List of war correspondents

Notable war correspondents

19th century

  • Archibald Forbes
  • Benjamin C. Truman
  • Bennet Burleigh (1840–1914), Sudan (Omdurman), Boer War, Russo-Japanese War, Italo-Turkish war
  • Charles Frederick Williams, British journalist.
  • Leo Tolstoy, Crimean War 1854-1855. A Russian of high class, he was an enlisted officer in the Caucasus, where he had gone arguably to escape his gambling, and the debts he had accrued. At the age of 26, he went to the site of the siege of Sevastopol, during the Crimean War, 1854. He wrote despatches there for the St Petersburg literary journal/newspaper The Contemporary. His essays based on his observances of boredom, rubbish dumping, meaningless suffering and disorder provided the basis for three publications, the Sevastopol Sketches. These were commended by the Czarina and translated into the French at her request. Tolstoy narrated the conditions, the bravery and the boredom encountered by the troops. He was frequently critical of higher officers. His skeptical essays were read by Mark Twain who travelled to Sevastopol long after the war and wrote The Innocents Abroad as a result. Tolstoy's sketches torpedoed him to fame and informed his later writings, including War and Peace.
  • Ferdinando Petruccelli della Gattina, Expedition of the thousand, Second and Third Italian War of Independence, Paris Commune
  • Frederic Villiers
  • George Wingrove Cooke, Second Opium War, 1857–1858.
  • Henry Crabb Robinson, Germany and Spain (1807–1809).
  • Howard C. Hillegas, covered Boer Wars
  • John F. Finerty was a war correspondent for the Chicago Times covering the Great Sioux War of 1876–1877.
  • Kit Coleman (1864–1915), female war correspondent who covered the Spanish–American War for the Toronto Mail in 1898.
  • Peter Finnerty, Walcheren Campaign (1809).
  • Richard Harding Davis (1864–1916); covered the Spanish–American War, Second Boer War and the fighting on the Macedonian front during World War I.
  • Robert Edmund Strahorn was a fighting war correspondent in The Great Sioux War of 1876–1877.
  • Stephen Crane (1871–1900); covered the 1897 Greco-Turkish War, where he contracted tuberculosis.
  • Thomas William Bowlby, North China Campaign (1860).
  • William Hicks covered the Battle of Trafalgar for The Times (1805)
  • William Howard Russell covered The Crimean War (1854–1855)
  • Winston Churchill (1874–1965); covered the Siege of Malakand, the Mahdist War and the Second Boer War.

20th century

United States World War II correspondents

Some of them became authors of fiction drawing on their war experiences, including Davis, Crane and Hemingway.

21st century

See also

References

  1. ^ "Soldier of the press: Covering the front in europe and north africa, 1936-1943 by henry t. Gorrell. Edited by kenneth gorrell". Archived from the original on 2010-04-18. Retrieved 2010-02-28.
  2. ^ "Bio, Jacques Leslie", jacquesleslie.com
  3. ^ Nussbaum, Louis Frédéric et al. (2005). "Hyōbusho" in Japan Encyclopedia, p. 692., p. 692, at Google Books
  4. ^ El corresponsal despechado