Journalism

Personal History – Katharine Graham

Personal History by Katharine Graham
Date read: 3/4/23. Recommendation: 10/10.

The best autobiography I’ve ever read. Graham tells her own story with honesty and candor. She reflects on how she built her own strength and self-confidence navigating a business world dominated by men while leading the Washington Post through its crucible moments of the Pentagon Papers, Watergate, and the pressmen’s strike of 1975. The Post not only endured but thrived, elevating its position among the most respected newspapers in the country thanks to Graham’s dedication to serving the public good, her ability to make tough decisions, and her commitment to upholding high journalistic standards.

Check out my notes below or Amazon for details and reviews.

My Notes:

Upbringing:
The children were an afterthought to Katharine’s mother, Agnes. She rarely mentioned them individually. The first time Katharine appeared in her diary by initial was two years after her birth. 

“My difficulties were much more tied to a lack of guiding personal relationships, for I had more or less to bring myself up emotionally and figure out how to deal with whatever situations confronted me. At the same time that I was surrounded by extreme luxury, I led a life structured and in many ways spartan, circumscribed by schools and lessons, travel and study.”

“My mother’s effect on us was often contradictory. We received every encouragement for what we accomplished, yet her ego was such that she trampled on our incipient interests or enthusiasms. If I said I loved The Three Musketeers, she responded by saying I couldn’t really appreciate it unless I had read it in French, as she had.”

Between fourth and fifth grade, she spent the entire summer by herself reading nearly 100 different books on the third floor of Mount Kisco. 

Self-esteem:
Upon graduating high school: “I still felt fairly different and shy and believed I had only a few friends. Apparently my class didn’t see me the way I saw myself. My senior yearbook entry describes a girl known for her laugh and manly stride. My class prophecy read: ‘Kay’s a Big Shot in the newspaper racket.’ But I envisaged no such future for myself or, in fact, any specific future at all. Rather than creating my own way, what I was trying to do all the time was figure out how to adjust to whatever life I found.” 

After departing for college, she read the Post daily and offered feedback: “I found myself deeply involved with the struggle to improve the paper. Somewhat to my surprise, given that I thought of myself during this period as unsophisticated, unworldly, and fairly unopinionated. I seem to have been full of independent appraisals of the paper and what it was printing.”

The Washington Post – beginnings:
In June of 1933, Katharine’s father, Eugene Meyer, bought The Washington Post at a bankruptcy auction. The paper had fallen on hard times and was led by an aimless owner. Five years earlier her father had tried to buy it for $5m, at the auction he got it for $825k. 

Eugene soon realized the newspaper business wasn’t like the other businesses he knew. The space was competitive. The tactics he applied weren’t generating results. The beginning was a struggle. But he always maintained his belief that a newspaper is a public trust, meant to serve the public. And over time, he stuck with it and began to create his own success. See his original principles on page 63.

The Washington Post – Phil Graham years:
Phil, Katharine’s husband, joined the Post as associate publisher in January of 1946 at the age of 30. He would learn an entirely new and competitive business, starting at the top as deputy to Eugene. He was relentless and worked incredibly hard as a close collaborator. By 1947, Phil had established himself as the defacto leader of the paper. He was involved in everything. 

By 1948, circulation had increased from 50k to 180k daily. Advertising had gone from 4m lines to 23m. The Post had been awarded numerous prizes. Eugene decided to officially pass the paper on to Phil and Katharine so it would stay in the family.

Over time, all of Phil’s responsibilities and interests built up—he was stretched thin—and that took a toll on his health and endurance. He suffered from various illnesses, often drank too much, and lashed out in explosions of anger at people who provoked him in the slightest. There were shadows building.

Phil eventually suffered from severe manic depression (bipolar disorder). He grew completely dependent on Katharine, almost like a child. The time between his hyperactivity and despair started growing more severe and occurring closer together. Then he ran off and had a public affair and announce his intention to divorce Katharine. 

