Quincy native became St. Louis war correspondente

Virginia Irwin, World War II correspondent for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, was born June 29, 1908, in Quincy, the daughter of Anna Hermann and Clare Irwin.
Irwin's life in newspaper publishing began in March 1932 when she went to work for the Post-Dispatch as a clerk. Advancing from feature stories to world news, she made front-page headlines as the first female reporter in Berlin the day it fell to the Allied Forces in 1945, four days before Adolf Hitler committed suicide.
Irwin was one of the few women who wrote about the war from the front lines and the woman whose exclusive stories from the Nazi stronghold were a sensation across the country.
Irwin was valedictorian of her 1924 Quincy High School class, attended Lindenwood College in St. Charles, Mo., for a year and then enrolled at Gem City Business College.
After secretarial work at Irwin Paper Co. and a short marriage to one of its salesman, Marcus Thompson, she moved to St. Louis.
Irwin's unlikely climb at the Post-Dispatch was chronicled in a 1985 article in the Missouri Historical Review by Anne R. Kenney. Irwin's writing skills soon elevated her to feature writing on a variety of topics such as etiquette, marriage, divorce, opera and theater. A good interviewer, she was assigned to out-of-town events on both coasts and covered two national political conventions, in 1936 and 1940, from a woman's point of view.
All of this changed after Pearl Harbor in 1941 when the United States entered the war. Irwin's new assignments included reporting on women mobilizing at home. Her most noted writing, based on interviews with plant managers and women on the production line nationwide, was an 11-part series in 1942 on women in war industries.
In 1943, at age 35, Irwin asked for an overseas assignment. Editors of the Post-Dispatch refused, but Irwin, determined to be involved overseas, was granted a leave of absence, joined the American Red Cross and was sent to Britain. The Post encouraged Irwin to write human-interest stories for publication while on leave. After two months at a Red Cross camp, she was assigned to public relations in London. Though she had put her career aside to be near the action,the move benefited her as the war progressed. She already was overseas.
In 1944 the Post decided to send a correspondent, but it was difficult to get onto mainland Europe. It took several weeks to receive War Department accreditation. Just before D-Day, the Post was granted two accreditations, one of which was for Irwin.
Restrictions applied to women correspondents made it more difficult for them to turn in breaking news stories or get the scoop. They were associated with a contingent of the Women's Army Corps or field hospitals, and were to go no farther on the front than the nurses, wearing the WAC uniform and carrying their portable typewriters.
On D-Day, June 6, at the southern coast of England, Irwin reported on the first wounded returning from Normandy. On July 11 she crossed the English Channel to France with the first detachment of the WAC but did not see much action until just before the fall of Paris. Anxious for a scoop, Irwin broke the rules to get a story. She and a fellow woman reporter went AWOL from their press camp for three days and were nearly killed when they "blundered into a battle" just south of Paris, wrote Kenney.
Assigned to a press hotel in Paris in the summer of 1944, Irwin secured a three-day pass to visit the headquarters of the 19th Tactical Air Command attached to General Patton's Third Army. She stayed until Christmas. On September 21, 1944, the command accepted her as its first female correspondent. The Paris office issued an all-points bulletin for Irwin's unapproved absence, but she was "adept at dodging them," Kenney wrote.
In the winter and spring of 1945, enduring the hardships of a soldier, she followed the Third Army front in France, Belgium, Holland, Luxembourg and Germany. Irwin experienced the front lines, witnessed the horrors of war, took some real risks, and at the Rhine in Germany, "missed eternity by a matter of yards," obsessed with making it to the front, according to Kenney. Writing to Ben Reese of the Post she commented, "when I am not scared to death, I am tickled to death."
Anticipating the fall of the capital in April 1945, a bold Irwin and another American reporter, Andrew Tully, set out to cover what would be the pinnacle story of Irwin's career. By nightfall on April 27 they arrived in Berlin as the war still raged -- the first Americans to enter the capital and two weeks before any other war correspondent. In a devastated city, the dead lay everywhere, but the Russians held a festive banquet in their honor. Irwin described the Russian soldiers "celebrating with an almost indescribably wild joy." She retired late to write what she called "the story of the most exciting thing that could ever happen to a newspaper reporter."
On April 28 she wrote, "As I write, the Russians' artillery is pounding the heart of the city with a barrage. . . The earth shakes." Her story was a coup, but the red tape of getting it out was difficult and took several days.
On May 8, 1945, the Post-Dispatch's headline story was about its correspondent who got to Berlin. Celebrating official victory in Europe the front page read, "Post-Dispatch Reporter Gets into Berlin." A photo of a jubilant Irwin accompanied the article.
Irwin broke the mold and showed the world what she could do. She was instantly a national hero, honored with abundant accolades and a bonus of a year's pay. Independent, persistent and fearless, Irwin told the story of the capture of Berlin, an event unlike any other in the entire war. She had intrepidly pushed her way to cover the Germany surrender.
Irwin never achieved her goal to be a newsroom reporter for the Post. After 14 years assigned to the New York Bureau of the Post writing feature stories, Irwin retired at age 55, lived quietly in Webb City, Mo., and died at age 72 in 1980, her unique place in history forgotten.
Iris Nelson is retired from her position as reference librarian and archivist at the Quincy Public Library. She serves on boards for civic and historical organizations and has written articles for historical journals.
Sources
Sorel, Nancy Caldwell. The Women Who Wrote the War. New York: Arcade Publishing, 1999.
Kenney, Anne R. "She Got to Berlin: Virginia Irwin, St. Louis Post-Dispatch War Correspondent," Missouri Historical Review 79, no. 4 (1985): 456-479.





