Craig LeMoult

Craig LeMoult is a reporter for WGBH News in Boston.

Craig LeMoult is a reporter for WGBH News in Boston.Formerly, Craig was a Senior News Reporter for WSHU in Fairfield, CT. Craig has had feature stories run nationally on Morning Edition, All Things Considered, Weekend Edition and Marketplace. He regularly contributes to the national NPR newscast. Craig has won a number of national and regional awards for his reporting, including the national Society of Professional Journalists Sigma Delta Chi award for feature reporting (2011), first place awards from Public Radio News Directors Inc. for soft feature (2012) and news feature (2009), and second place in the national Society of Environmental Journalists contest (2007).In addition to WSHU, Craig's radio stories have aired on WNYC in New York City, New England Public Radio, WNPR in Hartford, CT, WILL in Urbana, IL, CKMO in Victoria, B.C., KUOW in Washington and other public radio stations.Craig's print stories have been published in the Chicago Tribune, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, Providence Journal, Philadelphia Inquirer, Austin American Statesman, Detroit News, New York Observer, Arizona Republic, Kansas City Star and other publications.Craig is a graduate of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and Tufts University. He has also worked in public relations for Columbia University and Tufts.


botanist

Spring’s early arrival is a troubling indicator of climate change

Lifestyle

Since 2004, Boston University professor Richard Primack and his students have been documenting the same things as Henry David Thoreau did in his book, “Walden.”

Paralympic rowers train on the Charles River.

US rowers aim for gold in the Rio Paralympics

Sports
Charles River Olympics training

US Olympic rowers get ready for Rio with ‘incredibly painful’ training

Sports
Ambulances line the street after bomb explosions interrupted the running of the 117th Boston Marathon in Boston.

Paris attacks and Boston Marathon bombings: How first responders worked

Conflict
Amy Poehler

Female students try to break the glass ceiling at Harvard’s Hasty Pudding Club

Arts
Snotbot2

Don’t let the name fool you. The ‘Snotbot’ drone could innovate how we track whales.

Science

According to its inventors, the device is cheaper, safer for whales and a treasure of data.

WGBH Boston 2024 graphic

US still backing Boston for Olympics bid. With caveats.

Business

Organizers for Boston’s Olympics push promise multiple layers of insurance to protect taxpayers. But where they would find such insurance is still an unanswered question.

Dave Fortier survived the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing but still suffers from tinnitus, a ringing sound that doctors once told him would go away within a few days.

Boston Marathon bombing survivors deal with a lingering, invisible injury — tinnitus

Health

The bombings at the 2013 Boston Marathon caused hundreds of traumatic injuries. But among the most common is an invisible one: tinnitus, a persistent ringing in the ears that for some people still hasn’t stopped.