Awards & Winners

Gilbert M. Gaul

Date of Birth 18-May-1951
Place of Birth Jersey City
(Hudson County, New Jersey, United States of America, Area code 551, Area code 201, Area codes 201 and 551)
Nationality United States of America
Also know as Gilbert Gaul
Profession Journalist
Gilbert M. Gaul is an American journalist. He has won two Pulitzer Prizes and been a finalist for three others. Gaul was born in Jersey City and grew up in Kearny, New Jersey. He attended St. Benedict's Prep in Newark, NJ, where he was a state champion in the javelin throw. He graduated from Fairleigh Dickinson University in 1973 and shortly thereafter started his career as a journalist. Gaul worked at the Lehighton Times-News in Lehighton, Pennsylvania, before moving to The Pottsville Republican in the anthracite coal region. There, he teamed with Elliot Jaspin on a five-part series on the collapse of the huge Blue Coal Corporation, once one of the largest producers of soft coal. For their efforts, they shared the 1979 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting, citing "stories on the destruction of the Blue Coal Company by men with ties to organized crime", among other national reporting awards. In 1980, Gaul worked for the Philadelphia Bulletin covering Atlantic City, which recently had added casino gaming. He returned to Pottsville a year later and worked on a series detailing millions in waste in the county government, which won a National Headliners Award for investigative reporting.

Awards by Gilbert M. Gaul

Check all the awards nominated and won by Gilbert M. Gaul.

2001


Nominations 2001 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting The Philadelphia Inquirer
For their series on the extreme commercialization of college sports.

1994


Nominations 1994 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting
For their investigation that identified rampant abuses of America's nonprofit tax laws.

1990


Pulitzer Prize for Public Service
Honored for : Washington Daily News
(For revealing that the city's water supply was contaminated with carcinogens, a problem that the local government had neither disclosed nor corrected over a period of eight years.)

Nominations 1990 »

Award Nominated Nominated Work
Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting
For reporting that disclosed how the American blood industry operates with little governmental regulation or supervision.

1979


Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting
([Local Investigative Specialized Reporting] For stories on the destruction of the Blue Coal Company by men with ties to organized crime.)