Will Byrnes's Reviews > First to the Front: The Untold Story of Dickey Chapelle, Trailblazing Female War Correspondent

First to the Front by Lorissa Rinehart
Rate this book
Clear rating

by
1526851
On Sunday February 18, [1945] the lieutenant in charge of Navy press at the
Oakland air base agreed to see her. Eying her credentials once more, he handed them back.
“And just where was it you wanted to go,” he asked.
She had been rehearsing her response ever since her credentials first arrived in the mail.
“As far forward as you’ll let me,” she replied.
“Be here at 0600, tomorrow,” he said.
--------------------------------------
…good intentions have rarely paved such a direct route to hell.
Back in World War II there was a small bit of graffiti that appeared in many places across the world. It showed a nose, the fingers of two hands and eyes peeking over a wall, or a fence, along with the words “Kilroy was here.” It was meant to show that American soldiers had been in a particular place, and that they had been everywhere. If Dickey Chapelle had wanted to, she could have left her graffiti across the world as well, not just to show that she had been there, but that she had been the first woman, the first reporter, the first woman reporter who had done the job in many, many dangerous places.
She slept in Bedouin tents in the Algerian desert, and in the foxholes she dug herself in the hills overlooking Beirut. She rode in picket boats between battleships off the coast of Iwo Jima and flew in a nuclear-armed jet stationed on an aircraft carrier in the Aegean sea. On New Year’s Eve 1958, she patrolled the Soviet border with the Turkish infantry. On New Year’s Day 1959, she photographed Fidel Castro’s army as they entered Havana. She jumped out of planes over America, the Dominican Republic, South Korea, Laos, and Vietnam. She heard bullets flying over her head in Asia, North America, Europe, and Africa, and knew that they all sounded the same.
description
Engraving of Kilroy on the National World War II Memorial in Washington D.C. - image and descriptive text from Wikipedia

It is likely you have heard of Margaret Bourke-White, famed for her coverage of World War II. You may have heard of Marguerite Higgins, noted for reporting on the Korean War. It is very unlikely you have heard of the subject of this book. Go on Wikipedia, or most other places that aggregate such information, and look up World War II correspondents. Chapelle, whose full name was Georgette Louise Marie Meyer Chapelle, is unlikely to appear. Yet, she did seminal work covering diverse elements of the war, including battles on the front lines. She even trained as a paratrooper, so she could jump into battle zones with American military units, which she did. Lorissa Rinehart seeks to correct that oversight.

description
Lorissa Rinehart - Image from Macmillan

She tracks Dickey from her brief stint as a student of aeronautical engineering at MIT. Soon after, she was a journalist in Florida, covering a tragic air show in Cuba. It was her first real reporting “at the front” of a deadly event. And the way ahead was set. When Hitler invaded Poland in 1939, she saw that war was coming with United States. Although Congress did not agree to declare war, it did ramp up production of airplanes and other war materials to support the effort against Nazism.

description
Dickey Chapelle - Image from Narratively, courtesy of Wisconsin Historical Society

She learned that she would have to become a photographer if she wanted to cover the war. So she took photography classes. Among her teachers was the man she would marry, Anthony “Tony” Chapelle. Their relationship was never a natural. He was much older, controlling, with a temper, described by some as a consummate con man. He would be jealous of her successes, and seemingly always eager to undermine her confidence. But he was a very successful war photographer and taught her the skills that would enhance her natural eye, helping make her the great photojournalist she would become.

description
Dickey Chapelle photographs marines in 1955 - image From Wall Street Journal – from Wisconsin Historical Society

Rinehart tracks not only Chapelle’s adventures on the front lines of many military conflicts, but the skirmishes in which she was forced to engage to gain permission to be there at all. Sexism, as one would expect, forms a major portion of those struggles, but some had to do with her being a journalist at all, regardless of her gender. There is a string of firsts next to her name in the history of journalism, and the word “female” does not appear in all of them. Sadly, she was the first female correspondent killed in Viet Nam.

