On May 20 in non-whitewashed history, together we learn about

American journalist and columnist Doris Fleeson, who was l the first woman in the United States to have a nationally syndicated political column.

Fleeson was born on May 20, 1901 in Sterling, Kansas. “She was the youngest of six children. In 1918, she graduated from Sterling High School, where she was the class valedictorian.”

“In 1918, Fleeson attended Sterling College, then known as Cooper College, for an academic year. Fleeson went on to attend and receive a B.A. in economics from the University of Kansas in 1923.”

“Fleeson’s first journalism job was at the Pittsburg Sun. She moved to Evanston, Illinois, to become the society editor of the News-Index and then to Long Island, New York to be an editor at Great Neck News. In 1927, she joined the New York Daily News as a general assignment reporter, eventually moving to the newspaper’s Albany bureau to cover state politics.”

“Fleeson and her husband, fellow Daily News reporter John O’Donnell, moved to Washington D.C. to work on at Daily News‘ Washington Bureau in 1930. They started a column together called ‘Capital Stuff’ in 1933 that was published until their divorce in 1942.”

“She left the Daily News in 1943 to be a war correspondent for Woman’s Home Companion. She reported from France and Italy during the war before returning to Washington to write a political column for the Boston Globe and Washington Evening Star. In 1945, the column was picked up by the Bell Syndicate and distributed across the country. At its height in 1960, her column ran in about 100 newspapers.”

In 1954 Fleeson received the Raymond Clapper Memorial Award from the American Society of Newspaper Editors. She twice received the New York Paperwoman’s Club Prize for Distinguished Reporting. Fleeson was a member of the Women’s National Press Club.

In 1970, Fleeson died of complications from a stroke.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doris_Fleeson

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