Phil was hospitalized for his own safety. But negotiated his own release and went with Katharine to their farm in the countryside. After lunch they went upstairs for a nap, Phil excused himself to lie down in a separate bedroom. A few minutes later Katharine heard a gunshot. Phil had killed himself. She found him in the downstairs bathroom. 

Living in Phil’s shadow: 
“Despite my pleasure in the life I was leading during these years, I can see now that I was having problems I didn’t acknowledge to myself. I was growing shyer and less confident as I got older. I still didn’t know how to look my best or handle myself in social situations. I was afraid of being boring, and went on believing that people related to us entirely because of Phil.” 

“At the same time he was building me up, he was tearing me down. As he emerged more on the journalistic and political scenes, I increasingly saw my role as the tail to his kite—and the more I felt overshadowed, the more it became a reality…The wit he had turned on others he now turned on me. I became the butt of the family jokes. Strangely, I was still so mesmerized by him that I didn’t perceive what was happening, and even played along with it.” 

“I felt as though he had created me and that I was totally dependent on him…The truth is that I adored him and saw only the positive side of what he was doing for me. I simply didn’t connect my lack of self-confidence with his behavior toward me.”

When she and Phil were splitting up, Katharine was intent on keeping the paper in her family until one of her children could run it. Her friend, Luvie Pearson, looked at her and said, “Don’t be silly, dear. You can do it….You’ve just been pushed down so far you don’t recognize what you can do.” This was the first time she ever contemplated the idea that she could actually run the Post.

On her father’s death:
“People react in such complicated ways to any death, but particularly to the death of a parent, because a lot of what one feels is about oneself and the sense that nothing now stands between that self and dying. You have now become the older generation.”

The Washington Post - Katharine’s rise:
After Phil’s death: “It’s hard to remake decisions and even harder to rethink non decisions. Sometimes you don’t really decide, you just move forward, and that is what I did—moved forward blindly and mindlessly into a new and unknown life.”

September 20th, 1963, Katharine was elected president of The Washington Post Company at a board of directors meeting. 

“I naively thought the whole business would just go on as it had while I learned by listening. I didn’t realize that nothing stands still—issues arise every day, big and small, and they start coming at you. I didn’t understand the immensity of what lay before me, how frightened I would be by much of it, how tough it was going to be and how many anxious hours and days I would spend for a long, long time. Nor did I realize how much I was eventually going to enjoy it all.” 

Redefining her role: Comparing herself to her exaggerated idea of Phil’s ability and accomplishments only made things more challenging. “I had to come to realize that I could only do the job in whatever way I could do it. I couldn’t try to be someone else, least of all Phil.”

“What I essentially did was to put one foot in front of the other, shut my eyes, and step off the edge.”

Her devotion to the Post and her overwhelming desire to keep the paper in the family, despite her insecurity and lack of knowledge, she knew she had to make it work. She got down to the job and set out to learn everything she could. 

“Most of all, what I know I did well in these years was to care about the company. I took an inordinate interest in all that we did…I tried to create an atmosphere that gave people the freedom to do their jobs, an environment in which good ideas would always be heard. I think I shared the highs and the lows, the failures as well as the successes.” 

The Pentagon Papers:
The New York Times got a hold of classified documents and started running articles about the secret history of decision-making in Vietnam—the Pentagon Papers. More formally titled, “History of the United States Decision-Making Process on Vietnam Policy.” Secret of Defense Robert McNamara had commissioned the review in 1967 before he had left the Pentagon. This resulted in a year-and-a-half-long study, with a 3000 page narrative history, and 4000 page appendix of documents. It was 47 volumes covering American involvement in Indochina from WWII to 1968 when peace talks began on the Vietnam War began in Paris. The government forced the Times to suspend publication. The Post was the only other paper that was able to get its hands on the raw documents—though it was a 4400 page jumbled mess of unordered pages without page numbers. 

Internal team at the Post was conflicted about publishing and defying court orders. But the company’s soul was at stake. The editors were pushing to publish in solidarity with the Times on the issue of freedom of the press. Their lawyers pushed back. Publishing could destroy the paper. But not publishing and advancing their own cause could do the same thing. Katharine made the decision to publish. 

