Born in Manhattan, Kansas, on October 4,
1884,Damon Runyon was one of the first great
American sportswriters. Runyon got his first newspaper job,
with the Pueblo
Evening Press, at age fifteen, before enlisting to take
part in the Spanish American War. When he returned from the war, he
worked for a number of small daily newspapers before becoming a
sportswriter with the Denver
Post. In 1910, Runyon moved to New York City to work at
the New York American,
where he covered New York baseball clubs for many years, as
well as a number of other sports venues.
At its peak, his column had a
daily readership of over ten million, and he was known as
America's premier journalist. Runyon's work was so outstanding
that Red Smith said, "Runyon could do things ... that made a fellow
want to throw his typewriter away." Outside of sports, Runyon was
also an accomplished writer; his works include the book "Guys and
Dolls," which was later reworked into a Broadway
musical. Runyon died in 1946. He was inducted into the
NSSA Hall of Fame on April 7,
1964.