Each August thousands of high school graduates from the
Hoosier State and around the country descend upon Bloomington to begin their
college careers at Indiana University. That happy lot fell to me in 1978. As a
journalism major, I attended many classes at Ernie Pyle Hall, a handsome
limestone structure near the university’s Union
that housed the journalism department and the offices of the student newspaper,
the Indiana Daily Student.
Climbing the steps to enter the building, I often noticed a
display window that included a photograph of the famous World War II correspondent after whom the structure was named. Although I had heard of the
Dana, Indiana, native, I knew little about the man or his career. In fact, before attending
IU, if I thought of Pyle at all, the picture that flashed in my mind was not
that of the newspaperman but the actor who played him in the 1945 film The Story of G.I. Joe—Burgess Meredith.
A hasty glance at Pyle’s newspaper career left me less than
impressed, typifying as it did, as the correspondent’s biographer James Tobin
has noted, a cheerleading style of “war journalism that fell out of favor
during the Vietnam War and has not recovered since.” Journalism students of my
generation received their inspiration not from old-fashioned reporters such as
Pyle but instead from modern investigative journalists such as the Washington Post’s Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein, men whose work had helped bring down a president, and David Halberstam, who wrote so honestly and brilliantly about this country’s early
involvement in Vietnam .
Nobody is so pure of heart—and so self-righteous—as a
freshman journalism student. I began to see the errors of my ways while working
for the Indiana State Museum System, which at that time included Pyle’s birthplace home in
Dana as one of its state historic sites. While researching Pyle’s life for a
brochure about the site, I read a number of his war columns and developed a
deep respect for the man most World War II GIs regarded as “the soldier’s
friend.” To the millions of Americans on the home front during the war, anxious
for news of their loved ones, Pyle’s column offered a foxhole view of the
struggle as he reported on the life, and sometimes death, of the average
combatant. Later, while working at the Indiana Historical Society, I wrote a youth biography about the Hoosier hero of World War II for the IHS Press.
Because of Pyle’s work, poet and veteran Randall Jarrell
said, most of the country “felt, in the fullest moral and emotional sense,
something that had never happened to them, that they could never have imagined
without it—a war.” At the time of his death in the Pacific on April 18, 1945, Pyle enjoyed a worldwide readership, with his work appearing
in four hundred daily and three hundred weekly newspapers.
Nobel Prize–winning author John Steinbeck, a Pyle friend, perhaps summed up the reporter’s work best when he told a Time magazine reporter: “There are really two wars and they haven’t much to do with each other. There is the war of maps and logistics, of campaigns, of ballistics, armies, divisions and regiments—and that is General [George]Marshall 's war. Then there is the war of the
homesick, weary, funny, violent, common men who wash their socks in their
helmets, complain about the food, whistle at the Arab girls, or any girls for
that matter, and bring themselves through as dirty a business as the world has
ever seen and do it with humor and dignity and courage—and that is Ernie Pyle’s
war.”
Nobel Prize–winning author John Steinbeck, a Pyle friend, perhaps summed up the reporter’s work best when he told a Time magazine reporter: “There are really two wars and they haven’t much to do with each other. There is the war of maps and logistics, of campaigns, of ballistics, armies, divisions and regiments—and that is General [George]
Hamstrung as Pyle was by the restrictions imposed by U.S.
Army censors, he nevertheless attempted to convey to his readers the hardships
endured by those in uniform. Although Pyle’s columns covered almost every
branch of the service—from quartermaster troops to pilots—he saved his highest
praise and devotion for the common foot soldier. “I love the infantry because
they are the underdogs,” he wrote. “They are the mud-rain-frost-and-wind boys. They have no comforts, and
they even learn to live without the necessities. And in the end they are the
guys that wars can’t be won without.”
The Hoosier reporter’s columns not only described the
soldier’s hardships, but also spoke out on his behalf. In a column from Italy in 1944,
Pyle proposed that combat soldiers be given “fight pay,” similar to an airman’s
flight pay. In May of that year Congress acted on Pyle’s suggestion, giving
soldiers 50 percent extra pay for combat service, legislation nicknamed the
Ernie Pyle bill.
In spite of the warmth he felt for the average GI, Pyle had
no illusions about the dangers involved with his own job. He once wrote a
friend that he tried “not to take any foolish chances, but there's just no way
to play it completely safe and still do your job.”
Weary from his work inEurope , Pyle grudgingly accepted what was to be his last
assignment, covering the action in the Pacific with the navy and marines. He
rationalized his acceptance, noting, “What can a guy do? I know millions of
others who are reluctant too, and they can't even get home.”
Weary from his work in
After Pyle’s tragic death on Ie Shima, Edwin Waltz, the reporter’s personal secretary at Pacific Fleet headquarters, went through his personal effects and discovered a draft of a column Pyle had handwritten in anticipation of the war’s end in Europe. The column, which was never published, reveals as does no other piece of writing the terrible personal toll the conflict took on him. He wrote that buried in his brain forever would be the sight of cold, dead men scattered everywhere: “Dead men in such monstrous infinity that you come almost to hate them.” For the reader at home, Pyle wrote, these men were merely “columns of figures, or he is a near one who went away and didn’t come back. You didn’t see him lying so grotesque and pasty beside the gravel road in