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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #65868 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65868)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Story of the Sun. New York, 1833-1918,
-by Frank M. O'Brien
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The Story of the Sun. New York, 1833-1918
-
-Author: Frank M. O'Brien
-
-Release Date: July 18, 2021 [eBook #65868]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: deaurider, Charlie Howard, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was
- produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital
- Library.)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY OF THE SUN. NEW YORK,
-1833-1918 ***
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: THE FIRST HEAD-LINE OF THE NEW YORK SUN]
-
-[Illustration: THE SECOND HEAD-LINE OF THE NEW YORK SUN]
-
-
-[Illustration: THE STORY OF
-
-The Sun]
-
-[Illustration: BENJAMIN H. DAY, FOUNDER OF “THE SUN”]
-
-
-
-
- THE STORY OF
-
- The Sun.
-
- [Illustration]
-
- NEW YORK, 1833–1918
-
- BY
-
- FRANK M. O’BRIEN
-
- WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY EDWARD
- PAGE MITCHELL, EDITOR OF “THE
- SUN”--ILLUSTRATIONS AND FACSIMILES
-
- NEW YORK: GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY
-
-
-
-
- _Copyright, 1918,
- By George H. Doran Company_
-
-
- _Copyright, 1917, 1918, The Frank A. Munsey Company_
-
- _Copyright, 1918, The Sun Printing and Publishing Association_
-
- _Printed in the United States of America_
-
-
-
-
- TO
-
- FRANK A. MUNSEY
-
-
-
-
-AN INTRODUCTION
-
-BY THE EDITOR OF THE SUN
-
-
-It is truer, perhaps, of a newspaper than of most other complex things
-in the world that the whole may be greater than the sum of all its
-parts. In any daily paper worth a moment’s consideration the least
-fancifully inclined observer will discern an individuality apart from
-and in a degree independent of the dozens or hundreds or thousands of
-personal values entering at a given time into the composite of its grey
-pages.
-
-This entity of the institution, as distinguished from the human beings
-actually engaged in carrying it on, this fact of the newspaper’s
-possession of a separate countenance, a spirit or soul differentiating
-it from all others of its kind, is recognised either consciously or
-unconsciously by both the more or less unimportant workers who help
-to make it and by their silent partners who support it by buying and
-reading it. Its loyal friends and intelligent critics outside the
-establishment, the Old Subscriber and the Constant Reader, form the
-habit of attributing to the newspaper, as to an individual, qualities
-and powers beneficent or maleficent or merely foolish, according to
-their mood or digestion. They credit it with traits of character quite
-as distinct as belong to any man or woman of their acquaintance. They
-personify it, moreover, without much knowledge, if any, of the people
-directing and producing it; and, often and naturally, without any
-particular concern about who and what these people may be.
-
-On their own side, the makers of the paper are accustomed to
-individualise it as vividly as a crew does the ship. They know better
-than anybody else not only how far each personal factor, each element
-of the composite, is modified and influenced in its workings by the
-other personal factors associated in the production, but also the
-extent to which all the personal units are influenced and modified
-by something not listed in the office directory or visible upon the
-payroll; something that was there before they came and will be there
-after they go.
-
-Of course, that which has given persistent idiosyncrasy to a newspaper
-like the _Sun_, for example, is accumulated tradition. That which has
-made the whole count for more than the sum total of its parts, in the
-_Sun’s_ case as in the case of its esteemed contemporaries, is the
-heritage of method and expedient, the increment of standardised skill
-and localised imagination contributed through many years to the fund of
-the paper by the forgotten worker as well as by the remembered.
-
-The manner of growth of the great newspaper’s well-defined and
-continuous character, distinguishing it from all the rest of the
-offspring of the printing press, a development sometimes not radically
-affected by changes of personnel, of ownership, of exterior conditions
-and fashions set by the popular taste, is a subject over which
-journalistic metaphysics might easily exert itself to the verge of
-boredom. Fortunately there has been found a much better way to deal
-with the attractive theme.
-
-The _Sun_ is eighty-five years old as this book goes to press. In
-telling its intimate story, from the September Tuesday which saw the
-beginning of Mr. Day’s intrepid and epochal experiment, throughout the
-days of the Beaches, of Dana, of Laffan, and of Reick to the time
-of Mr. Munsey’s purchase of the property in the summer of 1916, Mr.
-O’Brien has done what has never been undertaken before, so far as is
-known to the writer of this introduction, for any newspaper with a
-career of considerable span.
-
-There have been general histories of Journalism, presenting casually
-the main facts of evolution and progress in the special instance.
-There have been satisfactory narratives of journalistic episodes,
-reasonably accurate accounts of certain aspects or dynastic periods of
-newspaper experience, excellent portrait biographies or autobiographies
-of journalists of genius and high achievement, with the eminent man
-usually in strong light in the foreground and his newspaper seldom
-nearer than the middle distance. But here, probably for the first time
-in literature of this sort, we have a real biography of a newspaper
-itself, covering the whole range of its existence, exhibiting every
-function of its organism, illustrating every quality that has been
-conspicuous in the successive stages of its growth. The _Sun_ is the
-hero of Mr. O’Brien’s “Story of the _Sun_.” The human participants
-figure in their incidental relation to the main thread of its life
-and activities. They do their parts, big or little, as they pass in
-interesting procession. When they have done their parts they disappear,
-as in real life, and the story goes on, just as the _Sun_ has gone on,
-without them except as they may have left their personal impress on the
-newspaper’s structure or its superficial decoration.
