Dorothy Roe Lewis
She then joined the Los Angeles Examiner. During her brief time there, she wrote, sold and illustrated a shopping column. Missing her journalism experiences, she moved on to Chicago to write Sunday features for the Hearst morning newspaper. She soon worked for the Universal Service in New York. For the first six years, she wrote for the national desk. Most frequently, she covered murder trials and kidnappings.
In 1941, she joined the Associated Press in New York. She wrote that she found women’s page journalism, “surprisingly exciting, after her long experience in the more lurid phases of straight news reporting.” She also noted, “hemlines often make headlines” and she was able to do pioneering work on women’s news. She was the main women’s editor for the Associated Press for 19 years. In 1959, she earned the Missouri Honor Medal. She later taught at the Missouri School of Journalism.
Her papers are at the Western Historical Manuscript Collection. I have done some initial collecting of her papers and plan to begin drafting her story next fall.
Here’s a link to one of her stories.
2 Comments
Kimberly Wilmot Voss
What a great comment. Thanks for sharing.
Anonymous
Dorothy Roe Lewis was my mentor — a lady in every way. At the Univ. of Missouri Journalism School, I was always amazed at how calm & composed she was when other professors whould be shouting around & at her!
She was a true lady in every sense — someone you always rember with a smile!
MJR, BJ 1969