Following the Front: The Dispatches of World War II Correspondent Sidney A. Olson
Following the Front is a compilation of WWII dispatches written by Sidney A. Olson for TIME and LIFE magazines, 1944-1945.

Olson, who joined Time Inc. in 1939 and served as a senior editor there, asked to be assigned overseas as a war correspondent. In mid-December, 1944, he received his accreditation from the War Department and sailed for London.

Attached to the European Theater of Operations (ETO), Olson followed the Allied Forces as they pushed the Nazis back into Germany. He typed up his reports and cabled them to his editors in New York.

Following the front meant being on the move constantly. In late January, Olson made his way to Paris, flew to Brussels, then drove to the battlefront in Holland. From that time forward, he never really stopped moving. He would race ahead and circle back, hopping from one military division to the next, gradually making his way across Germany and into Austria. His dispatches illustrate—line by line, battle by battle—the extraordinary Allied effort to defeat Hitler.

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Following the Front: The Dispatches of World War II Correspondent Sidney A. Olson
Following the Front is a compilation of WWII dispatches written by Sidney A. Olson for TIME and LIFE magazines, 1944-1945.

Olson, who joined Time Inc. in 1939 and served as a senior editor there, asked to be assigned overseas as a war correspondent. In mid-December, 1944, he received his accreditation from the War Department and sailed for London.

Attached to the European Theater of Operations (ETO), Olson followed the Allied Forces as they pushed the Nazis back into Germany. He typed up his reports and cabled them to his editors in New York.

Following the front meant being on the move constantly. In late January, Olson made his way to Paris, flew to Brussels, then drove to the battlefront in Holland. From that time forward, he never really stopped moving. He would race ahead and circle back, hopping from one military division to the next, gradually making his way across Germany and into Austria. His dispatches illustrate—line by line, battle by battle—the extraordinary Allied effort to defeat Hitler.

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Following the Front: The Dispatches of World War II Correspondent Sidney A. Olson

Following the Front: The Dispatches of World War II Correspondent Sidney A. Olson

by Margot Clark-Junkins
Following the Front: The Dispatches of World War II Correspondent Sidney A. Olson

Following the Front: The Dispatches of World War II Correspondent Sidney A. Olson

by Margot Clark-Junkins

Hardcover

$38.00 
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Overview

Following the Front is a compilation of WWII dispatches written by Sidney A. Olson for TIME and LIFE magazines, 1944-1945.

Olson, who joined Time Inc. in 1939 and served as a senior editor there, asked to be assigned overseas as a war correspondent. In mid-December, 1944, he received his accreditation from the War Department and sailed for London.

Attached to the European Theater of Operations (ETO), Olson followed the Allied Forces as they pushed the Nazis back into Germany. He typed up his reports and cabled them to his editors in New York.

Following the front meant being on the move constantly. In late January, Olson made his way to Paris, flew to Brussels, then drove to the battlefront in Holland. From that time forward, he never really stopped moving. He would race ahead and circle back, hopping from one military division to the next, gradually making his way across Germany and into Austria. His dispatches illustrate—line by line, battle by battle—the extraordinary Allied effort to defeat Hitler.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781538192085
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 09/24/2024
Pages: 412
Product dimensions: 6.30(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.15(d)

About the Author

Margot Clark-Junkins has worked as an independent curator, art reviewer and art educator for the last 20 years. She writes a column called “Following the Front” for Substack.

Table of Contents

Contents

I. Pre-War

May 20, 1939 Letter to Zembra

April 30, 1944 Olson Diary

May 6, 1944 Memo to Time Editors

Sept./Oct. 1944 Letter to Luce

Nov. 28, 1944 Telegram to Graebner & Wertenbaker

II. Wartime

1. A New Dark Age

Dec. 18 - 27, 1944 Olson Diary

Dec. 27, 1944 Letter to Zembra

Dec. 27, 1944 Letter to Luce

Dec. 28-29, 1944 Olson Diary

Jan. 2 - 5, 1945 Olson Diary

Jan. 8, 1945 Letter to Luce

Jan. 8, 1945 Letter to Zembra

Jan. 10 - 11, 1945 Olson Diary

Jan. 12, 1945 Letter to Zembra

Jan. 13, 1945 Cable [unnumbered]

