Become a Member
Obituaries

Obituary: Murray Fromson

Campaigning war correspondent who witnessed the Vietnam atrocities

August 30, 2018 10:04
Murray Fromson (Getty Images)

ByTom Tugend, tom tugend

2 min read

Murray Fromson, renowned American war correspondent, university professor and campaigner for press freedom, with close ties to Israel, has died in Los Angeles at the age of 88. He had suffered from Alzheimer’s disease for several years.

Born in the Bronx, N.Y, one of his early idols was legendary CBS correspondent Edward R Murrow. “I was enamoured of him,” Fromson recalled in a 2015 Jewish Journal interview. “I’d go to sleep with a pencil under my pillow, pretending I was a microphone.”

His family moved to Los Angeles when Murray was 11 and he celebrated his bar mitzvah at the old Sinai Temple. The start of his journalistic career was as a copyboy and stringer at the Los Angeles Times, followed by an army stint as a reporter for the Stars and Stripes. After his discharge, he joined the Associated Press, filing articles throughout the United States and Southeast Asia.

In 1960, he followed in Murray’s footsteps and became a network correspondent, first for NBC and then CBS, for whom he worked for a decade. Abroad, he covered the Vietnam War and the fall of Saigon, and at home he reported vividly on the Nixon-Kennedy presidential race and the civil rights movement in the South.