1926 Pulitzer Prize

The following are the Pulitzer Prizes for 1926.

Journalism awards

 * Public Service:
 * Columbus Enquirer Sun, for the service which it rendered in its brave and energetic fight against the Ku Klux Klan; against the enactment of a law barring the teaching of evolution; against dishonest and incompetent public officials and for justice to the Negro and against lynching.
 * Reporting:
 * William Burke Miller of Louisville Courier-Journal, for his work in connection with the story of the trapping in Sand Cave, Kentucky, of Floyd Collins.
 * Editorial Writing:
 * Edward M. Kingsbury of The New York Times, for "The House of a Hundred Sorrows".
 * Editorial Cartooning:
 * D. R. Fitzpatrick of St. Louis Post-Dispatch, "The Laws of Moses and the Laws of Today".

Letters and Drama Awards

 * Novel:
 * Arrowsmith by Sinclair Lewis (Harcourt (publisher)) (declined)
 * Drama:
 * Craig's Wife by George Kelly (Little, Brown and Company)
 * History:
 * A History of the United States, Vol. VI: The War for Southern Independence (1849–1865) by Edward Channing (Macmillan Publishers)
 * Biography or Autobiography:
 * The Life of Sir William Osler by Harvey Cushing (Oxford University Press)
 * Poetry:
 * What's O'Clock by Amy Lowell (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt)