Lewinson was born in
New York City in 1897 and attended
Barnard College to study journalism, earning a
B.Litt. She was one of 11 female graduates of the
Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism in 1918, compared to eight men. This was unprecedented at the time, and women were only gaining major access to the school due to a
wartime shortage of male journalists. Lewinson and
Henry Beetle Hough were jointly awarded the
1918 Pulitzer Prize for Newspaper History for a research paper, "A History of the Services Rendered to the Public by the American Press During the Year 1917
", described by the judges as "the best history of the services rendered to the public by the American press during the preceding year". Lewinson was the first woman to win a journalism Pulitzer Prize. Lewinson also worked as a
copy writer, reporter and columnist for
Daily Investment News, and as a reporter for
''Women's Wear Daily''. She died in 1938 at the age of 41 from
Hodgkin lymphoma. == References ==