Background
Walker was born in 1921 in Canton, Texas, the second youngest child of nine children of Charles H. Walker and Wincie Sides Walker.
Walker was born in 1921 in Canton, Texas, the second youngest child of nine children of Charles H. Walker and Wincie Sides Walker.
She graduated in 1942 from North Texas Teacher"s College, which is now the present-day University of North Texas.
After working at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram as a staff writer following college. Her editors at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram sent her to cover a story on the Women"s Army Corps (Women's Army Corps), the women"s branch of the United States Army during World World War World War II The story changed Walker"s career, as she enlisted in the Women"s Army Corps soon after covering corporations Through Women's Army Corps, Walker was posted to Europe, where she joined the staff of the The Stars and Stripes newspaper"s Paris edition as a reporter in 1945.
The couple lived in Germany, Belgium and Sweden before moving to Paris, France.
She joined the Associated Press as the news service"s European fashion editor, based from Paris. She interviewed some of the largest figures in fashion during post-war period, including Christian Dior and Coco Chanel.
Designer Yves Lanvin of the fashion house, Lanvin, named one of his dresses for Nadeane Walker. Walker worked as a London correspondent for the International Herald Tribune and a freelance reporter for numerous other newspapers and magazines after leaving the Associated Press. Walker moved back to her native Texas in 1970 and took a position as a reporter for the Dallas Times-Herald.
However, the United States Department of Labor launched an investigation into both gender discrimination and age discrimination at the Dallas Times-Herald.
Walker cooperated with the Department of Labor"s probe and was subsequently fired by the newspaper. She joined a lawsuit filed by the Department of Labor in 1981. The suit led to a change of employment procedures at the Dallas Times-Herald.
Walker continued to work as a freelance writer for the next two decades.
She died in Austin of natural causes on January 7, 2013, at the age of 91.