# 4250 - 2008 42c American Journalist: George Polk
George Polk
American Journalist
Issue Date: April 22, 2008
City: Washington, DC
Birth Of George Polk
Polk attended the Virginia Military Institute but left during his junior year. After returning briefly to Fort Worth, he grew restless. Polk spent some time in California before going to Alaska, where he attended the University of Alaska.
After graduating with an English degree in 1938, Polk worked as a reporter in China and France. After the US entered World War II, he joined the Naval Construction Battalion (Seabees). During the war, he volunteered as a dive-bomber and reconnaissance pilot. In a battle near the Solomon Islands, Polk was searching for a downed pilot when two Japanese fighters attacked his own plane. He got away from them but had to land his plane in the ocean and spent a week with friendly villagers before an American plane passed over to help him. Polk also contracted malaria and was in the hospital for nearly a year.
Polk stood by his convictions, putting the story before his personal safety. He was founded dead on May 16, floating near the port of Thessaloniki, with his hands and feet bound and a bullet wound to his head. Three Greek communists were convicted of his murder; the Greek government claimed Polk was killed while trying to get a meeting with a leader of the group. Most historians believe the real story was never revealed. Polk’s younger brother William thought, “The trial was a joke. The defense attorneys never raised any of the issues they could have raised. They never called witnesses they could have called. It was like a Soviet show trial.”
George Polk
American Journalist
Issue Date: April 22, 2008
City: Washington, DC
Birth Of George Polk
Polk attended the Virginia Military Institute but left during his junior year. After returning briefly to Fort Worth, he grew restless. Polk spent some time in California before going to Alaska, where he attended the University of Alaska.
After graduating with an English degree in 1938, Polk worked as a reporter in China and France. After the US entered World War II, he joined the Naval Construction Battalion (Seabees). During the war, he volunteered as a dive-bomber and reconnaissance pilot. In a battle near the Solomon Islands, Polk was searching for a downed pilot when two Japanese fighters attacked his own plane. He got away from them but had to land his plane in the ocean and spent a week with friendly villagers before an American plane passed over to help him. Polk also contracted malaria and was in the hospital for nearly a year.
Polk stood by his convictions, putting the story before his personal safety. He was founded dead on May 16, floating near the port of Thessaloniki, with his hands and feet bound and a bullet wound to his head. Three Greek communists were convicted of his murder; the Greek government claimed Polk was killed while trying to get a meeting with a leader of the group. Most historians believe the real story was never revealed. Polk’s younger brother William thought, “The trial was a joke. The defense attorneys never raised any of the issues they could have raised. They never called witnesses they could have called. It was like a Soviet show trial.”