Model. Surrealist. Photographer. World War II correspondent. Lee Miller's life reads like a M masterclass in living several different lives in one lifetime. "She was the nearest thing I knew to a mid-20th century Renaissance woman," said fellow World War II photojournalist David E Scherman. Perhaps her most remarkable work is from her time as a World War II photojournalist and correspondent, documenting women's war effort in Britain, the Siege of St Malo, the Alsace Campaign and the liberation of Buchenwald and Dachau concentration camps.
A fractured childhood
Elizabeth 'Lee' Miller was born on 23 April 1907 in Poughkeepsie, New York, to Florence and Theodore Miller. Growing up on a farm provided near endless possibilities for adventure and Theodore, a mechanical engineer, would treat Lee the same as her two brothers, encouraging their shared interests in science and machinery. Lee's favourite toy was a chemistry set, and she was soon introduced to photography when her father installed a darkroom in a cupboard underneath the stairs. Yet Lee's childhood was to end abruptly. At the age of seven she was sexually assaulted, by a family acquaintance. The trauma was to be further aggravated, as the perpetrator infected Lee with gonorrhoea - a venereal disease for which the medical treatment at the time consisted of numerous acid irrigations, administered daily for a year. "It changed her whole life and attitude," her brother, the aviation pioneer John Miller, recalled years later. "She went wild."
This story is from the Issue 114 edition of History of War.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the Issue 114 edition of History of War.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
NAUMACHIA TRUTH BEHIND ROME'S GLADIATOR SEA BATTLES
In their quest for evermore novel and bloody entertainment, the Romans staged enormous naval fights on artificial lakes
OPERATION MANNA
In late April 1945, millions of Dutch civilians were starving as Nazi retribution for the failed Operation Market Garden cut off supplies. eet as In response, Allied bombers launched a risky mission to air-drop food
GASSING HITLER
Just a month before the end of WWI, the future Fuhrer was blinded by a British shell and invalided away from the frontline. Over a century later, has the artillery brigade that launched the fateful attack finally been identified?
SALAMANCA
After years of largely defensive campaigning, Lieutenant General Arthur Wellesley went on the offensive against a French invasion of Andalusia
HUMBERT 'ROCKY'VERSACE
Early in the Vietnam War, a dedicated US Special Forces officer defied his merciless Viet Cong captors and inspired his fellow POWs to survive
LEYTE 1944 SINKING THE RISING SUN
One of the more difficult island campaigns in WWII's Pacific Theatre saw a brutal months-long fight that exhausted Japan’s military strength
MAD DAWN
How technology transformed strategic thinking and military doctrine from the Cold War to the current day
BRUSHES WITH ARMAGEDDON
Humanity came close to self-annihilation with the Cuban Missile Crisis, Broken Arrows’ and other nuclear near misses
THE DEADLY RACE
How the road to peace led to an arms contest between the USA and USSR, with prototypes, proliferation and the world’s biggest bomb
THE MANHATTAN PROJECT
Einstein, Oppenheimer and the race to beat Hitler to the bomb. How a science project in the desert helped win a war