<Tr> <Th> Children </Th> <Td> Lally Weymouth Donald E. Graham William Welsh Graham Stephen Meyer Graham </Td> </Tr> <Tr> <Th> Parent (s) </Th> <Td> Agnes Ernst Meyer Eugene Meyer </Td> </Tr> <P> Katharine Meyer "Kay" Graham (née Meyer; June 16, 1917--July 17, 2001) was an American publisher and the first female publisher of a major American newspaper . She led her family's newspaper, The Washington Post, for more than two decades, overseeing its most famous period: the Watergate coverage that eventually led to the resignation of President Richard Nixon . Her memoir, Personal History, won the Pulitzer Prize in 1998 . </P> <P> Graham was born in 1917 into a wealthy family in New York City, to Agnes Elizabeth (née Ernst) and Eugene Meyer . Graham's father was a financier and, later, a public official; his grandfather was Joseph Newmark . He bought The Washington Post in 1933 at a bankruptcy auction . Graham's mother was a bohemian intellectual, art lover, and political activist in the Republican Party, who shared friendships with people as diverse as Auguste Rodin, Marie Curie, Thomas Mann, Albert Einstein and Eleanor Roosevelt, and worked as a newspaper reporter at a time when journalism was an uncommon profession among women . Graham's father was Jewish and her mother was Lutheran, from a family of German descent . Along with her four siblings, Graham was baptized as a Lutheran but attended an Episcopal church . Her siblings included Florence Meyer, Eugene Meyer III (Bill), Ruth Meyer and Elizabeth Meyer . </P>

Who was the woman who ran the washington post