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From James Cameron to Winston Churchill: Martin Bell on the Ten Greatest War Correspondents
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By Martin Bell DAILY MAIL, 12th March 2011 -From Cameron's committed - but not biased - reporting during the fifties and Churchill's reports from the Boer War, to American journalist Ernie Pyle's mould-breaking interviews during World War II, MARTIN BELL looks at those brave men from the front line.
6. WINSTON CHURCHILL (1874-1965) Winston Churchill made his name in the Boer War, obtaining a commission to act as war correspondent for the Morning Post on a salary of £250 per month just weeks after the conflict broke out in 1899.
Churchill (above) was the first celebrity war reporter. He made his name in the Boer War, obtaining a commission to act as war correspondent for the Morning Post on a salary of £250 per month just weeks after the conflict broke out in 1899. Shortly after arriving, he joined a scouting expedition in an armoured train, leading to his capture and imprisonment in a PoW camp in Pretoria, but he escaped across the border to Portuguese Mozambique and wrote about his exploits for the paper.
Shortly after arriving, Churchill joined a scouting expedition in an armoured train, leading to his capture and imprisonment in a PoW camp in Pretoria, but he escaped and wrote about his exploits for the Morning Post
See the entire list here at the Mail Online
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| Last Updated on Tuesday, 15 March 2011 08:03 |