Hubert Renfro Knickerbocker

{{short description|American journalist and author}}

{{infobox person

| name = Hubert Renfro Knickerbocker

| image = Bundesarchiv Bild 102-11663, Hubert Knickerbocker.jpg

| imagesize = 150px

| caption = Hubert Renfro Knickerbocker

| birth_date = {{Birth date |1898|1|31}}

| birth_place = Yoakum, Texas, U.S.

| death_date = {{Death date and age|1949|7|12|1898|1|31}}

| death_place = Ghatkopar, Mumbai, India

| nationality = U.S.

| education = Southwestern University, Columbia University

| occupation = journalist, writer

| parents = Hubert Delancey Knickerbocker and Julia Catherine Knickerbocker (née Opdenweyer)

| spouses = Laura Knickerbocker, Agnes Knickerbocker (July 1935 - July 1949)

}}

Hubert Renfro Knickerbocker (January 31, 1898 – July 12, 1949) was an American journalist and author; winner of the 1931 Pulitzer Prize for Correspondence for his series of articles on the practical operation of the Five Year Plan in the Soviet Union.{{cite web|url=http://www.pulitzer.org/awards/1931|title=The Pulitzer Prize: 1931 Winners|publisher=The Pulitzer Prizes |access-date=Dec 13, 2023}}

He was nicknamed "Red" from the color of his hair.{{cite book|page=33|title=We Saw Spain Die: foreign correspondents in the Spanish Civil War|first=Paul|last=Preston|year=2009|isbn=978-1-60239-767-5|publisher=Skyhorse Publishing, Inc.}}

Early life

Knickerbocker was born in Yoakum, Texas, to Rev. Hubert Delancey Knickerbocker and Julia Catherine Knickerbocker (née Opdenweyer).Edgar P. Sneed, 'Knickerbocker, Hubert Renfro (1898–1949)', in The Handbook of Texas, available online (published: 1976; updated: February 1, 1995): https://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/entries/knickerbocker-hubert-renfro He attended Southwestern University before serving in the army for a few months as a telegraph operator. In 1919, he moved to Columbia University to pursue medicine, but his financial constraints allowed him only to study journalism. He completed the program in 1921.'The Press: Correspondent on Stump' in Life, Monday, March 25, 1940: https://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,763735,00.html

Education

Knickerbocker graduated from the Southwestern University in Texas and then studied journalism at Columbia University.'The Press: Correspondent on Stump' in Life, Monday, March 25, 1940: https://content.time.com/time/subscriber/article/0,33009,763735,00.htmlWalter Prescott Webb, Eldon Stephen Branda, The Handbook of Texas vol. 3 (1952), p. 482: "Hubert Renfro Knickerbocker, internationally known writer and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, was born in Yoakum, Texas, on January 31, 1898, the son of Rev. Hubert Delancey and Julia Catherine Knickerbocker..."

Career

Knickerbocker was a journalist, noted for reporting on German politics before and during World War II. From 1923 to 1933 he reported from Berlin, but because of his opposition to Adolf Hitler he was deported when Hitler came to power. On December 1, 1930, Knickerbocker interviewed Soviet leader Joseph Stalin's mother, Keke Geladze, in Tbilisi for the New York Evening Post through a Georgian interpreter. The article was titled “Stalin Mystery Man Even to His Mother.”{{cite book |author1=Stephen Kotkin |title=Stalin:Volume 2 |publisher=Penguin Press |location=New York |page=64 }}

In 1932 he traveled across Europe for the book Does Europe Recover. He interviewed many state leaders, amongst them Benito Mussolini, and the second-most important person of Germany's NSDAP Party, Gregor Strasser. His report on Italian fascism is full of praise for the regime's "stability".Knickerbocker, Does Europe recover, German: Kommt Europa wieder hoch, Rohwot, Berlin 1932, p. 110 He also praises Strasser's "left wing" of NSDAP party and the Papen government's semi-dictatorship.Knickerbocker, Does Europe recover, German: Kommt Europa wieder hoch, Rohwot, Berlin 1932, p. 203f. There is no hint of a warning about Nazism in the book but rather a recommendation for its success in Italy.

