Melanie has been a staff photographer with The Christian Science Monitor since 1985. While covering news and feature assignments, she has visited every continent and more than 80 countries including Afghanistan, Antarctica, the Soviet Union, Iraq, South Africa, India, and the Galapagos Islands in Ecuador - twice.
Melanie has a Master of Arts in journalism from the University of Missouri, Columbia, and a Bachelor of Arts from Principia College in Elsah, Illinois, where she majored in history. Before joining the Monitor, she worked for the Orange County Register in Santa Ana, California, and interned at the San Jose Mercury News in California, The Florida Times-Union in Jacksonville, Florida, and the Simi Valley Enterprise in California.
Melanie's favorite assignments include: photographing (and hand feeding) black bears in northern Minnesota; reporting on youth climate activists in arctic Canada, Bangladesh, and Namibia; following a Russian orphan from her orphanage outside Moscow to a new home with a family in America; following a teenage Mexican-American migrant girl from the challenges of her high school years, to her marriage and the birth of her daughter, to college graduation, and to becoming an elementary school teacher; and following a young South African woman who took in six children orphaned by AIDS.
Melanie's favorite things include: Zumba, roller coasters, scuba diving, Springsteen concerts, Mountain Dew, animals of all kinds (especially cats,) tribal art.
Stories by Melanie Stetson Freeman
- In Canada, too, people remember a feast with settlers and Indigenous people
- Beyond ‘Green Gables’: A new look at Anne’s creator
- Cover Story Moody chickens? Playful bumblebees? Science decodes the rich inner lives of animals.
- Crops, cows, and solar panels? Why farmers are harvesting sunlight.
- A silver rush built Nelson, British Columbia. It still has polish.
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