Frederick Woltman

Frederick Woltman (1905–1970) was a 20th-century American newspaper journalist for the New York World-Telegram, known as "an anti-communist reporter in the 1940s and early 1950s but best known for criticism of U.S. Senator Joseph McCarthy in a series of articles called "The McCarthy Balance Sheet," which ran July 12–16, 1954.[1][2]

Frederick Woltman
BornEnos Frederick Woltman
March 16, 1905
York, Pennsylvania
DiedMarch 1970
OccupationJournalist
LanguageEnglish
NationalityAmerican
Notable awardsPulitzer Prize for Reporting

Background

Enos Frederick Woltman was born on March 16, 1905.[3]

Career

Until 1929, Woltman taught Philosophy at the University of Pittsburgh, when the Pennsylvania Governor Gifford Pinchot had him fired for an article he had written in the American Mercury about police brutality during a coal strike. Roy Howard of the New York World-Telegram hired him because of it.[4]

After World War Two, Woltman received assistance from Victor Laskyon articles about Communist Party infiltration within the USA.[5]

In 1946, Woltman beat out other newspaper investigators into the accusation of Louis F. Budenz that a high-level communist spy was working in the United States and discovered that person was Gerhart Eisler.[1][4][6]

U.S. Senator Joseph McCarthy chats with Roy Cohn (right) at the Army-McCarthy hearings (1954)

Frederick Woltman, a reporter with a long-standing reputation as a staunch anti-communist, wrote a five-part series of articles criticizing McCarthy in the New York World-Telegram. He stated that McCarthy "has become a major liability to the cause of anti-communism", and accused him of "wild twisting of facts and near facts [that] repels authorities in the field".[7]

TIME magazine described Woltman as follows:

Long acknowledged the No. 1 newspaper specialist on Reds, he has been exposing Communists since 1938, and, unlike many other anti-Communist writers, he was never a Communist himself. A hard-digging reporter, he backed his stories with solid documentation—e.g., he exposed Gerhart Eisler as the top Kremlin agent in the U.S. the day before the FBI picked Eisler up.... This week the World-Telly and other Scripps-Howard papers splashed Woltman's five-part series across their pages. His appraisal: McCarthy is "a major liability to the cause of anti-Communism." By making it harder for real Communist-fighters to operate effectively, wrote Woltman, McCarthy has actually become an asset to Communism. "He has introduced a slambang, rabble-rousing, hit-and-run technique into the serious business of exposing the Communist conspiracy... and thereby disarranged...[8]

The story was so controversial that it stirred up coverage itself, including again by TIME: "In their series on Joe McCarthy, the Scripps-Howard papers... stirred up an even bigger furor than they had expected"[9]

Awards

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See also

References

  1. Ceplair, Larry (2011). Anti-Communism in Twentieth-Century America. ABC-CLIO. p. 80 (Eisler), 126 (anti-communist). Retrieved December 30, 2017.
  2. Ghiglione, Loren (2011). CBS's Don Hollenbeck: An Honest Reporter in the Age of McCarthyism. Columbia University Press. p. 129. Retrieved 30 December 2017.
  3. A genealogy and history of the Kauffman-Coffman families of North America, 1584 to 1937. Kauffman. 1940. p. 427. Retrieved 30 December 2017.
  4. "The Press: Two Plus Two Equals Red". TIME. 30 June 1947. Retrieved December 30, 2017.
  5. Fowler, Glenn (23 February 1990). "Victor Lasky, 72, Whose Writings Focused on Fighting Communists". New York Times. Retrieved December 30, 2017.
  6. "A Secret Boss of the U.S. Communists Is Exposed". Life. 28 October 1946: 44. Retrieved 30 December 2017. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  7. Cook, Fred J. (1971). The Nightmare Decade: The Life and Times of Senator Joe McCarthy. Random House. p. 536. ISBN 0-394-46270-X.
  8. "About McCarthy". Time. July 19, 1954. Retrieved December 18, 2006.
  9. "The Press: Woltman v. McCarthy". Time. August 2, 1954. Retrieved December 30, 2017.
  10. "York native Frederick Woltman won Pulitzer in 1947". York Daily Record. 4 January 2007. Retrieved December 30, 2017.


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