Back in America, after Hitler's reign of terror became the face of NSDAP, he began writing about the threat of Nazism. On April 15, 1933, he wrote in the New York Evening Post: "An indeterminate number of Jews have been killed. Hundreds of Jews have been beaten or tortured. Thousands of Jews have fled. Thousands of Jews have been, or will be, deprived of their livelihood." In 1931, as a correspondent for the New York Evening Post and the Philadelphia Public Ledger, he won the Pulitzer Prize for "a series of articles on the practical operation of the Five Year Plan in Russia".{{cite web|title=Knickerbocker, Hubert Renfro|url=http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fkn03|access-date=2013-10-31|publisher=TSHAOnline}}{{cite web|url=http://www.pulitzer.org/awards/1931|title=The Pulitzer Prize: 1931 Winners|publisher=The Pulitzer Prizes |access-date=Mar 9, 2010}}

In 1936 he covered the Spanish Civil War for the Hearst Press group. Like other foreign reporters, his work was progressively hampered by the rebel authorities, who finally arrested Knickerbocker in April 1937 and deported him shortly after. Back to the United States, he wrote an article for the Washington Times, published on 10 May 1937, in which he exposed the brutal repression and the "antisemite, misogynist and antidemocratic" society that the Nationalists planned to develop, according to the statements by Francoist Foreign Press Liaison Officer Gonzalo de Aguilera Munro. The next day, Congressman Jerry J. O'Connell cited the article extensively in the House of Representatives due to the concern generated.{{Cite book|last=Preston|first=Paul|title=Idealistas bajo las balas: Corresponsales extranjeros en la guerra de España|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1LjWwYvHM8AC&q=Jerry+O%27Connell|access-date=2022-02-14|year=2011|publisher=Penguin Random House|isbn=9788499891484|chapter=Chapter 4|language=es}}

After World War II, Knickerbocker went to work for radio station WOR, in Newark, New Jersey. He was on assignment with a team of journalists touring Southeast Asia when they were all killed in a plane crash near Bombay, India (modern day Mumbai), on July 12, 1949.{{cite news |last1=Doctor |first1=Vikram |title=Anatomy of a crash: Lessons for Indian aviation from a 69-year-old tragedy |url=https://economictimes.indiatimes.com/industry/transportation/airlines-/-aviation/anatomy-of-a-crash-lessons-for-indian-aviation-from-a-69-year-old-tragedy/articleshow/64802331.cms?from=mdr |access-date=3 April 2020 |work=The Economic Times |date=30 June 2018}}

Personal life

Knickerbocker was married first to Laura Patrick in 1918, and they had one son, Conrad, who became a daily book reviewer for The New York Times. His second marriage was to Agnes Schjoldager, with whom he had three daughters, including Miranda, who married actor Sorrell Booke.

Major publications

  • [https://archive.org/details/KnickerbockerHubertRenfroFightingTheRedTradeMenace Fighting the Red Trade Menace] (1931)
  • The New Russia (1931)
  • [https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli.2015.8007 Soviet Trade and World Depression] (1931)
  • [https://michaelharrison.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/The-Soviet-Five-year-Plan-and-its-effect-on-world-trade.pdf The Soviet Five Year Plan and Its Effect on World Trade] (1931)
  • Can Europe Recover? (1932)
  • German Crises (1932)
  • Germany-Fascist or Soviet? (1932)
  • The Truth about Hitlerism (1933)
  • The Boiling Point: Will War Come in Europe? (1934)
  • [https://gutenberg.org/ebooks/66251 Is Tomorrow Hitler’s? 200 Questions On The Battle of Mankind] (1941)

References

{{Reflist}}

Further reading

  • Cohen, Deborah. Last Call at the Hotel Imperial: The Reporters Who Took On a World at War (2022) American coverage of 1930s in Europe by John Gunther, H. R. Knickerbocker, Vincent Sheean, and Dorothy Thompson.[https://www.amazon.com/Last-Call-Hotel-Imperial-Reporters/dp/0525511199/ excerpt]