In memory of Sadie Kneller Miller
Oct 07, 1867 - Nov 21, 1920Location
Memorial Page of Sadie Kneller Miller
Sadie Kneller Miller
lies beside her husband in the cemetery’s only traditional-style mausoleum. A memorial
such as this befits a most remarkable woman – a photojournalist when no other American woman was pursuing such an adventurous career.
Sadie, a Westminster native, began writing sports articles for the local Democratic
Advocate while attending Western Maryland College, but the public never knew the
stories came from a woman’s pen. She also attended photography lectures. After
graduation, she continued as a sportswriter and began giving dramatic readings at
Carroll County churches and other locations, thus learning how to catch and hold the
attention of her listeners.
In 1894, Sadie Kneller married Charles Robert Miller, also a Western Maryland graduate who played baseball and practiced law. The couple moved to Baltimore where Sadie wrote her sports stories under the initials “SKM” without anyone but her employers knowing her identity. She purchased a camera and began her first ventures into photojournalism by submitting her photographs to Leslie’s
Illustrated Weekly, a New York magazine that circulated throughout the country. Some of her photos won prizes. Soon she was on Leslie’s staff, and her career took off.
She covered events in the U.S. and abroad, combining a vivid style of writing with her
own dramatic photographs. No unfolding story seemed to faze her no matter the
potential personal danger in reporting it. She journeyed to Morocco where the Spanish
were fighting the Moroccans; she interviewed the Mexican guerilla Pancho Villa at his
base in Mexico; she covered the Great Baltimore Fire of 1904 (her first big story); and
she became the first outside woman allowed to photograph a leper colony on the
Hawaiian island of Molokai.
Leslie’s gradually eliminated assignments for Sadie and other foreign correspondents
between 1915 and 1918 as World War I changed the way press coverage worked
overseas. In 1918, when only 51, she suffered a stroke which seriously disabled her and
she died two years later of a heart attack. While many Carroll County women have left
significant local legacies, Sadie Kneller Miller’s life and work were known over much
of the western world.

