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Milton Brooks

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Name
  
Milton Brooks

Died
  
September 3, 1956

Parents
  
James W. Brooks


Milton Brooks Ford Strikers Riot by Milton Brooks 1942 Pulitzer Prize Winner

Awards
  
Pulitzer Prize for Photography

Milton E. "Pete" Brooks (August 29, 1901 – September 3, 1956) was the winner of the first Pulitzer Prize for photography in 1942.

Contents

Biography

Brooks was born in St. Louis. He was a stocky red-headed man with an ardent boating habit. His father, James W. Brooks, was also a newspaper reporter and "desk man". Brooks won the prize while employed at The Detroit News.

Prize-winning photograph

The photograph with which Brooks won the prize was called Ford Strikers Riot. It was taken during the 1941 workers' strike at a Ford manufacturing plant, and shows strikers beating a strikebreaker, who is trying to protect himself by pulling his coat over his head and face.

Describing the circumstances surrounding the photo, Brooks said, "I took the picture quickly, hid the camera under my coat and ducked into the crowd. A lot of people would have liked to wreck that picture."

References

Milton Brooks Wikipedia