#12 – P.M. the daily newspaper

Solly mentions P.M in the February 9, 1945 letter for the first time, and then later on in the April 19, 1945 letter he talks about receiving his copies, and again a week or so later in the April 27th letter he boasts that he has gotten the major from Brooklyn to start reading P.M.   Solly talks about how reading P.M. makes him feel like he is back home, riding the subway, and catching up with news of the world.

P.M. was a very liberal leaning daily newspaper published in New York City by Ralph Ingersoll from June 1940 to June 1948 and financed by Chicago millionaire Marshall Field III.  The origin of the name is unknown, although Ingersoll recalled that it probably referred to the fact that the paper appeared in the afternoon; The New Yorker reported that the name had been suggested by Lillian Hellman.

The paper borrowed many elements from weekly news magazines, such as many large photos and at first was bound with staples. In an attempt to be free of pressure from business interests, it did not accept advertising.  There were accusations that the paper was Communist-dominated, but the editorial pages of P.M. were frequently critical with the Communist Party’s paper, the Daily Worker.

 

PM_Daily_060144_mst
A page out of P.M., 1944

P.M. was also a highly literary and intellectual read and attracted some of the great writers and political innovators of its time.  Theodor Geisel, better known as Dr. Seuss, published more than 400 cartoons on PM‘s editorial page. Crockett Johnson’s comic strip Barnaby debuted in the paper in 1942. Other artists who worked at PM included Ad Reinhardt, one of the founders of Abstract Expressionism, and Joseph LeBoit, who both contributed margin cartoons and drawings.

Coulton Waugh created his short-lived strip, Hank, which began April 30, 1945 in PM. The story of a disabled GI returning to civilian life, Hank had a unique look due to Waugh’s decorative art style, combined with dialogue lettered in upper and lower case rather than the accepted convention of all uppercase lettering in balloons and captions. Some dialogue was displayed with white lettering reversed into black balloons.

The comic strip Hank.

Hank sought to raise questions about the reasons for war, and how it might be prevented by the next generation. Waugh discontinued it at the very end of 1945 because of eyestrain. Cartoonist Jack Sparling created the short-lived comic strip Claire Voyant, which ran from 1943 to 1948 in PM, and which was subsequently syndicated by the Chicago Sun-Times.

 Journalist I. F. Stone was the paper’s Washington correspondent. He published an award-winning series on European Jewish refugees attempting to run the British blockade to reach Palestine, later collected and published as Underground to Palestine. Staffers included theater critic Louis Kronenberger and film critic Cecelia Ager. Weegee, Margaret Bourke-White and Arthur Leipzig were the photographers. The sports writers were Tom Meany, Tom O’Reilly and George F. T. Ryall, who covered horse racing. Sophie Smoliar was the New York City reporter working frequently with photographer Arthur Felig (Weegee) submitted by her son and a collection of her original articles. Elizabeth Hawes wrote about fashion, and her sister Charlotte Adams covered food.

Other writers who contributed articles included Erskine Caldwell, Myril Axlerod, McGeorge Bundy, Saul K. Padover, James Wechsler, eventually the paper’s editorial writer, Penn Kimball, later a professor at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism, Heywood Hale Broun, James Thurber, Dorothy Parker, Ernest Hemingway, Eugene Lyons, Earl Conrad; Ben Stolberg, Malcolm Cowley, Tip O’Neill (later Speaker of the United States House of Representatives); and Ben Hecht (playwright and author).

The primary point of my listing all the names of these people who worked at P.M. is to convey how much this short-lived daily represented some of the most progressive and creative thinkers, artists and journalists of its day.  Our family was part of a well-informed and intellectually demanding readership.  Clearly, this was a newspaper the Kovsky’s could sink their teeth into.

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