Pulitzer Prizes 1950s: A decade of winners

The 1950s Pulitzer Prizes captured a nation in transition—a postwar America grappling with its identity, its place in the world, and the boundaries of artistic expression. This was the decade when the Pulitzer Prize itself solidified its reputation as America’s most prestigious literary honor, and the winners reflect a remarkable diversity of voices and concerns. From Ernest Hemingway’s spare masterpiece The Old Man and the Sea to Tennessee Williams’s steamy Southern Gothic triumph Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, from Gwendolyn Brooks becoming the first Black writer to win in any category to the musical sensation South Pacific breaking ground on Broadway, the awards embraced both experimental form and popular appeal. The history category proved equally vital, with works like Bruce Catton’s A Stillness at Appomattox and Richard Hofstadter’s The Age of Reform establishing the scholarly rigor that would define public history for decades to come.

What makes this decade particularly fascinating is how the Pulitzer judges reflected the era’s contradictions—honoring both the grand establishment figures (Charles Lindbergh’s celebrity memoir The Spirit of St. Louis as biography in 1954) and fearless newcomers like William Inge with Picnic. There’s an undeniable confidence running through these selections, a sense that American literature was reaching its maturity while simultaneously questioning what that maturity meant. The poetry winners alone—from Carl Sandburg to Marianne Moore to Wallace Stevens to Elizabeth Bishop—represent a golden age of American verse, each bringing their own distinct voice to questions of form, nature, and meaning.

Whether you’re tracing the roots of postwar American drama, charting the evolution of historical scholarship, or simply curious about which books mattered most during that pivotal decade, the Pulitzer Prizes of the 1950s offer a remarkable window into what the literary establishment valued—and, just as importantly, what the broader culture was reading and watching. Below is the complete list of winners from 1950 to 1959:

1950

Biography

Drama

  • South Pacific by Richard Rodgers, Oscar Hammerstein II and Joshua Logan

Fiction

History

Poetry

1951

Biography

  • John C. Calhoun: American Portrait by Margaret Louise Coit

Fiction

History

Poetry

1952

Biography

Drama

Fiction

History

Poetry

1953

Biography

Drama

Fiction

History

Poetry

1954

Biography

Drama

History

Poetry

1955

Biography

Drama

Fiction

History

Poetry

1956

Biography

Drama

Fiction

History

Poetry

1957

Biography

Drama

History

Poetry

1958

Biography

  • George Washington, Volumes I-VII by Douglas Southall Freeman with John Alexander Carroll and Mary Wells Ashworth

Drama

Fiction

History

Poetry

1959

Biography

Drama

  • J. B. by Archibald Macleish

Fiction

History

Poetry