Awards & Winners

Thomas M. Storke

Date of Birth 23-November-1876
Place of Birth Santa Barbara
(United States of America, California)
Nationality United States of America
Also know as Thomas Storke
Profession Politician, Journalist, Publisher
Thomas More Storke was an American politician, rancher, journalist and publisher. He was awarded the Pulitzer Prize for Journalism in 1962. Born in Santa Barbara, California, to eminent local citizen and politician Charles A. Storke, he attended public schools and graduated from Stanford University in 1898. He was editor and publisher of the Santa Barbara News-Press and its predecessors, a rancher and citrus fruit grower, and postmaster of Santa Barbara from 1914 to 1921. Storke was one of the few prominent voices opposed to the movement in Santa Barbara in the 1920s to unify the architectural style around a Spanish theme, although he later recanted, claiming that his original opposition was principally because such dictates interfered with the constitutional rights of property owners. He was appointed on November 9, 1938, as a Democrat to the United States Senate to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of William Gibbs McAdoo and served from November 9, 1938, to January 3, 1939. However, because Congress was not in session during the time he was in office, Storke was never actually sworn into office. He was not a candidate for election for the full term.²

Awards by Thomas M. Storke

Check all the awards nominated and won by Thomas M. Storke.

1962


Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Writing
(For his forceful editorials calling public attention to the activities of a semi-secret organization known as the John Birch Society.)