“…During World War I women correspondents, especially women war reporters, were a rarity ) Edy, 2017Edy, , 2019aEdy, , 2019b(. War reporting was a male domain up until World War II when in 1944 the U.S. military constructed the concept of a woman war correspondent to govern accredited journalists' access ) Edy, 2019b(. There is a growing interest in studying the concept of transnational journalism ) Broersma, 2010;Coyle & Fondren, 2021;Grieves, 2012;Hellmueller & Berglez, 2023; van Tuyll, 2017van Tuyll, , 2021( but there are only a handful of case studies of early 20th century transnational )war( correspondents ) Cozma, 2015;Fondren, 2021b;Fondren & Edy, 2022;Seul, 2016Seul, , 2021(. Many special correspondents, especially those belonging to minority groups, freelancers, and women, did neither have professional training nor experience in war reporting.…”