Supreme Court eventually ruled that the government had not met the burden of showing justification for restraining further publication. 

The Post, as a policy, never published information based on intercepted communications, signal intelligence, or cryptography that endangered national security. This was a pledge they kept even with the Pentagon Papers.

“That was a key moment in the life of this paper. It was just sort of the graduation of the Post into the highest ranks. One of our unspoken goals was to get the world to refer to the Post and New York Times in the same breath, which they previously hadn’t done. After the Pentagon Papers, they did.” Ben Bradlee

Watergate is ultimately what led to the Washington Post becoming a household name.

Integrity:
In 1970, the Post hired an ombudsman whose job it was to receive and review complaints about what appears in the paper—only the second paper to do so.

During Watergate created strict rules to ensure fair coverage and accurate details, despite the abuse Katharine and the paper were facing from the Nixon administration. Every bit of information attributed to an unnamed source had to be supported by at least one additional independent source. They ran nothing that was reported by another newspaper, television or radio station without independently verifying and confirming by their own reporters. Every word and every story was read by at least one senior idiot before it went into print. “No matter how careful we were, there was always the nagging possibility that we were wrong, being set up, being misled.” 

Warren Buffett:
Warren joined the board of The Washington Post Company in 1974 and started mentoring Katharine in business education. During meetings he would bring as many annual reports as he could carry and took Katharine through them, describing different businesses, illustrating his points with real-world companies and case studies, identifying the differences between good businesses and bad ones.

Helped her discover self-confidence: “Warren summed up our learning relationship by suggesting that I seemed to go around as though I were seeing myself through the distorting mirrors of a carnival fun house. He saw it as his task to get me a better mirror that could eliminate the distortions.”

“He later told me that he subscribed to Charlie Munger’s ‘orangutan theory’—which essentially contended that, ‘if a smart person goes into a room with an orangutan and explains whatever his or her idea is, the orangutan just sits there eating his banana, and at the end of the conversation, the person explaining comes out smarter.’ Warren claimed to be my orangutan. And in a way he was. I heard myself talk when I was with him and I always got a better idea of what I was saying.” 

The pressmen’s strike:
Early morning on October 1, 1975, the contracts between The Washington Post and its unions had expired at midnight. Around 4am, the pressmen disabled all nine presses, including setting fire to one and beating the press foreman, Jim Hover. The pressmen walked out, taking the other unions with them, and started picketing. When Katharine arrived there was a foot of water covering the floor, smoke, and chaos. 

Katharine never wanted a strike and told the managers to avoid one if possible. And once it began, she didn’t want it last one second longer than necessary. None of their preparations in case a strike had occurred had planned for the presses being so badly damaged—electrical wiring ripped out, essential operating parts removed, oil drained out to strip the gear, and newsprint rolls slashed, or having all the craft unions in the building out on strike together.

Once they fixed one press, a group of advertising executives and others stepped in to run the press. They were able to print 100k papers that same night. Afterwards, the papers made their way through the mailroom where they were bundled up by another crew of executives and sent down the chutes to the waiting trucks. 

Preparing the mailing for the large Sunday papers was time-consuming and dirty. Katharine worked the mailroom on Saturday nights throughout the strike, as well as several other nights during the week. Went on duty when presses started to run at 930pm, didn’t finish until 3 or 4am. Left them filthy, sweaty, and covered with paste. “We had to roll up each individual paper in a brown wrapper, paste on an address label, seal the whole thing shut, and throw the finished, wrapped package into the big, smelly, heavy, and unwieldy canvas bags at the side of the work table, which we then dragged over to another station from which they were finally hauled off to the post office. 

“The whole job was so tedious and interminable that we came to look on it as our supreme service for the cause, the ultimate sacrifice. Warren Buffett, who spent several Saturday nights in the mailroom with us, said it made him rethink the price of the Sunday paper—no price was sufficient.”

