Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Sarah McClendon

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Occupation
  
journalist

Books
  
My Eight Presidents

Spouse
  
John Thomas (m. 1943)

Role
  
Reporter

Name
  
Sarah McClendon


Sarah McClendon imagesusatodaycomnewsphotos20030107mcclend

Born
  
July 8, 1910 (
1910-07-08
)
Tyler, Texas, United States

Status
  
widowed (prior to her death)

Children
  
Sally Newcomb MacDonald

Died
  
January 8, 2003, Washington, D.C., United States

Education
  
University of Missouri, Tyler Junior College

Sarah mcclendon mr president produced by roberta oster sachs


Sarah Newcomb McClendon (July 8, 1910 – January 8, 2003) was a long-time White House reporter who covered presidential politics for a half-century. McClendon founded her own freelance news service as a single mother in the post-World War II era, and became known as a model for women in the press and as a vocal advocate of various causes, particularly those of United States military veterans. McClendon was best known, however, for posing sharp, blunt questions at United States presidential press conferences.

Contents

Sarah McClendon AFN Gasthaus with Sarah McClendon Herb Glover 957 YouTube

Afn gasthaus with sarah mcclendon herb glover 957


Early life

Sarah McClendon Sarah McClendonNational Women and MediaThe State

The youngest of nine children, McClendon was born July 8, 1910 and reared in Tyler, Texas. McClendon's birthplace is listed on the National Register of Historic Places listings in Smith County, is a Recorded Texas Historic Landmark and a Tyler Historical Landmark.

Sarah McClendon Sarah McClendon Papers uttyleruasc

McClendon graduated from Tyler Junior College in 1928, and from the University of Missouri's School of Journalism in 1931.

Sarah McClendon Sarah McClendon Papers uttyleruasc

After graduation, McClendon worked for the Tyler Courier-Times, the Tyler Morning Telegraph where she covered the New London School explosion, and for The Beaumont Enterprise. As a reporter for the Beaumont Enterprise, McClendon wrote a series of articles criticizing the Women's Army Auxililiary Corps—the very branch of the service in which she would soon enlist.

Military career

With America's entry into World War II, McClendon volunteered to serve in the United States Army. After learning that she did not have the academic qualifications to join military intelligence, McClendon enlisted in the Women's Army Auxililiary Corps, and reported for duty in September, 1942. McClendon initially served in the WAAC's public relations department, then attended Officer Candidate School, was promoted to Lieutenant and eventually was assigned the Army Surgeon General's office as a public relations officer.,

After insisting on her full rights and privileges as a first lieutenant, McClendon was the first Army officer to give birth at a military hospital, Walter Reed Hospital. As a result of the pregnancy, McClendon was honorably discharged from the military, also in June 1944. A single mother, McClendon used her Washington, D.C. press connections to obtain a job as a Washington correspondent, starting work the same month as her daughter's birth.

Washington, D.C. Career

In June 1944, after McClendon's discharge from the Women's Army Corps, famed newspaperman Bascom N. Timmons hired McClendon as a Washington, D.C. correspondent for the Philadelphia Daily News. In 1946, when Timmons discharged McClendon to make room for reporters returning from service in World War II, McClendon started her own service, the McClendon News Service, which provided Washington dispatches and columns to member newspapers and personal subscribers. A single mother, McClendon often brought her young daughter to news conferences.

For the next several decades, McClendon attended White House press conferences on behalf of the McClendon News Service.

Activism

In 1977, McClendon became an associate of the Women's Institute for Freedom of the Press (WIFP). WIFP is an American nonprofit publishing organization. The organization works to increase communication between women and connect the public with forms of women-based media.

Personal life

While in the service, McClendon met and was briefly married to John Thomas O'Brien. O'Brien, a paper salesman, abandoned McClendon before the birth of their daughter and died during World War II. McClendon later described O'Brien as an alcoholic who "had little to recommend him but my own loneliness." The couple's daughter, Sally Newcomb MacDonald, was born in June, 1944.

Works

  • McClendon, S; My Eight Presidents, Wyden Books, 1978. ISBN 0-88326-150-2.
  • McClendon, S; Minton, J., Mr. President, Mr. President! — My Fifty Years of Covering the White House, General Pub. Group, 1996. ISBN 1-57544-005-9.
  • References

    Sarah McClendon Wikipedia