Pulitzer Prizes 1924: Complete list of winners
The 1924 Pulitzer Prizes celebrated a remarkable year for American letters, spotlighting works that captured the nation’s imagination during a period of significant cultural reflection. This was only the fifth year of the prestigious Pulitzer Prize awards program, which was still establishing itself as the gold standard for recognizing excellence in American letters, drama, and journalism. The selections that year demonstrated the award’s commitment to honoring diverse voices and perspectives across multiple genres, from groundbreaking memoirs to innovative verse.
Perhaps most notably, Robert Frost’s “New Hampshire: A Poem with Notes and Grace Notes” captured the Poetry prize, cementing the New England poet’s already-growing reputation as one of America’s most important literary voices. Meanwhile, Margaret Wilson’s “The Able McLaughlins” won the Novel category, representing an important moment for women writers in the early Pulitzer era. The selections across biography, history, and drama—including Michael Idvorsky Pupin’s “From Immigrant to Inventor,” Charles Howard McIlwain’s “The American Revolution – A Constitutional Interpretation,” and Hatcher Hughes’s “Hell-Bent Fer Heaven”—revealed an awards committee interested in works that grappled with American identity, historical understanding, and theatrical innovation.
The 1924 Pulitzer Prizes winners represent a fascinating snapshot of what the literary establishment valued during the mid-1920s. Here are the complete winners across all categories:
Biography
- From Immigrant to Inventor by Michael Idvorsky Pupin
Drama
Hell-Bent Fer Heaven by Hatcher Hughes
History
- The American Revolution – A Constitutional Interpretation by Charles Howard McIlwain
Novel
- The Able McLaughlins by Margaret Wilson
Poetry
- New Hampshire: A Poem with Notes and Grace Notes by Robert Frost