For the first ten days of the strike, they operated at a high level of activity and stress. Facing uncertainties, difficulties, and violence at the picket line. Katharine received threats and personal attacks. Nails and tacks were spread across the alley entrance near the office and resulted in flat tires for those coming into the office. Pressmen began picketing the paper’s advertisers and boycotting their goods. They passed out flyers for consumers to boycott the advertisers goods, went into stores and dumped goods off shelves, and in one instance poured oil into a store’s fish tank, killing all the fish. 

“We had weathered a strike we hadn’t asked for and didn’t control. The Post survived this crucial test, but there was no ‘clean victory’—it was a painful one for the Post, for its guild and craft-union members, and for the Washington community. It divided the paper, creating a false atmosphere of ‘us’ versus ‘them.’ Nearly two hundred people lost their jobs.”

“I never wanted the strike. I know that many people believe I deliberately set out to destroy a union, but that was certainly not the case….I never dreamed it was possible to replace the pressmen, not did I feel it was desirable….Most people at the Post are still represented by unions.”

The Washington Post has lived long and honorably with its unions…Katharine believed that they benefited from strong, healthy trade unionism. She always believed that. But she stands by the choice to go around the union because she had no other choice. The future of the company hung in the balance. The strike was a great tragedy that could have been avoided with wiser union leadership. Many good pressmen were caught in the crosshairs, they either had to resign from the union or remain with leaders who led them so poorly and had done tremendous harm. 

“I felt that the philosophy that any union is right no matter what it does was an odd cause for which to sacrifice one’s career. I wish the pressmen had influenced their union leadership to be responsible in the first place. Failing that, I wish they had returned as individuals. Unfortunately, many followed Dugan over the cliff.”

The strike taught Katharine necessary, but painful lessons about the need for strong and compassionate managers who are knowledgeable about the work, labor relations, and communications. The paper became more efficient, flexible and productive as a result. Went from 17 pressmen on each press before the strike to 8 person crews afterwards. Press speeds increased. Atmosphere improved throughout the building. Katharine focused on establishing better communication within the company and it resulted in a stronger paper.

The Bully Pulpit – Doris Kearns Goodwin

The Bully Pulpit by Doris Kearns Goodwin
Date read: 2/10/23. Recommendation: 8/10.

The story of a remarkable friendship between Theodore Roosevelt and William Howard Taft, the way it built up each man, and eventually tore them both down. Goodwill details their upbringing, the events that shaped their lives, and how they came to navigate their political careers. She also discusses the backdrop of the Progressive era where a new vision for the relationship between the government and the people under Roosevelt’s leadership started to set in. I read this mainly for context on Roosevelt so my notes reflect a narrow perspective. But the entire book is captivating and worthy of its Pulitzer Prize.

See my notes below or Amazon for details and reviews.

My Notes:

Reform:
End of Roosevelt’s tenure, mood of reform swept the country, creating a new kind of presidency. Anti-trust suits had been won and legislation passed to regulate railroads, strengthen labor rights, curb political corruption, end corporate campaign contributions, impose limits on the working day, protect consumers from unsafe foods and drugs, and conserve vast swaths of natural resources for the American people.

“Roosevelt would focus the charge of a national movement to apply an ethical framework, through government action, to the untrammeled growth of modern America.” DKG

Square Deal had awakened the country to the need for government action to allay problems caused by industrialization. 

Friendship between Taft and Roosevelt:
Lifelong, mutually beneficial friendship. No man Roosevelt trusted more to carry out his legacy of active moral leadership and progressive reform. 

Initial foray into politics:
When he began inquiring about the local Republican organization, friends and family warned him that district politics were low and the world of saloon-keepers and horse-car conductors. Rough and brutal men. Started attending monthly meetings. Grew close with Joe Murray, thickset, red-haired Irish boss. Roosevelt later credited him with launching his political career. 