-
-During no small part of its four score and five years of intelligent
-interest in the world’s thoughts and doings it has been the _Sun’s_
-fortune to be regarded as in a somewhat exceptional sense the newspaper
-man’s newspaper. If in truth it has merited in any degree this
-peculiar distinction in the eyes of its professional brethren it
-must have been by reason of originality of initiative and soundness
-of method; perhaps by a chronic indifference to those ancient
-conventions of news importance or of editorial phraseology which, when
-systematically observed, are apt to result in a pale, dull, or even
-stupid uniformity of product. Mr. Dana wrote more than half a century
-ago to one of his associates, “Your articles have stirred up the
-animals, which you as well as I recognise as one of the great ends of
-life.” Sometimes he borrowed Titania’s wand; sometimes he used a red
-hot poker. Not only in that great editor’s time but also in the time
-of his predecessors and successors the _Sun_ has held it to be a duty
-and a joy to assist to the best of its ability in the discouragement of
-anything like lethargy in the menagerie. Perhaps, again, that was one
-of the things that helped to make it the newspaper man’s newspaper.
-
-However this may be, it seems certain that to the students of the
-theory and practice of journalism, now happily so numerous in the land,
-the chronicler of one highly individual newspaper’s deeds and ways is
-affording an object lesson of practical value, a textbook of technical
-usefulness, as well as a store of authoritative history, entertaining
-anecdote, and suggestive professional information. And a much wider
-audience than is made up of newspaper workers present or to come will
-find that the story of a newspaper which Mr. O’Brien has told with wit
-and knowledge in the pages that follow becomes naturally and inevitably
-a swift and charming picture of the town in which that newspaper is
-published throughout the period of its service to that town--the most
-interesting period in the existence of the most interesting city of the
-world.
-
-It is a fine thing for the _Sun_, by all who have worked for it in
-its own spirit beloved, I believe, like a creature of flesh and blood
-and living intelligence and human virtues and failings, that through
-Mr. Munsey’s wish it should have found in a son of its own schooling a
-biographer and interpreter so sympathetically responsive to its best
-traditions.
-
- EDWARD P. MITCHELL.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER I
-
- SUNRISE AT 222 WILLIAM STREET
- PAGE
- _Benjamin H. Day, with No Capital Except Youth and Courage,
- Establishes the First Permanent Penny Newspaper.--The
- Curious First Number Entirely His Own Work_ 21
-
-
- CHAPTER II
-
- THE FIELD OF THE LITTLE “SUN”
-
- _A Very Small Metropolis Which Day and His Partner, Wisner,
- Awoke by Printing Small Human Pieces About Small Human
- Beings and Having Boys Cry the Paper_ 31
-
-
- CHAPTER III
-
- RICHARD ADAMS LOCKE’S MOON HOAX
-
- _A Magnificent Fake Which Deceived Two Continents, Brought to
- “The Sun” the Largest Circulation in the World and, in
- Poe’s Opinion, Established Penny Papers_ 64
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
-
- DAY FINDS A RIVAL IN BENNETT
-
- _The Success of “The Sun” Leads to the Founding of The
- “Herald.”--Enterprises and Quarrels of a Furious Young
- Journalism.--The Picturesque Webb.--Maria Monk_ 103
-
-
- CHAPTER V
-
- NEW YORK LIFE IN THE THIRTIES
-
- _A Sprightly City Which Daily Bought Thirty Thousand copies of
- “The Sun.”--The Rush to Start Penny Papers.--Day Sells “The
- Sun” for Forty Thousand Dollars_ 121
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
-
- MOSES Y. BEACH’S ERA OF HUSTLE
-
- _“The Sun” Uses Albany Steamboats, Horse Expresses, Trotting
- Teams, Pigeons, and the Telegraph to Get News.--Poe’s
- Famous Balloon Hoax and the Case of Mary Rodgers_ 139
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
-
- “THE SUN” IN THE MEXICAN WAR
-
- _Moses Y. Beach as an Emissary of President Polk.--The
- Associated Press Founded in the Office of “The Sun.”--Ben
- Day’s Brother-in-Law Retires with a Small Fortune_ 164
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
-
- “THE SUN” DURING THE CIVIL WAR
-
- _One of the Few Entirely Loyal Newspapers of New York.--Its
- Brief Ownership by a Religious Coterie.--It Returns to the
- Possession of M. S. Beach, Who Sells It to Dana_ 172
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
-
- THE EARLIER CAREER OF DANA
-
- _His Life at Brook Farm and His Tribune Experience.--His Break
- with Greeley, His Civil War Services and His Chicago
- Disappointment.--His Purchase of “The Sun”_ 202
-
-
- CHAPTER X
-
- DANA: HIS “SUN” AND ITS CITY
-
- _The Period of the Great Personal Journalists.--Dana’s
- Avoidance of Rules and Musty Newspaper Conventions.--His
- Choice of Men and His Broad Definition of News_ 233
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
-
- DANA, AS MITCHELL SAW HIM
-
- _A Picture of the Room Where One Man Ruled for Thirty
- Years.--The Democratic Ways of a Newspaper Autocrat.--W. O.
- Bartlett, Pike, and His Other Early Associates_ 247
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
-
- DANA’S FIRST BIG NEWS MEN
-
- _Amos J. Cummings, Dr. Wood, and John B. Bogart.--The Lively
- Days of Tweedism.--Elihu Root as a Dramatic Critic.--The
- Birth and Popularity of “The Sun’s” