Dorothy was born to Rev. Peter Thompson, a Methodist preacher, and Margaret Grierson, followed by her siblings, Peter and Margaret. Her mother died in 1901, when Dorothy was 7, and her father remarried two years later to Elizabeth Abbott. She did not get along well with her stepmother, and in 1908, her father sent her to live with his two sisters, Margaret Kenning and Henrietta Thompson, in Chicago, where she attended Lewis Institute. Two years later, she transferred to Syracuse University and graduated in 1914, and began working out of Buffalo, New York, on the women's suffrage movement. In 1920, she was hired as a freelance journalist and traveled through much of Europe. That year, she was the last person to interview Terence MacSwiney, a leader in the Irish Sinn Féin movement, before he died, which secured her position as a foreign correspondent for The Philadelphia Ledger. As a correspondent, she chronicled the rise of the Nazis and, in 1931, met and interviewed Hitler. In her book, "I Saw Hitler," she wrote about the dangers of the Nazis and famously said of Hitler, "He is formless, almost faceless, a man whose countenance is a caricature, a man whose framework seems cartilaginous, without bones. He is inconsequent and voluble, ill-poised, and insecure. He is the very prototype of the little man." Hitler was so bothered by the criticisms of Dorothy Thompson that he had a unit set up to monitor her whereabouts and writings, and by August of 1934, she was the first journalist to be expelled from Germany. In 1936, she began writing her very popular "On The Record" syndicated newspaper column, which appeared in over 170 newspapers and was read by more than 10 million people. That same year, she became a radio commentator for NBC, and her broadcasts were one of the most popular at the time. In Woman of the Year (1942), the main character, Tess Harding, is said to be based on Dorothy and was portrayed by Katherine Hepburn in the movie and by Lauren Bacall on Broadway. She married her first husband, Joseph Bard, in 1923. In 1928, she married the Nobel Prize-winning author Sinclair Lewis and gave birth to their only son, Michael Lewis, in 1930. In 1945, she married her third husband, Max Kopf. Dorothy Thompson died at the age of 67 while staying with her daughter-in-law and grandchildren in Lisbon, Portugal.
Dorothy was born to Rev. Peter Thompson, a Methodist preacher, and Margaret Grierson, followed by her siblings, Peter and Margaret. Her mother died in 1901, when Dorothy was 7, and her father remarried two years later to Elizabeth Abbott. She did not get along well with her stepmother, and in 1908, her father sent her to live with his two sisters, Margaret Kenning and Henrietta Thompson, in Chicago, where she attended Lewis Institute. Two years later, she transferred to Syracuse University and graduated in 1914, and began working out of Buffalo, New York, on the women's suffrage movement. In 1920, she was hired as a freelance journalist and traveled through much of Europe. That year, she was the last person to interview Terence MacSwiney, a leader in the Irish Sinn Féin movement, before he died, which secured her position as a foreign correspondent for The Philadelphia Ledger. As a correspondent, she chronicled the rise of the Nazis and, in 1931, met and interviewed Hitler. In her book, "I Saw Hitler," she wrote about the dangers of the Nazis and famously said of Hitler, "He is formless, almost faceless, a man whose countenance is a caricature, a man whose framework seems cartilaginous, without bones. He is inconsequent and voluble, ill-poised, and insecure. He is the very prototype of the little man." Hitler was so bothered by the criticisms of Dorothy Thompson that he had a unit set up to monitor her whereabouts and writings, and by August of 1934, she was the first journalist to be expelled from Germany. In 1936, she began writing her very popular "On The Record" syndicated newspaper column, which appeared in over 170 newspapers and was read by more than 10 million people. That same year, she became a radio commentator for NBC, and her broadcasts were one of the most popular at the time. In Woman of the Year (1942), the main character, Tess Harding, is said to be based on Dorothy and was portrayed by Katherine Hepburn in the movie and by Lauren Bacall on Broadway. She married her first husband, Joseph Bard, in 1923. In 1928, she married the Nobel Prize-winning author Sinclair Lewis and gave birth to their only son, Michael Lewis, in 1930. In 1945, she married her third husband, Max Kopf. Dorothy Thompson died at the age of 67 while staying with her daughter-in-law and grandchildren in Lisbon, Portugal.
Bio by: Garver Graver
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DOROTHY THOMPSON KOPF
1893-1961
WRITER
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