Murray determined that the incumbent Republican assemblyman for the Twenty-first District could not hold his seat in the fall elections in 1881, having been linked to corruption, surprised his compatriots by nominating the 23-year-old Roosevelt. TR was elected as the youngest member of the New York State Assembly. Less than two decades later he would become the youngest president in the history of the United States. 

“His three terms in the New York State Assembly had provided Roosevelt with considerable reason for pride and satisfaction in his accomplishments. He had led the fight against Judge Westbrook and had been instrumental in the passage of both the cigar bill and civil service reform…” DKG

“The assembly had proved a great school for Roosevelt. He had learned to cooperate with colleagues far removed from his patrician background…” DKG

“He fought with gusto against fraud and corruption, delivering speeches studded with bold and original turns of phrase.” DKG

Tragedy:
After Roosevelt’s mother and wife passed away on the same day, he was in a dazed, stunned state. Then he decided (as he learned from his father’s death), that frantic activity was the only way to keep sorrow at bay. But he was a changed man, there was a sadness about his face that he never had before.

Systematically suppressed his wife’s memory, failed to even recognize Alice (his first wife and widow) in his autobiography.

Returning to Albany: Upon his return, he immersed himself in long hours of work and daily sessions. The camaraderie of his fellow legislators helped mitigate his misery. In the weeks that followed he led a torrent of dramatic investigations and eventually nine reform bills were reported to the floor. 

Civil Service Commissioner:
“For sixty years, politicians in both parties had been complicit in a spoils system where officials (postal carriers, typists, stenographers, and clerks) were appointed, promoted, or fired according to their politics rather than their merit.” DKG

From the start, Roosevelt understood that public opinion was the best way to hold party leaders in the cabinet and in the Congress accountable. 

In order to change the average citizen’s attitude toward the spot system and current way of business, he had to instill his own outrage into the public…to popularize the reformist cause and initiate change from the bottom up.

Within his first few weeks, he initiated an investigation into the New York Customs House where he found that clerks were leaking examination questions to favored party candidates for a fee. Issued a scathing report demanding the dismissal and prosecution of guilty clerks. This early action served as notice that civil service law was going to be enforced without fear or favor. 

Leveraged a network of progressive journalists and editors to point out infractions of the law in their localities.

Found that Indianapolis Postmaster, William Wallace, had made a number of irregular appointments that violated civil service standards. Exposed this in the newspaper and it chastened Wallace to change. Within a couple of years his administration was deemed a model of fairness and justice. 

“Roosevelt seemed to feel that everything ought to be done before sundown.” President Harrison, dared not remove Roosevelt despite the feathers he ruffled because he had the influential newspapers supporting him and the public behind his cause of violations of the civil service law. 

“He isn’t afraid of the newspapers, he isn’t afraid of losing his place, and he is always ready for a fight. He keeps civil-service reform before the good people and as the case often is, his aggressiveness is a great factor in a good cause.” The Boston Evening News

When Grover Cleveland was elected asked Roosevelt to stay at his post for another year or two despite not being in the same political party. Theodore got along better with Cleveland than he had with Harrison. Cleveland trusted his even hand.

New York Police Commissioner:
Showmanship: As he approached his new headquarters at 300 Mulberry Street in the heart of Little Italy, he energetically greeted the reported as he sprinted up the stairs, and signaled for everyone to follow as he asked where the offices were and what they should do first. 

He was appointed president of the four-man board and drove the other board members crazy. 

Two sides of his role as police commissioner: 1) daily work of managing the police department, 2) the opportunity to use his position, which encompassed membership on the health board, to make the city a better place to live and work for those whom the conditions of life and labor were hardest.

Corruption: Found new police recruits were forced to pay Tammany a fixed fee for their appointments. The fee was well beyond the means of most, but officers understood they would make the money back with plenty to spare over time. Superintendent Tom Bynes had amassed a fortune of $350k, while his chief inspector Alec Williams could not explain the unusual size of his bank account when forced to testify. 

