Louis P. Lochner


Ludwig "Louis" Paul Lochner was an American political activist, journalist, and author. In World War I Lochner was a leading figure in the American and international anti-war movement. Later he served for many years as head of the Berlin bureau of Associated Press, best remembered for his work there as a foreign correspondent. Lochner was awarded the 1939 Pulitzer Prize for correspondence for his wartime reporting from Nazi Germany. In December 1941 Lochner was interned by the Nazis and later released in a prisoner exchange.

Biography

Early years

Louis Lochner was born February 22, 1887 in Springfield, Illinois to Johann Friedrich Karl Lochner and Maria Lochner née von Haugwitz. The senior Lochner was a Lutheran minister.
In 1905 Louis graduated from the Wisconsin Music Conservatory. He went on to attend the University of Wisconsin at Madison, from which he graduated Phi Beta Kappa in earning a Bachelor's degree in 1909.
On September 7, 1910 he married Emmy Hoyer; they had two children, Elsbeth and Robert. Hoyer died in 1920.
Lochner married again in 1922, his second wife being Hilde De Terra, née Steinberger, who brought Rosemarie De Terra, her daughter from her first marriage, into the family.

Political activism

During the second decade of the 20th century Lochner was a leading activist in the American pacifist movement. Late in 1914 he was appointed Executive Director of the Chicago-based Emergency Peace Federation, working closely with social activist Jane Addams in an attempt to call an international conference of neutral nations to mediate an end to World War I. Lochner, Addams, and their Emergency Peace Federation were instrumental in convening a national conference in Chicago in February 1915 which brought together delegates representing pacifist, religious, and anti-militarist political organizations from around the United States.
Lochner became a secretary to Henry Ford in 1915, and served as head of publicity for Ford's ill-fated "Peace Ship" in that year.

Journalism career

Following the end of the war in 1918, Lochner moved to Milwaukee, Wisconsin to join the staff of the Milwaukee Free Press. He also edited for the International Labor News Service, a press agency of the day.
In 1924 Lochner was appointed to the Berlin bureau of Associated Press. He remained there until 1946; he twice interviewed Adolf Hitler, first in 1930 and then in 1933.
When the German invasion of Poland in 1939 led to World War II Lochner became the first foreign journalist to follow the German Army into battle. His bravery in remaining in Nazi Germany, despite the outbreak of hostilities, to provide objective and measured news coverage was rewarded with the 1939 Pulitzer Prize for correspondence.
He reported further on the German side of the war, accompanying the German Army on the Western Front in the Netherlands, Belgium and France, witnessing the 1940 French surrender in Compiègne.
After the December 1941 declaration of war between Germany and the United States, the Berlin government interned Americans remaining in the Third Reich. Lochner was held for nearly five months at Bad Nauheim near Frankfurt am Main before being released in May 1942 as part of a prisoner exchange for interned German diplomats and correspondents.
Upon his release Lochner took eight months leave of absence for an extended lecture tour throughout North America, which he spent publicly attacking Nazism and warning of its dangers. In this interval he wrote a book warning of the fascist menace, entitled What About Germany?
From 1942 to 1944 Lochner worked as a news analyst and radio commentator for the National Broadcasting Company. Thereafter he departed once again for Europe, working as a war correspondent until after the end of World War II.

Post-war years

In 1948 Lochner translated and edited a volume of diary material by the Nazi propaganda chief, Joseph Goebbels, which attained considerable commercial success. This set him on a new path as a writer of non-fiction books. During the 1950s Lochner published a further three volumes on various aspects of German history and current affairs.
Lochner also returned to his Lutheran roots as a member of the editorial board of The Lutheran Witness and a columnist for The Lutheran Layman and The Lutheran Witness Reporter.
In 1955 Lochner published his memoirs, Stets das Unerwartete: Erinnerungen aus Deutschland 1921-1953. The English language edition of this volume was published in 1956.
Lochner spent his later years compiling a series of articles for the quarterly journal of the Wisconsin Historical Society, published on the campus of his alma mater, the University of Wisconsin.

Death and legacy

Louis P. Lochner died on January 8, 1975 in Wiesbaden, West Germany.
In 2005 a posthumous volume of Lochner's German journalism was published as Journalist at the Brink : Louis P. Lochner in Berlin, 1922-1942, edited by Morrell Heald.
Lochner's papers are held at the Concordia Institute in St. Louis, Missouri. An online finding aid is available. Many of the volumes from his personal library found their way to Valparaiso University in Indiana, an institution at which Lochner had lectured at various times during his career.
The archive of the Henry Ford Peace Expedition of 1915-1916, including scattered material by Lochner, is at Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania as part of its Peace Collection.
The papers of Lochner's son Robert, which include photographs of and correspondence by Louis Lochner, are at the Hoover Institution archives at Stanford University in Palo Alto, California.

Works

Books and pamphlets