description
Chapelle with Pilots - image from the Wisconsin Historical Society

Dickey was tough as nails, enduring some of the same training as the GIs she was covering. In addition to her considerable coverage of World War II, she was on the front lines of the major hot spots in the Cold War. Not only embedded with marines, Chapelle spent considerable time with troops from Turkey, Castro’s rebels in Cuba, anti-Castro plotters in Florida, secret American forces in Laos, Laotian anti-communist fighters, Algerian revolutionaries, Hungarian rebels, and more. The list is substantial. She would keep diving in, wanting to get the immediate experience of the fighters, the civilians caught in the crossfire, the human impact of war. No Five o’clock Follies for Dickey. She was not interested in being a stenographer for brass talking points, seeing that approach as the enemy of truthful reporting.

description
Dickey Chapelle sits and drinks coffee with the FLN Scorpion Battalion Rebels in the Atlas Mountains in Algeria
- image and descriptive text from the Wisconsin Historical Society – shot by Dickey Chapelle

Chapelle was captured, imprisoned, and tortured in Hungary by Soviet forces. It gave her a particularly pointed perspective on the treatment of prisoners by Western militaries, and the greater implications of the USA not holding to the highest international standards.

One of her greatest gifts was a respect for local cultures and particularly local fighters. She was quite aware of how hard they trained, how hard and far they pushed themselves, how much deprivation they willingly endured. Yet she encountered attitudes from American officers and leaders that regarded non-white fighters through a self-defeating racist lens. Chapelle tried to get the message across to those in command how wrong they were in their regard for the locals the USA was supposedly there to support. Despite occasionally breaking through the brain-truth barrier, that engagement proved a demoralizing, losing battle.

description
Iwo Jima Medical Facilities - image from the Wisconsin Historical Society – shot by Dickey Chapelle

Another example of her analytical capability was fed by her time with a community in Laos, led by a cleric, possessed of superior tactical and political approaches. She tried to bring her knowledge of this to American military leaders. It was not a total failure. Although her ideas were not implemented to a meaningful extent, she was eventually brought in by the military to teach what she knew to new officers.

Through much of her work, which included extensive coverage of the on-the-ground Marshall Plan in Europe, her marriage to Tony was seemingly in constant crisis. It was an ongoing war, with dustups aplenty, advances and retreats, damage incurred, but resulted, ultimately, in a separation of forces, which freed Chapelle to pursue her front-line compulsion unimpeded by contrary wishes.

description
Fidel Castro with cigar, and five other men
- image from the Wisconsin Historical Society – shot by Dickey Chapelle

Her employers were not always news outlets. She was employed by the Red Cross to document the need for blood in the war zone. She covered a hospital ship, and medical units on the battlefield. It was hoped that her coverage would give a boost to a national blood drive encouraging Americans to give blood for wounded soldiers. It was a huge success. She worked for the American Friends Service Committee covering military behavior in the Dominican Republic. Other non-profits paid for her to report from other parts of the world. And sundry magazines provided enough employment to keep her working almost constantly.

description
A woman in a headscarf crosses an improvised bridge in the vicinity of the village of Tamsweg, escaping from Hungary to Austria
- image from the Wisconsin Historical Society – shot by Dickey Chapelle

This is an amazing book about an amazing woman.The story of Dickey Chapelle reads like fiction. Even though we know this is a biography, and that what is on the page has already occurred, Rinehart makes the story sing. Her story-telling skill brings us into the scenes of conflict, sometimes terror, so we tremble or gird along with her subject. She taps into the adventure of Dickey’s life, as well as the peril. This is the life that Dickey had sought, and which would be her undoing. The book reads like a novel, fast, exciting, eye-opening, frustrating, enraging, sad, but ultimately satisfying. Dickey Chapelle’s was a life that was as rich with stumbling blocks as it was with jobs well done, but ultimately it was a life well lived, offering concrete benefits to those who were exposed to her work, and an inspiration for many who have followed in her bootsteps.
I side with prisoners against guards, enlisted men against officers, weakness against power.
—Dickey Chapelle

Review posted - 10/6/23

Publication date – 7/11/23

I received a copy of First to the Front from St. Martin’s Press in return for a fair review. Thanks, folks.



