After her experience abroad, she moved to
Lake Forest, Illinois, a Chicago suburb, but she returned to Washington in 1913. In 1920, her brother Joseph finally succumbed to his sister's pleas and allowed her to write for his
New York Daily News, founded the previous year. She also worked for
William Randolph Hearst. She published two novels,
romans à clef,
Glass Houses (1926) and
Fall Flight (1928), part of her feud with former friend
Alice Roosevelt Longworth. In 1925, Eleanor married Elmer Schlesinger, a New York lawyer. He died four years later, and in 1930, Mrs. Schlesinger legally changed her name to Mrs. Eleanor Medill Patterson. Patterson tried to buy Hearst's two Washington D.C. papers, the morning
Washington Herald and the evening
Washington Times. However, Hearst hated to sell anything, even when he needed the money. Although he had never made money from his Washington papers, he refused to give up the prestige of owning papers in the capital. However, Hearst agreed to make Patterson the papers' editor at the urging of his editor
Arthur Brisbane. "...And Cissy, although she had no education to speak of and she had very little journalistic experience, seemed to have some of that gift. One of the things she did when William Randolph Hearst allowed her to run his
Washington Herald, which was running fifth in a six-paper market in 1930, she immediately started making changes, the kind of changes that her brother would have made. She added a lot of local features, a lot of local color. She hired a lot of local writers, rather than use the, as she put it, “canned stuff” that came off the Hearst wires." -
Amanda Smith, 2011 "She revitalized the paper and promptly changed the Times from a staid and plodding publication to one more vitally interested in the most tawdry murders to women’s issues and society columns. The addition of coverage of much of Washington’s glittering society appealed to women readers, as did articles on food and fashion. Cissy hired several women to write for the Times and her changes had the effect of propelling the Washington Herald to one of the leading newspapers in Washington, D. C. It wasn’t long before Cissy Patterson had doubled the circulation of the Herald, a feat William Randolph Hearst himself had not been able to accomplish." - Ray Hill,
The Knoxville Focus She began work on August 1, 1930. Patterson was a hands-on editor who insisted on the best of everything—writing, layout, typography, images, and comics. She encouraged society reporting and the
women's page and hired many women as reporters, including
Adela Rogers St. Johns and Martha Blair. In 1936, she was invited to join the
American Society of Newspaper Editors. In April 1931, Patterson purchased
Mount Airy, a mansion built by
Charles Calvert, 3rd Baron Baltimore in the 1600s. Located on extensive grounds near
Rosaryville, Maryland, since about 1910 the mansion's owners had operated it as Dower House, an exclusive restaurant, but it suffered a severe fire in February 1931. Patterson not only meticulously restored the mansion, but improved the stables, added a guest house, and built a greenhouse for growing orchids. In 1937, Hearst's finances had worsened, and he agreed to lease the
Herald and the
Times to Patterson with an option to buy.
Eugene Meyer, the man who had outbid Hearst and Patterson for
The Washington Post in 1933, tried to buy the
Herald out from under Patterson, but failed. Instead, she bought both papers from Hearst on January 28, 1939, and merged them as the
Times-Herald. "
Henry Luce, husband of
Clare Booth Luce, sometime playwright and Congresswoman, was the owner of the august
TIME magazine and
LIFE, among other publications. His dislike for Cissy was likely in part for Cissy’s tart dismissal of his wife as “that lovely asp” and he derided Cissy’s newspaper as “Cissy’s henhouse.” Cissy did indeed use her newspaper to punish her enemies as well as publicly pick at issues sure to appeal to her readers." In 1942, after the
Battle of Midway, the
Times-Herald ran a
Tribune story that the U.S. had advance knowledge about the movements of the Japanese attack force. The story did not report that the U.S. had broken the Japanese naval code, but that was a natural conclusion the enemy could make from the content. Roosevelt, furious, had the
Tribune and the
Times-Herald indicted for espionage but backed down because of the publicity, charges he was persecuting his enemies, and the likelihood of an acquittal (since the Navy's censors had twice cleared the story before it was published and the
Code of Wartime Practices said nothing about the movement of enemy ships). Attorney General Biddle said that the government's humiliation in the case made him feel "like a fool." During
World War II, she and her brother were accused of being
Nazi sympathizers even though both had endorsed the president in the previous three elections. Representative
Elmer Holland of
Pennsylvania said on the floor of the
United States House of Representatives that the Pattersons "would welcome the victory of
Hitler." According to a file from the Federal Bureau of Investigation, she was also involved in a case involving an affair she had with a member of MacArthur’s staff, or perhaps even MacArthur himself, in 1944. ==Family difficulties==