Awards & Winners

Hazel Brannon Smith

Date of Birth 04-February-1914
Place of Birth Alabama
(United States of America, Contiguous United States)
Nationality United States of America
Profession Editor, Businessperson, Journalist
Hazel Freeman Brannon Smith, the owner and editor of four weekly newspapers in rural Mississippi, was the first woman to receive the Pulitzer Prize for editorial writing. A lifelong Baptist, she described herself as "just a little editor in a little spot. A lot of other little editors in a lot of little spots is what helps make this country. It's either going to help protect that freedom that we have, or else it's going to let that freedom slip away by default." In 1930, she graduated from high school in Gadsden, Alabama, at the age of 16. Graduating from the University of Alabama in 1935 with a B.A. in Journalism, she went to Durant, Mississippi and bought the failing Durant News, making it such a success by 1943 that she purchased the Lexington Advertiser in the neighboring town of Lexington, Mississippi. She edited and published the Lexington Advertiser from 1943 to 1983. In 1956, she acquired the Banner County Outlook in 1956 and the Northside Reporter in 1956.

Awards by Hazel Brannon Smith

Check all the awards nominated and won by Hazel Brannon Smith.

1964


Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing
(For steadfast adherence to her editorial duty in the face of great pressure and opposition.)