Katharine Meyer Graham postage stamp now available

Legendary Washington Post publisher had been considered for stamp for nearly 9 years, son says

A postage stamp emblazoned with the image of Katharine Meyer Graham — the legendary Washington Post publisher and namesake of WKMG — is now available to the public.

The United States Postal Service announced the stamp featuring Katherine Graham in November. You can see our previous coverage of the announcement in the media player below.

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After losing her husband, she took over The Washington Post in 1963 with only newspaper reporting experience and quickly learned she would have to prove herself every day.

“I thought the way men thought because I’d been brought up in that world,” Graham told News 6 in a decades-old interview. “I thought they were in charge and bright and I was a sort of second-class citizen.”

Her biggest challenge was a showdown with President Richard Nixon and the U.S. government during the Vietnam war.

“No reporter from the Washington Post is ever to be in the White House, is that clear?” Nixon infamously said.

Former President Jimmy Carter with Katherine Graham, chairman of the board Washington Post, at the Newsweek Gala in New York on Feb. 7, 1983. (AP Photo/Carlos Rene Perez) (Associated Press)

As depicted in the Steven Spielberg film, “The Post,” Graham had to decide whether to publish what became known as the Pentagon Papers, a top-secret study revealing the truth about the war.

Graham’s son Don, Chairman of Graham Holdings Co., was a young reporter at The Washington Post at the time.

“It was fascinating to listen to her as the first time she learned the Pentagon Papers had been given to the Washington Post,” Don Graham said. “A day later she had to make the decision are we going to publish the story, and the Attorney General of the United States sent her a message: if you publish this and you are convicted of a crime as a result, the government could take away your television stations which are 1/3 of our company.”

Washington Post Publisher Katharine Graham and Execuctive Editor Ben Bradlee leave U.S. District Court in Washington June 21, 1971 , happy with Judge Gerhard A. Gesell's ruling the the paper could publish further articles about a Pentagon report on Vietnam. Later however, the U.S. Court of Appeals extemded for one more day a ban against publishing the secret documents. (AP Photo/stf/bd) (Associated Press)

Katharine Graham was unsure about her decision to publish the papers, according to her son.

“My mother was oddly a CEO but was a very, very self-doubting person,” Don Graham said. “A lot of CEOs have big egos and she never did. She was always saying to herself ‘I wonder if I’m getting this right, I wonder if I’m not about to make some terrible mistake.’ So here she had the full opportunity to think to herself of maybe the negative consequences of what she was doing.”

After publishing the papers, Katharine Graham was vindicated a month later by the Supreme Court.

And shortly after, through solid journalism and a commitment to truth-telling, Katherine Graham and The Post changed the course of history yet again, exposing the Watergate scandal that led to President Nixon’s resignation.

“The fact that I was a woman made me more conspicuous,” Katherine Graham said.

In 1980, she was named the most influential woman in the country.

“And it is a good lesson that someone pretty normal, someone who didn’t have elaborate preparation, someone who had never been to business school but had good judgment and great people to surround her to make those decisions, turned out to be a really good leader,” Don Graham said.

Katharine Meyer Graham passed away in 2001.


About the Authors

Thomas Mates is a digital storyteller for News 6 and ClickOrlando.com. He also produces the podcast Florida Foodie. Thomas is originally from Northeastern Pennsylvania and worked in Portland, Oregon before moving to Central Florida in August 2018. He graduated from Temple University with a degree in Journalism in 2010.

Erik von Ancken anchors and reports for News 6 and is a two-time Emmy award-winning journalist in the prestigious and coveted "On-Camera Talent" categories for both anchoring and reporting.

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