Everything about David Hume Kennerly totally explained
David Hume Kennerly (born
1947) is a
Pulitzer Prize winning photographer. He won the 1972
Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography for his photographs of the
Vietnam War.
David Hume Kennerly graduated from
West Linn High School. During his time there he worked on the school newspaper "the Amplifier."
His career began in
Roseburg, Oregon, where his first published picture was in the Roseburg High School newspaper. He later worked for the
Oregon Journal and eventually
UPI.
Kennerly won the
Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography in 1972 for his photographs of the
Vietnam War. After the war, Kennerly returned to the United States working for
Time magazine, and eventually serving as White House Photographer for President
Gerald Ford. He and the president's daughter
Susan Ford were to give the President
Liberty (dog), a
golden retriever, that became a signature of the Ford presidency.
Kennerly continued to work as a photographer shooting projects for
Newsweek,
LIFE,
Good Morning America, and
George. Kennerly has photographed more than 35 covers for
Time and
Newsweek, and covered assignments in over 130 countries.
On
March 16,
2006, Kennerly was named
NBC News Contributing Editor. He will provide special still-photo essays for NBC and its affiliates.
Bibliography
Kennerly authored several books, alone and in cooperation.
- Photo Op: A Pulitzer Prize-Winning Photographer Covers Events That Shaped Our Times, University of Texas Press (1995) ISBN 0292743238
- Extraordinary Circumstances: The Presidency of Gerald R. Ford
- Battle Eye: A History of American Combat Photography
- Photo du Jour: A Picture-a-Day Journey through the First Year of the New Millennium
- Sein Off: The Final Days of Seinfeld
Further Information
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