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Pete Hamill Papers

Call Number

BCMS.0081

Dates

1900-2020, inclusive
; 1980-2019, bulk

Creator

Extent

19.1 Linear Feet
in 17 record cartons, 1 document box, and 1 oversize box.

Language of Materials

English .

Abstract

Materials documenting the career of journalist and author Pete Hamill. The bulk of the collection includes items from Hamill's post-newspaper career, focusing on his books, speeches, public appearances, freelance articles and screenwriting.

Biographical

William Peter Hamill was born on June 24th 1935 in Park Slope, Brooklyn to parents Billy and Anne Hamill (née Devlin), immigrants from Belfast, North Ireland. Hamill attended P.S. 107 and Holy Name of Jesus elementary school, working as a delivery boy for the Brooklyn Daily Eagle to earn extra money. In 1949 Hamill was offered a scholarship to attend Regis High School in Manhattan. In 1951 he transferred to St. Agnes for a short time before dropping out for a job as a sheet metal worker at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. During this time, he moved out of his family's home and began taking night classes at the Cartoonists and Illustrators School (now the School of Visual Arts). In 1952, Hamill enlisted in the U.S. Navy, using money from his G.I. Bill to study painting at Mexico City College.

After returning to New York, he worked as a designer for the Greek magazine Atlantis, and soon opened his own studio. He also began writing letters to the editor of the New York Post, several of which were printed. In 1960, Post editor Jimmy Wechsler responded to one of Hamill's letters with a job offer, a three-month trial working the night desk. Hamill was hired, but a 1962 printers' union strike temporarily closed the paper, leaving Hamill to write freelance for several publications including the Saturday Evening Post. In February 1962 he married Ramona Negron, and their daughter Adriene was born later that year. In 1963, Hamill moved with his wife and daughter to Spain, where he worked as the European correspondent for the Saturday Evening Post, covering conflicts in Ireland and Lebanon. The couple's second daughter Deirdre was born in 1964.

In 1965 Hamill rejoined the New York Post and was sent to Vietnam to cover the war. In 1968 he joined the campaign trail of friend and democratic primary nominee Robert Kennedy. Hamill was standing a few feet from Kennedy when he was assassinated, and helped to subdue assassin Sirhan Sirhan. Later that year Hamill published his first novel, Killing for Christ. He worked as a columnist for the Post from 1969-1974, publishing a collection of his columns in Irrational Ravings (1971) and a second novel, The Gift (1973). Hamill was awarded a 1976 Grammy for his work writing the liner notes on Bob Dylan's album Blood on the Tracks. Hamill and Ramona Negron divorced in 1970.

From 1977-1979 Hamill worked as a columnist for the New York Daily News, as an editor for the Mexico City News in 1987 and as a columnist for Esquire from 1989-1991. He also contributed articles to New York Magazine, Rolling Stone, Playboy, and the Village Voice, bringing his work to a national audience. In 1987 he married journalist Fukikio Aoki. He continued to publish his own work, including Dirty Laundry (1978), Flesh and Blood (1977), The Deadly Piece (1979), The Invisible City: Short Stories (1980), Guns of Heaven (1984), Loving Women (1989) and Tokyo Sketches: Short Stories (1992).

In 1993 Hamill was named Editor of the New York Post, a position he held for five weeks. The following year his memoir, A Drinking Life, was published to positive reviews followed by a second collection of his columns called Piecework (1996.) In 1997 he was named Editor-in-Chief of the New York Daily News, which he resigned after eight months. In 1998 he published the bestselling Snow in August, followed by News is a Verb (1998) and biographies Why Sinatra Matters (1999) and Diego Rivera (1999).

In addition to books and articles Hamill was also a screenwriter, adapting stories from his novels and writing original content. Hamill briefly appears onscreen in several films and is credited as a writer on ten made for TV movies. He also gave lectures and participated in talks at numerous universities, libraries and organizations, speaking about his career and promoting projects. His ninth novel, Forever, was published in 2003, and in 2004 New York University named Hamill Distinguished Writer in Residence at the Arthur L. Carter Journalism Institute. Following the appointment he published his second memoir Downtown: My Manhattan, followed by novels North River (2007) and Tabloid City (2011).

