katharine Graham on the age of 46 assumed power over the Washington Post Company.
She “transformed the lackadaisical daily into one of many powerhouses of journalism. She stood about government, publishing the Pentagon Papers, which revealed U.S. bungling in Southeast Asia. She gave two reporters the OK to view a minor break-in on the Watergate — an investigation that toppled a president — and backed them despite intense White House pressure,” reported by lifetimetv.com.
Preaching about her decision to post the Pentagon Papers and other undaunted choices, Bradlee said, “Her instinct of the items is in line and what’s wrong was finely tuned.”
Quinn added that Graham had the “guts of the burglar,” and “She enjoyed the high wire act – she never flinched.”
Lifetimetv.com also says: “At the era of 80, Graham won a Pulitzer Prize on her behalf absorbing memoir, “Personal History,” through which she bared her anguish about her husband’s mental illness, her conflicts about combining motherhood and work and her insecurities about her powerful role.”