Clair Kenamore

Rufus Clair Kenamore (c. 1875 – November 3, 1935) was an American journalist who was a foreign correspondent and editor on the St. Louis Post-Dispatch newspaper in the early 20th century.

[1][2][3][4][5][6] He was a college graduate at age 21 when he and a friend, Paul H. Sankey, stopped in St. Louis and announced they were on their way to the Klondike in Canada to prospect for gold with three other people.

[11] Kenamore's early professional life as a journalist was with the St. Louis Republic, and for a time he worked in Chicago.

During World War I, he went to France, where he accompanied troops of the 35th Division of Missouri and Kansas and covered the St. Mihiel and Argonne-Meuse campaigns.

Haldane, Guglielmo Ferrero, Maxim Gorky, Martin Anderson Nexo, Bertrand Russell, Albert Einstein, Rudolph M. Holzapfel and Benedetto Croce.

Kenamore in 1897
Kenamore in 1918