- Shirer, William Lawrence
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▪ 1994U.S. journalist and author (b. Feb. 23, 1904, Chicago, Ill.—d. Dec. 28, 1993, Boston, Mass.), kept extensive diaries while working for CBS as a radio broadcaster in Berlin (1937-41) and used them and volumes of confidential information retrieved from the German archives after World War II to chronicle the Nazis' rise to power under Adolf Hitler in the massive, best-selling The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich (1960), which won the 1961 National Book Award. After graduating (1925) from Coe College, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Shirer was lured by Europe's mystique. He borrowed funds and worked his way there on a cattle boat. He secured a job with the Chicago Tribune as a copywriter and then as a foreign correspondent, and during the 1920s and '30s he sent dispatches from India, Afghanistan, and the capitals of Europe for the Tribune and later for the Universal News Service. While working for CBS, Shirer won several journalism awards for his impassioned commentaries. He laced his speeches with American slang in an effort to confuse the censors and convey information about the operations of the German army. After serving as bureau chief in Vienna, Shirer left CBS in 1947. He was blacklisted during the McCarthy era as a leftist sympathizer. It was then that he had time to complete The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich. Some of Shirer's other works include Berlin Diary: The Journal of a Foreign Correspondent, 1934-1941 (1941), The Collapse of the Third Republic: An Inquiry into the Fall of France in 1940 (1969), and Gandhi: A Memoir (1979). Shirer also published three volumes of memoirs and prior to his death had completed a book on Leo Tolstoy.
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Universalium. 2010.