Red Smith

American journalist
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Also known as: Walter Wellesley Smith
Quick Facts
Byname of:
Walter Wellesley Smith
Born:
Sept. 25, 1905, Green Bay, Wis., U.S.
Died:
Jan. 15, 1982, Stamford, Conn. (aged 76)

Red Smith (born Sept. 25, 1905, Green Bay, Wis., U.S.—died Jan. 15, 1982, Stamford, Conn.) was an American sports columnist whose literary craftsmanship, humorous and iconoclastic approach, and deep knowledge of sports made him one of the United States’ most popular sportswriters. His columns were literate, and he shunned the jargon of the genre. His popularity persisted nevertheless, and his work profoundly influenced a generation of writers.

Smith attended Green Bay public schools and often went hiking, hunting, and fishing. After graduating from the University of Notre Dame in 1927, Smith worked as a reporter for the Milwaukee Sentinel and then took a job as a sportswriter at the St. Louis Star-Times, where he developed his style. For nine years, from 1936 to 1945, he wrote sports stories for the Philadelphia Record.

Beginning in 1945, Smith’s column, “Views of Sport,” appeared in the New York Herald Tribune. Syndicated shortly afterward, it began to appear in newspapers throughout the United States, continuing after the Herald Tribune’s demise. He joined The New York Times in 1971. For the most part, Smith wrote about such major spectator sports as baseball, American football, boxing, and horse racing. Occasionally, never abandoning his wry humour or his keen sense of perspective, he wrote about one of his favourite sporting activities, fly-fishing for trout. His natural and precise use of the English language made him a consultant on usage to a variety of dictionaries and encyclopaedias.

In 1956 Smith’s column earned him the second Grantland Rice Memorial Award for outstanding sportswriting. His columns provided the material for five books, including Out of the Red (1950), Views of Sport (1954), and the last, Strawberries in the Wintertime (1974).

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.