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Intro | Canadian writer and screenwriter | |
Places | Canada | |
is | Writer Screenwriter | |
Work field | Film, TV, Stage & Radio Literature | |
Gender |
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Birth | 9 October 1879, Woodstock, Canada | |
Death | New York City, USA | |
Star sign | Libra |
Biography
George Pattullo (October 9, 1879 - 1967) was a journalist and author who wrote articles and stories for various publications including the Saturday Evening Post, McClure's Magazine, American Magazine, and Popular Magazine. He also served as a World War I correspondent, and wrote several novels. One of his stories was the basis for the film Gasoline Gus (1921 film). He was the first to report the wartime heroism of Alvin C. York. He was an editor at the Boston Herald. He wrote stories and novels about the American West after traveling it with photographer Erwin Smith during the summers of 1908 - 1910.
Born in Woodstock, Ontario, Canada to George Robson Pattullo and Mary (Rounds) Pattullo he had Scottish ancestry. He attended Woodstock Collegiate Institute and the University of Toronto, then worked at newspapers in Montreal, London, and Boston.
He married Lucile Wilson, daughter of Dallas businessman J. B. Wilson. He died July 29, 1967 in New York City and is buried at Hillcrest Mausoleum in Dallas.
The George C. Marshall Foundation library has notes from an interview with Pattullo May 8, 1959.