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Anne Hull

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Anne Hull is an enterprise reporter on the national staff of the Washington Post. She has written about immigration, class, race and the war in Iraq. She covered Sept. 11 at Ground Zero and Hurricane Katrina in New Orleans. Along with Post colleague Dana Priest, Hull spent 2007 reporting on the military’s care of wounded soldiers, including the investigation that exposed harsh living conditions at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.

Prior to joining the Washington Post in 2000, Hull was a reporter for 15 years at the St. Petersburg Times, where she was the paper’s national correspondent from 1995-2000. She attended Florida State University and was a 1995 Nieman Fellow at Harvard University. She is on the Board of Trustees at the Poynter Institute for Media Studies in St. Petersburg. Hull is a recipient of the 2010/2011 Berlin Prize Fellowship from the American Academy in Berlin. She lives in Washington, D.C.

Awards

The Walter Reed stories were awarded the 2008 Pulitzer Prize for Public Service, the Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award, the Selden Ring Award for Investigative Reporting, the American Society of Newspaper Editors Awards for Local Coverage and the Investigative Reporters and Editors Grand Prize Award.

Hull has been a Pulitzer Prize finalist several times and is a repeat winner of the American Society of Newspaper Editor Distinguished Writing Award.

External links

References