Dorothy Thompson, a prominent journalist, political
commentator and a leading opponent of Hitler and
1930s
fascism, was born July 9, 1893, in Lancaster, New
York.
Her mother, Margaret, died in 1901 and her
father, Peter, a Methodist pastor, remarried two
years later.
Dorothy fought frequently with her stepmother,
Elizabeth Abbott Thompson, and in 1908, Peter sent
his daughter to live with relatives in Chicago. After
graduating from Syracuse University in 1914, she
worked for the women's suffrage movement until 1917
when she moved to New York and embarked on a career
in journalism. Thompson went to Europe in 1920
where she established herself as a journalist. By
1925,
she
headed the
Berlin
bureau of the New York Post and
the Public Ledger. However, her negative
reporting on the rise of Adolph Hitler and the
Nazis
led to her expulsion from Germany in 1934. She returned
to America where, beginning in 1936, her thrice-weekly
column "On the Record" ran in the New York Herald
Tribune and more than 150 other newspapers. "On
the Record," plus a monthly column she wrote for
the
Ladies Home Journal and her work as a lecturer
and NBC radio commentator made her the most syndicated
woman journalist in the country as well as one of
the most famous women in pre-World
War II America– and along with Eleanor
Roosevelt, one of the most influential. Her private
life was
equally celebrated, especially after she married
Nobel Prize- winning novelist Sinclair Lewis in
1928. The
marriage ended in 1942.
America's entry into World War II deprived Thompson
of her crusade against the Nazis and fascism and her
intuitive, emotional style and penchant for viewing
world events and leaders in black and white moral
terms began to sound emotional and self-indulgent.
Seeking a new issue and a new audience after the war,
Thompson turned her attention to the Middle East.
Although she had supported Zionism (the movement to
establish a Jewish nation in Palestine) since 1920,
she ultimately became anti-Zionist and pro-Arab. Her
other political writings became more conservative;
however, she supported nuclear disarmament and portrayed
the Cold War as a cultural and ideological battle
rather than as a military struggle. She died in Portugal
in 1961.
Sources
Green, Carol Hurd and Barbara Sicherman, eds.
Notable American Women: The Modern Period. Cambridge,
MA: The Belknap Press of Harvard University, 1980,
683-686.
Concise Dictionary of American Biography.
vols. I-II. 5th ed. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons,
1997, 726; 1290.