Oral history of Russell Baker

General

Abstract

Russell Baker, born August 14, 1925 in Morrisonville, Virginia, a small town across the state line from Harper's Ferry, West Virginia and not far from Frederick, Maryland, is a notable American author and Hopkins alumnus. An essayist and journalist for many years, Baker won his first of two Pulitzer Prizes in 1979 for his writing for The New York Times. He is notably one of the longest-running columnists in the history of the New York Times and The Baltimore Sun. Three years later, his first autobiography, Growing Up, won Baker his second Pulitzer. The primary subject of this first autobiography, his most well-known work, was his childhood in Virginia during the Great Depression, while the focus of his second autobiography, Good Times, was his extensive and varied half-century career in journalism, including a close look at his time with The Baltimore Sun. In this oral history, Russell Baker describes his childhood, World War II, and his student days at Hopkins (1942-1947), specifically his courses in English, his work with the News-Letter, and his general impressions of Hopkins. This oral history is a part of the Mame Warren oral histories series.
Title Language
Dates

Date Published

1999-07-13
Publisher
Publisher Country
Language
Identifiers

Collection Number

MS.0404

DSpace Item ID

af11ce8e-fd7e-4813-8532-3bea0e2cf62d
Resources
Resource Type
Sound

Extent

01:21:28 hh:mm:ss
Contributor
Interviewer (ivr): Warren, Mame, 1950-
Interviewee (ive): Baker, Russell, 1925-2019
Copyright and Use
System
Access Rights
Public digital access
Model
Audio

Unique ID

b2c2bdf6-a55c-4cf3-a599-f0ebfce06413