This review will soon be cross-posted on my site, Coot’s Reviews. Stop by and say Hi!

=============================EXTRA STUFF

Links to Lorissa Rinehart’s personal, FB, and Instagram pages

Profile - from Women Also Know History
Lorissa Rinehart writes about art, war, and their points of intersection.
Her writing has recently appeared in Hyperallergic, Perfect Strangers, and Narratively, among other publications…When not writing she can be found photographing the natural world impinging upon the urban landscape or digging in the dirt with her husband and two sons in Santa Barbara, California. She holds an MA from NYU in Experimental Humanities and a BA in Literature from UC Santa Cruz.
Interviews
-----Writers Talking – Season 2 Episode 7 - Talking to Lorissa Rinehart - podcast – 50:30
-----Hidden History Podcast - A Conversation with Lorissa Rinehart with John Rodriguez - video – 40:18 – begin at 1:43 – there is a transcript on the side
-----Cold War Conversations - Dickey Chapelle – Trailblazing Female Cold War Journalist - audio – 1:01:50

Items of Interest from the author
-----The War Horse - excerpt
-----Facebook reel - Rinehart on Dickey Chapelle showing incredible guts
-----FB - The Top 10 Books She Read to Prepare
-----The History Reader - Escaping Algeria - excerpt
-----Narratively - The Parachuting Female Photojournalist Who Dove Into War Headfirst

Item of Interest
-----Milwaukee PBS - Behind the Pearl Earrings: The Story of Dickey Chapelle, Combat Photojournalist - video documentary- 56:05
-----Political Dictionary - Five o’clock Follies
88 likes · flag

Sign into Goodreads to see if any of your friends have read First to the Front.
Sign In »

Reading Progress

Started Reading
September 30, 2023 – Finished Reading
October 3, 2023 – Shelved
October 3, 2023 – Shelved as: books-of-the-year-2023
October 3, 2023 – Shelved as: 2023-nonfiction-reader-challenge
October 3, 2023 – Shelved as: adventure
October 3, 2023 – Shelved as: american-history
October 3, 2023 – Shelved as: biography
October 3, 2023 – Shelved as: feminist
October 3, 2023 – Shelved as: history
October 3, 2023 – Shelved as: military-and-intelligence-non-fic
October 3, 2023 – Shelved as: nonfiction
October 3, 2023 – Shelved as: public-policy
October 3, 2023 – Shelved as: world-history-non-fiction
October 3, 2023 – Shelved as: world-war-ii
October 3, 2023 – Shelved as: journalism

Comments Showing 1-11 of 11 (11 new)

dateDown arrow    newest »

message 1: by Adrienne (new) - added it

Adrienne Day Thank you for your review. Will definitely check this book out


message 2: by Marty (new)

Marty Fried Wow!

All I can think of to say, except excellent review!


message 3: by Carol (new) - added it

Carol Wow, another wonderful review. I always enjoy (and trust) what you have to say. Thanks very much.


Will Byrnes Adrienne wrote: "Thank you for your review. Will definitely check this book out
Thank you, Adrienne. Dickey was a marvel.


Will Byrnes Carol wrote: "Wow, another wonderful review. I always enjoy (and trust) what you have to say. Thanks very much."
Thanks, Carol


MarilynLovesNature Thank you so much for informing about this amazing person and book. It's too bad so little was known about her for so long (and I came from Wisconsin but never heard of her).


Will Byrnes Thank you, Marilyn. She was totally news to me.


Will Byrnes Marty wrote: "Wow!

All I can think of to say, except excellent review!"

Thanks. Marty. This is really an outstanding book, both informative and engrossing.


Steve Will-👍


message 10: by Will (new) - rated it 5 stars

Will Byrnes Steve-Thanks


Linda Based on your review, I am currently reading this book. I foresee it being one I will recommend to those who want to read about "women in the workforce."


back to top