Awards & Winners

John Strohmeyer

Date of Birth 26-June-1924
Place of Birth Boston
(Suffolk County, Massachusetts, United States of America, Area code 617, Area code 857)
Nationality United States of America
Profession Journalist, Editor
John Strohmeyer was the 1972 Pulitzer Prize winner for editorial writing “for his editorial campaign to reduce racial tensions in Bethlehem.” John Strohmeyer was born in Boston, Massachusetts and spent several decades as a working journalist, including as an editor at the now-defunct Bethlehem Globe-Times from 1956 to 1984. John Strohmeyer won an Alicia Patterson Journalism Fellowship in 1984 to research and write about a steel company's battle to survive. In 1992, Bob Atwood brought him to Alaska, to lecture in journalism at the University of Alaska Anchorage in a position endowed by Atwood. While there, Strohmeyer wrote Extreme Conditions: Big Oil and the Transformation of Alaska. Strohmeyer also wrote Atwood's biography, which was never published due to a dispute which arose after Atwood's death between Strohmeyer and Atwood's daughter Elaine John Strohmeyer died of heart failure on March 3, 2010 in Crystal River, Florida.

Awards by John Strohmeyer

Check all the awards nominated and won by John Strohmeyer.

1972


Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing
(For his editorial campaign to reduce racial tensions in Bethlehem.)