Joseph Morton (correspondent)
American journalist and war correspondent / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Joseph Morton was an American war correspondent for the Associated Press (AP) in the European Theater during World War II. On December 26, 1944, a Nazi counter-partisan unit named "Edelweiss" stormed a log cabin high on Homolka Mountain in today's Slovakia which housed 15 Allied intelligence officers, a Slovak officer, a Slovak-American interpreter, two Slovak civilian resistance fighters, and Morton himself, covering an OSS operation in the country for a story. Although the Allied officers were duly uniformed and Morton had a war correspondent ID in order to be treated as prisoners of war according to the Geneva Convention (1929), the SS headquarters, in compliance with the Commando Order—which stated that all Allied commandos should be killed immediately without trial, even those in proper uniforms—ordered the summary execution of Allied officers and others caught in the act. On January 24, 1945, Joseph Morton, along with 13 Allied officers, was executed at the Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp. He was the only Allied correspondent to be executed by the Axis during World War II.
Joseph Morton | |
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Born | 1911[1] St. Joseph, Missouri, United States |
Died | (1945-01-24)January 24, 1945 Mauthausen-Gusen concentration camp, Upper Austria |
Cause of death | Execution by shooting |
Occupation | War correspondent |
Employer | Associated Press |
Children | One (5 month old girl by the time of Joseph's death) |