Born in
Pleasantville, Pennsylvania, Palmer attended
Allegheny College in
Meadville, Pennsylvania. He was the son of Amos F. Palmer; in February 1896, he married Elsie M. Wither. The
New York Press hired Palmer in 1895 as its
London correspondent; and this opportunity evolved into a long career.
The New York Times sent Palmer to cover the
Balkan War in 1912. In 1914, Palmer was arrested in
Mexico City while covering the
Tampico Affair (1914) and the
United States occupation of Veracruz for ''
Everybody's Magazine.''
World Wars General
John Pershing persuaded him to take on the task of press accreditation for the
American Expeditionary Force (
AEF). In this period, he was accorded the rank of Colonel. Palmer subsequently became the first war correspondent to win the U.S. Army's
Distinguished Service Medal. Between World War I and
World War II, Palmer wrote thirty-one books, including
Our Greatest Battle, based on his World War I experiences. In his books, he provided an analysis of the future impact of weapons and strategies he had seen, and soon after the end of World War I predicted that a second world war was on the horizon. He was awarded an
honorary doctorate from
Princeton University in 1935. Palmer also wrote for the
North American Newspaper Alliance in World War II, submitting from London and then Paris at least through April 1945. ==Select works==