At his first press conference, Roosevelt announced that appointments and promotions would be based on merit alone moving forward. The police force had heard something similar before, but soon felt the weight of Roosevelt’s pledge. Within three weeks he forced Superintendent Bynes and Alec Williams to resign. He would spare no one in his campaign to root out corruption. 

Roosevelt accompanied reporters on a series of unannounced inspections between midnight and sunrise to determine whether officers were doing their jobs. If he found an officer patrolling his beat and doing a satisfactory job, he would pat him on the back. If he found someone sleeping or slacking off, he would summon them to appear before him the next morning. 

Predawn missions attracted press attention across the country. Roosevelt found them to be great fun but they meant he would go up to forty hours without sleep at a time. 

Sunday Law: passed by state legislature four decades earlier to satisfy rural constituents. No one took it seriously, but it warped into a massive vehicle of police and political blackmail and extortion. Saloons could stay open on Sundays as long as they made monthly payments to police and politicians. Roosevelt enforced the law but pissed off the public who later led a giant protest of some 150,000 people in NYC. Roosevelt attended and the crowd ended up cheering his good humor and the way he poked fun at himself. As November 1895 elections approached, Roosevelt stood his ground. His unpopular stance ushered in a democratic wave of votes, Republican bosses were livid at Roosevelt, blaming him for his uncompromising policy. 

1896 presidential contest between McKinley and Brian gave Roosevelt a path out and a way to earn the good favor of the Republican bosses once more. Traveled through the state and country to stump for the Republican nominee. Lent his energetic voice to McKinley’s campaign—represented his best hope for regaining the confidence of the Republican bosses. Gave all his time, energy, and ability to the work of the campaign. McKinley’s victory helped him get appointed as assistant secretary of the Navy, providing a graceful exit from his post as police commissioner. 

Time as police commissioner had deepened and broadened his outlook on social and economic issues. 

Assistant Secretary of the Navy:
McKinley appointed him as Assistant to John Davis Long because he thought Roosevelt was too eager for war.

As tension with Spain escalated in Cuba, Roosevelt did everything he could to prepare the U.S. Navy for war. Ordered the purchase of guns, ammunition, supplies, created war plans, scheduled additional gunnery drills, stocked distant supply stations with coal. 

In January 1898, McKinley agreed to ration the battleship USS Maine in Havana Harbor as “an act of friendly courtesy” to the Cuban people. Resisted mounting pressure for intervention. Then on February 15th, the Maine exploded killing 262 Americans. The cause of the explosion was never determined with certainty, but the blame was affixed to the Spaniards. 

Lieutenant colonel:
The country moved towards war with Spain in 1898, Roosevelt could not pass up the opportunity to go to Cuba and test himself on the field of battle.

Acted as lieutenant colonel under his friend Leonard Wood. 

“The press found the story of the so-called Rough Riders irresistible from the start—a volunteer regiment in which cowboys, miners, and hunters served on an equal footing with Ivy League graduates, Somerset Club members, polo players, tennis champions, and prominent yachtsmen.” DKG

“Up and up they went in the face of death, men dropping from the ranks at every step. The Rough Riders acted like veterans. It was an inspiring sight and an awful one…Roosevelt sat erect on his horse, holding his sword and shouting for his men to follow him until they gained the summit at last.” 

Spanish surrendered thirteen days later, by the middle of August, four months after the war began. Roosevelt and his Rough Riders were on their way to a triumphal homecoming. 

Governor of New York:
Inaugurated as governor of New York on January 2, 1899 in Albany. 

Relentless work ethic: He was unlike any governor New York had known. Arrived in the office well before the usual hour of 9am, sorting through hundreds of letters that arrived each morning. At 10am started his official day, spending an hour with assemblymen and senators, followed by rapid-fire meetings with political delegations, members of his administration, and individual petitioners. Returned home somewhere around 5-7pm. Evening hours were set apart for his literary work, socializing, reading, and spending time with his family. 

Vice President:
Roosevelt was horrified at the thought of spending four years as VP. “His friends were in despair, his enemies triumphed. At last they had him where they wanted him.” Jacob Riis