fiction.wikisort.org - WriterGeorge D. Beveridge (January 5, 1922 – February 14, 1987) was an American journalist praised for his coverage of the Washington politics, government, and regional development, and described by The Washington Post as "an expert on this city and a keen observer and critic of journalistic ethics and practices".[1]
He won a Pulitzer Prize for 1957 coverage of Washington urban problems.[2]
American journalist
George Beveridge |
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 Grave at Arlington National Cemetery |
Born | (1922-01-05)January 5, 1922
Washington, D.C., US |
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Died | February 14, 1987(1987-02-14) (aged 65)
Bethesda, Maryland, US |
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Resting place | Arlington National Cemetery |
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Occupation | Journalist |
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Employer | Washington Star |
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Youth
Born in Washington, D.C., Beveridge's father worked as a machinist for the federal government during the Great Depression. Although he lived briefly in Arlington, VA and raised his family in Bethesda, MD, he regarded himself a lifelong resident of the District, where he graduated from Eastern High School.
Early career
After graduating from high school Beveridge began his journalism career as a copyboy at the city's Evening Star. He enlisted in the US Army in 1942, where he wrote press releases before returning to the Star for what became a 41-year career there as reporter, editor, editorial writer, and ombudsman. He won the paper's first Pulitzer Prize for written journalism in 1958.
Evening Star, Washington Star
Beveridge joined the Evening Star in 1940 as a copyboy while attending George Washington University in the city. He worked his way up the ladder from general assignment reporter to local and then national news reporter.
In 1958 Beveridge wrote a series of articles about urban growth and development in Washington and its Maryland and Northern Virginia suburbs (much of the current Washington metropolitan area), delineating the concept of those municipalities acting together as a region. The series, titled "Metro, City of Tomorrow" earned him a Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting, No Edition Time (a predecessor of the Investigative Reporting Prize). The jury called the series "excellent and thought-provoking ... describing in depth the urban problems of Washington, D.C., which stimulated widespread public consideration of these problems and encouraged further studies by both public and private agencies.[2]
In 1963, he began an 11-year stint as the Star's chief editorial writer on local affairs. After returning to the newsroom as assistant managing editor for local news, he became the Star's first ombudsman. When the paper folded in 1981, Beveridge co-wrote the lead story for its last edition.
George Beveridge died of leukemia at his home in Bethesda on February 14, 1987, aged 65.
See also
References
- "George David Beveridge Jr. (Editorial)". The Washington Post. February 19, 1987.
- "1958 Winners". The Pulitzer Prizes (pulitzer.org). Retrieved 2009-10-21.
External links
Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting |
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Pulitzer Prize for Local Reporting, No Edition Time (1953–1963) |
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- 1953
- Edward J. Mowery
- 1954
- Alvin McCoy
- 1955
- Roland Kenneth Towery
- 1956
- Arthur Daley
- 1957
- Wallace Turner
- 1958
- George Beveridge
- 1959
- John Harold Brislin
- 1960
- Miriam Ottenberg
- 1961
- Edgar May
- 1962
- George Bliss
- 1963
- Oscar Griffin Jr.
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Pulitzer Prize for Local Investigative Specialized Reporting (1964–1984) |
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- 1964
- James V. Magee
- Albert V. Gaudiosi
- Frederick Meyer
- 1965
- Gene Goltz
- 1966
- John Anthony Frasca
- 1967
- Gene Miller
- 1968
- J. Anthony Lukas
- 1969
- Al Delugach
- Denny Walsh
- 1970
- Harold E. Martin
- 1971
- William Jones
- 1972
- Timothy Leland
- Gerard M. O'Neill
- Stephen Kurkjian
- Ann Desantis
- 1973
- The Sun Newspapers of Omaha
- 1974
- William Sherman
- 1975
- The Indianapolis Star
- 1976
- Chicago Tribune
- 1977
- Acel Moore
- Wendell Rawls Jr.
- 1978
- Anthony R. Dolan
- 1979
- Gilbert M. Gaul
- Elliot G. Jaspin
- 1980
- Stephen Kurkjian
- Alexander B. Hawes Jr.
- Nils Bruzelius
- Joan Vennochi
- Robert M. Porterfield
- 1981
- Clark Hallas
- Robert B. Lowe
- 1982
- Paul Henderson
- 1983
- Loretta Tofani
- 1984
- Kenneth Cooper
- Joan Fitz Gerald
- Jonathan Kaufman
- Norman Lockman
- Gary McMillan
- Kirk Scharfenberg
- David Wessel
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Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting (1985–present) |
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- 1985
- Lucy Morgan
- Jack Reed
- William K. Marimow
- 1986
- Jeffrey A. Marx
- Michael M. York
- 1987
- Daniel R. Biddle
- H.G. Bissinger
- Fredric N. Tulsky
- 1988
- Dean Baquet
- William C. Gaines
- Ann Marie Lipinski
- 1989
- Bill Dedman
- 1990
- Lou Kilzer
- 1991
- Joseph T. Hallinan
- Susan M. Headden
- 1992
- Lorraine Adams
- Dan Malone
- 1993
- Jeff Brazil
- Steve Berry
- 1994
- Providence Journal-Bulletin
- 1995
- Stephanie Saul
- Brian Donovan
- 1996
- The Orange County Register
- 1997
- Eric Nalder
- Deborah Nelson
- Alex Tizon
- 1998
- Gary Cohn
- Will Englund
- 1999
- Miami Herald
- 2000
- Sang-Hun Choe
- Charles J. Hanley
- Martha Mendoza
- 2001
- David Willman
- 2002
- Sari Horwitz
- Scott Higham
- Sarah Cohen
- 2003
- Clifford J. Levy
- 2004
- Michael D. Sallah
- Joe Mahr
- Mitch Weiss
- 2005
- Nigel Jaquiss
- 2006
- Susan Schmidt
- James V. Grimaldi
- R. Jeffrey Smith
- 2007
- Brett Blackledge
- 2008
- Walt Bogdanich
- Jake Hooker
- Chicago Tribune
- 2009
- David Barstow
- 2010
- Barbara Laker
- Wendy Ruderman
- Sheri Fink
- 2011
- Paige St. John
- 2012
- Matt Apuzzo
- Adam Goldman
- Eileen Sullivan
- Chris Hawley
- Michael J. Berens
- Ken Armstrong
- 2013
- David Barstow
- Alejandra Xanic von Bertrab
- 2014
- Chris Hamby
- 2015
- Eric Lipton
- The Wall Street Journal
- 2016
- Leonora LaPeter Anton
- Anthony Cormier
- Michael Braga
- Esther Htusan
- 2017
- Eric Eyre
- 2018
- The Washington Post
- 2019
- Matt Hamilton
- Harriet Ryan
- Paul Pringle
- 2020
- Brian Rosenthal
- 2021
- Matt Rocheleau
- Vernal Coleman
- Laura Crimaldi
- Evan Allen
- Brendan McCarthy
- 2022
- Corey G. Johnson
- Rebecca Woolington
- Eli Murray
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