Jan. 16, 1945 Telegram from Luce

Jan. 17, 1945 Letter to Luce

Jan. 18, 1945 Cable 2539

2. The Dragon’s Teeth

Jan. 27, 1945 Facility Visit, Adv Cdn Press Camp

Jan. 28, 1945 Sittard notes

Feb. 4, 1945 Cable [unnumbered]

Feb. 5, 1945 Cable [unnumbered]

Feb. 5, 1945 Letter to Zembra

Feb. 7, 1945 Cable [unnumbered]

Feb. 8, 1945 (sent Feb. 28) Cable [unnumbered]

Feb. 10, 1945 Cable [unnumbered]

Feb. 10, 1945 Letter to Zembra

Feb. 12, 1945 Cable 20

Feb. 17, 1945 Cable 21

Feb. 17, 1945 Cable 22

Feb. 24, 1945 Cable 24

Feb. 25, 1945 Cable 25

Feb. 26, 1945 Cable 26

Feb. 28, 1945 Cable 27

3. The Germans Are Beckoning Us On

March 2, 1945 Cable 28

March 2, 1945 Telegram from Luce

March 3, 1945 Cable 29 [I]

March 4, 1945 Cable [unnumbered]

March 5, 1945 Letter to Zembra

March 6, 1945 Cable 29 [II]

March 7, 1945 Cable 30

March 10, 1945 Cable 31

March 11 - 17, 1945 Olson Diary

March 17, 1945 Cable 32

March 18 - 24, 1945 Olson Diary

March 24, 1945 Travel Orders

March 24, 1945 Cable [unnumbered]

March 25, 1945 Letter to Zembra

March 25 - 29, 1945 Olson Diary

March 29, 1945 Quirk Letter

March 29, 1945 Cable [unnumbered]

March 29, 1945 Cable 34

March 29, 1945 Cable 35

Late March, 1945 Time Magazine excerpt

March 30 - 31, 1945 Olson Diary

4. A Violent Contrast

April 1, 1945 Cable 37

April 1 - 4, 1945 Olson Diary

April 4, 1945 Cable 38

April 5, 1945 Olson Diary

April 5, 1945 Cable 36

April 5, 1945 Letter to Zembra

April 6, 1945 Cable 39

April 6, 1945 Cable 40

April 6 - 8, 1945 Olson Diary

April 8, 1945 Cable 41

April 9, 1945 Cable [unnumbered, a.]

April 9, 1945 Cable [unnumbered, b.]

April 9 - 11, 1945 Olson Diary

April 11, 1945 Cable 42

April 11, 1945 Cable 43

April 12 - 13, 1945 Olson Diary

April 13, 1945 Cable 44

April 13, 1945 Cable 45

April 14, 1945 Olson Diary

April 15?, 1945 Letter to Zembra

5. The Last Days

April 15 - 26, 1945 Olson Diary

April 26, 1945 Cable 46

April 27 - 29 Olson Diary

April 30, 1945 Cable 47

April 30, 1945 Cable 48

April 30 - May 1, 1945 Olson Diary

6. Victory in Europe

May 2, 1945 Cable [unnumbered]

May 2 - 3, 1945 Olson Diary

May 3, 1945 Cable 49

May 2/3, 1945 Aberdeen News excerpt/Ridder

May 5 - 7, 1945 Olson Diary

May 5, 1945 Telegram from Luce

May 7, 1945 RCA Cable to Luce

May 7, 1945 Telegram from Luce

May 7, 1945 Cable [unnumbered]

May 10, 1945 Letter to Zembra

May 10, 1945 Memo from Billings

May 8 - 12, 1945 Olson Diary

May 12, 1945 Cable 53

May 13 - 17, 1945 Olson Diary

June 1, 1945 Travel Orders

June 4 - 10, 1945 Olson Diary

III. Post-War

July 16, 1945 Letter to Zembra

April 4, 1947 Novel notes

May 7, 1947 Letter from Gen. Courtney Hodges

Feb. 17, 1950 Letter to Luce

Feb. 17, 1950 Letter from Luce

IV. A New Beginning

Appendix

i. List of Correspondents, November 26, 1945

ii. Map: Jan. - June 1945

Chronology

Notes

Bibliography & Primary Sources

Index

About the Author

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