Henrietta Malkiel was born in New York City in 1901, the only child of political activists Leon and Theresa Malkiel.[1] Her parents were Russian Jewish immigrants and founded the New York Daily Call, a Socialist newspaper.[2] Her mother, a women's rights and labor activist, was the author of The Diary of a Shirtwaist Striker.[3] She attended Hunter College High School and graduated from the Columbia Journalism School in 1922.[4]
Career
After college, Henrietta worked as a features editor for several magazines, including Vanity Fair, Musical Digest, and Vogue. She served as the foreign editor for Vogue from 1929 to 1931. She also served as assistant to film director John Houseman. She met her future husband when they were both working on President Franklin D. Roosevelt's reelection campaign in 1940. They collaborated on a number of projects for the Office of War Information. During World War II she was the assistant program chief for Voice of America, and is credited with naming the program.[4]
In 1945, the Poynters co-founded the Congressional Quarterly as a means to have easier and more streamlined access to the major legislation going through Congress.[5] The Poynters resided mainly in St. Petersburg, Florida, but spent a great deal of time traveling between Florida and Washington, DC. Starting in 1953, she was the associate editor for her husband's newspaper, the St. Petersburg Times. She also served as the Vice President and a trustee of the Poynter Fund.
During her career, Poynter was a member of the National Women's Press Club and the National Conference of Editorial Writers and the International Press Institute (she is noted as the first woman to serve on its American Committee).[6][7]
^Markowitz, Ruth Jacknow (Summer 1993). "Reviewed Work: The Diary of a Shirtwaist Striker by Theresa S. Malkel". Journal of American Ethnic History. 12 (4): 80–82. JSTOR27501096.
^"News and Notes". Florida Historical Quarterly. 38 (2): 183. October 1959. JSTOR30139028.
^Nelson Poynter Memorial Library. Special Collections and University Archives.; Schnur, James Anthony; and Chance, Jean, "The Jean Chance Research File on Henrietta Poynter" (2004). Special Collections and University Archives Finding Aids: All Items. 50. https://digital.usfsp.edu/scua_finding_aid_all/50