# 4248 - 2008 42c American Journalist: Martha Gellhorn
Martha Gellhorn
American Journalist
Issue Date:Â April 22, 2008
City:Â Washington, DC
Birth Of Martha Gellhorn
After graduating from high school in 1926, Gellhorn attended Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania. However, she left the school the following year to work as a journalist. Her first articles were published in The New Republic.Â
Gellhorn then traveled to Spain to report on the Spanish Civil War. She then went to Germany and witnessed and covered the rise of Adolph Hitler. Gellhorn followed the war, reporting from Finland, Hong Kong, Burma, Singapore, and England. She didnât receive the proper press credentials to follow the Normandy landings, so she hid in the bathroom of a hospital ship and posed as a stretcher-bearer to go onshore. Gellhorn was the only woman to land on Normandy on D-Day.Â
For more than five decades, Gellhorn had covered wars in Europe, Asia, the Middle East, Vietnam, and Central America. In addition to this, she also wrote fiction, including five novels, fourteen novellas, and two short story collections. In her final years, she had an unsuccessful cataract surgery that left her partially blind. She died in London on February 15, 1998.
Martha Gellhorn
American Journalist
Issue Date:Â April 22, 2008
City:Â Washington, DC
Birth Of Martha Gellhorn
After graduating from high school in 1926, Gellhorn attended Bryn Mawr College in Pennsylvania. However, she left the school the following year to work as a journalist. Her first articles were published in The New Republic.Â
Gellhorn then traveled to Spain to report on the Spanish Civil War. She then went to Germany and witnessed and covered the rise of Adolph Hitler. Gellhorn followed the war, reporting from Finland, Hong Kong, Burma, Singapore, and England. She didnât receive the proper press credentials to follow the Normandy landings, so she hid in the bathroom of a hospital ship and posed as a stretcher-bearer to go onshore. Gellhorn was the only woman to land on Normandy on D-Day.Â
For more than five decades, Gellhorn had covered wars in Europe, Asia, the Middle East, Vietnam, and Central America. In addition to this, she also wrote fiction, including five novels, fourteen novellas, and two short story collections. In her final years, she had an unsuccessful cataract surgery that left her partially blind. She died in London on February 15, 1998.