Hamill's final full-length publication, a collection of short stories called The Christmas Kid: And Other Brooklyn Stories was released in 2012. He was the recipient of numerous awards including the Columbia Journalism Award for Lifetime Achievement, the Ernie Pyle Lifetime Achievement Award and the George Polk Career Award. Hamill died on August 5, 2020 following heart and kidney failure. He is interred at Green-Wood Cemetery. On June 24, 2021 7th Avenue between 11th and 12th Streets was renamed Pete Hamill Way, in honor of his childhood home at 378 Seventh Avenue.

Arrangement

Series 1: Subject Files and Series 2: Speeches maintain original order and folder titles.

Series 3: Writing is divided into three sub-series by topic. Original folder titles have been maintained, with proceeding book titles added to folder titles by the archivist.

Folder titles marked with an asterisk (*) and all dates have been added by the archivist.

Scope and Contents

This collection consists of materials documenting the career of journalist and author Pete Hamill. The bulk of the collection includes items from Hamill's post-newspaper career, focusing on his books, speeches, public appearances, freelance articles and screenwriting. Items dated pre-1985 are photocopies.

Subject Files represent Hamill's own record keeping system for various professional and personal items, which he kept in multiple A-Z file structures. Correspondence in this series is mostly in the form of printed emails to professional contacts, former classmates, family, friends and fans. Items concerning freelance work, public appearances, interviews, travel and awards are also included. Hamill collected his research, correspondence and promotional materials for several books in the Subject Files, including A. J. Liebling: The Sweet Science and Other Writings and A Time it Was: Bobby Kennedy in the Sixties in the Subject Files.

Speeches include handwritten speech notes, promotional items and correspondence regarding scheduling. Speech items also appear in the Subject Files. Scripts and treatments are original material and adaptations of previous work.

Books and Articles include manuscripts, research, press, correspondence and promotional materials for novels Snow in August, Forever, North River and Tabloid City; collection of short stories The Christmas Kid: And Other Brooklyn Stories; memoirsDowntown: My Manhattan and A Drinking Life; introduction to Vietnam: The Real War: A Photographic History by the Associated Press; biographies Why Sinatra Matters and Diego Rivera and an article tracing the life of Robert Henry Best. Also included are materials for an unpublished novel called Belfast Novel or Billy Dillon's Magic Leg, loosely based on the life of Hamill's father. Materials for other books and articles appear in the Subject Files. Writing by Others includes an early manuscript of Angela's Ashes and a handwritten note from author Frank McCourt.

Conditions Governing Access

Open to researchers without restriction.

Conditions Governing Use

While many items at the Center for Brooklyn History are unrestricted, we do not own reproduction rights to all materials. Be aware of the several kinds of rights that might apply: copyright, licensing and trademarks. The researcher assumes all responsibility for copyright questions.

Preferred Citation

Identification of item/descriptive title, date (if known), Pete Hamill Papers, BCMS_0081, Brooklyn Public Library, Center for Brooklyn History.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Gift of Fukiko Aoki Hamill, 2021 and 2022.

Physical Characteristics and Technical Requirements

If digital surrogates exist, they should be used in place of the originals whenever possible.

Floppy discs are unavailable due to technical limitations.

Related Materials

Brooklyn Historical Society newspaper collection ARC.258

Catholic churches of Brooklyn publications and ephemera 1986.016

Female authors of Kings County list 1995.008

Jennie Child manuscript 1973.129

Collection processed by

Sarah Quick, Reference Archivist

About this Guide

This finding aid was produced using ArchivesSpace on 2023-08-21 11:22:21 +0000.
Using Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language: Description is written in: English, Latin script.

Repository

Brooklyn Collection
Center for Brooklyn History
128 Pierrepont Street
Brooklyn, NY 11201