Happy Birthday, Martha Gellhorn

US #4248 from the 2008 American Journalists set.

One of the world’s first female war correspondents, Martha Ellis Gellhorn, was born on November 8, 1908, in St. Louis, Missouri.

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

US #4248 – Fleetwood First Day Cover.

Gellhorn wanted to work as a foreign correspondent, so she went to France and spent two years working at the United Press Bureau in Paris.  She then returned to the US in 1932 and was hired as a field investigator for the Federal Emergency Relief Administration.  In this role, she traveled the country reporting on the effects of the Depression.  She later assembled these into a collection of short stories in The Trouble I’ve Seen.

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 didn’t 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. 

US #2838c from the 1944: Road to Victory sheet.

What set Gellhorn apart was her insistence on going into the action to interview ordinary soldiers and civilians.  She rode with the British RAF on night bombing raids over Germany.  Traveling with the US 82nd Airborne, Gellhorn reported on the Battle of the Bulge and was one of the first to enter Dachau Concentration Camp.  The respected reporter once remarked that she “followed the war wherever I could reach it.”

US #2418 – Gellhorn was married to Hemingway for four years.

Gellhorn reported on the Vietnam War and the Arab-Israel conflicts of the 1960s and 70s for the Atlantic Monthly.  She also covered the civil wars in Central America and the invasion of Panama when she was 81 years old.  That would be her final assignment, as she turned down the next offer to cover the Bosnia War.  She did however, make one final trip in 1995 to Brazil, to report on the poverty there for the journal Granta.

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.

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11 Comments

    1. There was one on HBO I believe a few years ago that covered her life with Hemingway. It dealt with their time together in Spain & China. As I recall, Nicole Kidmann played her.

  1. An amazing story of an amazing woman that is largely unknown today.. And we even have a stamp of her. Thank you, Mystic

  2. It might have been good to mention her marriage to Ernest Hemingway in the article as opposed to just mentioning it under the Hemingway stamp.

  3. This lady had an amazing carreer. Thanks for reporting on her. I will look more into her work. She must have been tough and courageous.

  4. What a determined lady. Thank you Mystic for sharing her story and enlightening so many of your readers.

  5. One of your best articles yet, and I’ve read nearly all of them since you started. It has made me want to learn more about her AND start a new topical for amazing historical women, especially little known women like Martha Gellhorn. This story and many others have made the stamps in my collections more meaningful to me. Thank you.

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