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To: Snow Bunny; all
I was reading a book written during WWII, and it mentioned the amazing and absolutely reckless exploits of the famous LIFE photographer, Margaret Bourke-White. I have a very fuzzy memory that she died on duty in Vietnam -- sniper or land mine, perhaps. Does anyone remember?
95 posted on 03/05/2002 6:50:43 AM PST by T'wit
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To: T'wit
Margaret Bourke-White

BIRTHDATE: June 14, 1904

BIRTHPLACE: The Bronx, NY

EDUCATION: Margaret Bourke-White attended several universities throughout the United States while pursuing a degree in Herpetology (the study of reptiles). They included Columbia University in New York, the University of Michigan, Purdue University in Indiana, Western Reserve University in Cleveland, Ohio, and she received her degree in 1927 from Cornell University in Ithaca, NY. Margaret began to study photography as a hobby while a very young woman. She developed the styles and techniques that she needed for various formats on her own. Her father was also somewhat of a camera enthusiast and he exposed her to the wonders of the photographic lens as a youngster.

FAMILY BACKGROUND: Her father, Joseph White, was of Polish-Jewish background. He was an inventor and an engineer. He believed in equality in education and opportunity for all his children. Margaret's mother, Minnie Bourke, was of Irish-English ancestry and was a loving and nurturing mother. Minnie was completing her college degree at the time of her death. Margaret was married twice; once to Everett Chapman, when she was but 18 years old; and to Erskine Caldwell, the writer, in 1939, after they had worked together. They divorced in 1942.

DESCRIPTION OF ACCOMPLISHMENTS: Margaret Bourke-White is a woman of many firsts. She was a forerunner in the newly emerging field of photojournalism, and was the first female to be hired as such. She was the first photographer for Fortune magazine, in 1929. In 1930, she was the first Western photographer allowed into the Soviet Union. Henry Luce hired as the first female photojournalist for Life magazine, soon after its creation in 1935, and one of her photographs adorned its first cover. She was the first female war correspondent and the first to be allowed to work in combat zones during World War II, and one of the first photographers to enter and document the death camps. She made history with the publication of her haunting photos of the Depression in the book You Have Seen Their Faces, a collaboration with husband-to-be Erskine Caldwell. She wrote six books about her international travels. She was the premiere female industrial photographer, getting her start in Cleveland, Ohio, at the Otis Steel Company about 1927.

PLACE OF DEATH: Connecticut

DATE OF DEATH: August 27, 1971

98 posted on 03/05/2002 7:41:50 AM PST by SAMWolf
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To: T'wit
Are you thinking, perhaps, of Bernard Fall, the French journalist and author of Street Without Joy and Hell in a Very Small Place , about the siege of Dien Bien Phu?

He was killed on the very Street he wrote about in the French Vietnam war while covering the second (American) war - by a land mine, I believe.

108 posted on 03/05/2002 8:32:09 AM PST by BRO68
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To: T'wit
Yes I do remember the book.Thanks for reminding me.
164 posted on 03/05/2002 10:28:48 AM PST by Snow Bunny
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