Edgar Ansel Mowrer

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Edgar Ansel Mowrer (March 8, 1892March 2, 1977) was a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author best known for his writings on international events.

Born in Bloomington, Illinois, Mowrer graduated from the University of Michigan in 1913. From his elder brother, Paul Scott Mowrer, the editor of Chicago Daily News, Mowrer received a job and in 1914 went to France as a foreign correspondent. From there he reported on events throughout the First World War, including the Italians' defeat at the Battle of Caporetto. In 1916, he married Lilian Thomson; the two had a daughter, Diana, and would remain together until Mowrer's death sixty-one years later.

Mowrer remained a correspondent in Europe throughout the 1920s and 1930s, living in Rome for eight years before moving to Berlin. In 1933, Mowrer won the Pulitzer Prize for Correspondence for his reporting on the rise of Adolf Hitler in Germany, and was named president of the Foreign Press Association. With the Germans pressuring him to leave because of his reporting on the Nazi regime, Mowrer agreed to depart in return for the release of Paul Goldmann, an elderly Jewish correspondent for the Austrian newspaper Neue Freie Presse. Taking over as the Paris bureau chief for the Chicago Daily News, Mowrer continued to report on European affairs until France's defeat by German forces in 1940.

Returning to the United States, Mowrer served as the Deputy Director, first of the Office of Facts and Figures, then, after the OFF's consolidation, of the Office of War Information, from 1942 until 1943. Upon his departure, he started his column "Edgar Mowrer on World Affairs," which he later supplemented with a column entitled "What's Your Question on World Affairs?" After the Second World War, Mowrer wrote a number of books and helped organize the Americans for Democratic Action. In 1956, he took over as editor of Western World magazine, a position he held for four years. In 1969, he moved to Wonalancet, New Hampshire and wrote a column for The Union Leader until 1976.

[edit] Works

  • Germany Puts The Clock Back, London: John Lane Company, 1933.
  • The Nightmare of American Foreign Policy. New York: Alfred A Knopf, 1948.
  • A Good Time to be Alive. New York: Duell, Sloan & Pearce, 1959.
  • Triumph and Turmoil: A Personal History of our Time. New York: Weybright and Talley, 1968.
  • (with Lilian T. Mowrer) Umano and the Price of Lasting Peace. New York: Philosophical Library, 1972. ISBN 0802221033

[edit] Further reading

  • Grant Duff, Shiela, The Parting of Ways: a Personal Account of the Thirties. Memoir by a British reporter who mentored under Mowrer