Andrew F. Tully Jr. (October 24, 1914 - September 27, 1993)[1] was an American war reporter, writer and columnist. He also wrote some 18 fiction and non-fiction books, translated in multiple languages. As a war reporter for the Boston Traveler, he was one of the few American journalists to enter Berlin with the Russians in April 1945. He wrote the column Capital Fare from 1961 until 1987.[1][2]

Early life edit

Tully was born in Southbridge, Mass., where he began his newspaper career at the Southbridge News the summer after graduating from high school. At the age of 21 he became the youngest newspaper publisher in the United States when he purchased the weekly Southbridge Press.[3]

Bibliography edit

  • 1947: Era of Elegance
  • 1949: Yankee Salesman
  • 1958: Treasury Agent: The Inside Story
  • 1960: When They Burned the White House, illustrated by Milton Glaser (reprinted 1961)
  • 1960: A Race of Rebels
  • 1962: Capitol Hill
  • 1962: CIA: The Inside Story (translated in French, 1962, German, 1963, and Vietnamese, 1988)
  • 1963: Berlin: Story Of A Battle (translated in Dutch, French (1963, reprinted 1969), Italian (1963) and Japanese; reprinted 1977)
  • 1963: Supreme Court
  • 1964: Where Did Your Money Go?: The Foreign Aid Story (with Milton Britten)
  • 1966: The F.B.I.'s Most Famous Cases (translated in French, 1967, and Italian, 1968)
  • 1967: White Tie and Dagger
  • 1967: The Time of the Hawk
  • 1969: The Super Spies
  • 1973: The Secret War Against Dope
  • 1974: The Brahmin Arrangement
  • 1980: Inside the FBI (reprinted 1987)
  • 2010: Andrew Tully on Everything (a collection of 100 columns)

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b "Andrew Tully Biography". eNetPress. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
  2. ^ "Tully, Andrew (1914-1993)". Howard Gotlieb Archival Research Center. Retrieved 3 May 2018.
  3. ^ "COLUMNIST ANDREW TULLY DIES AT 78". The Washington Post.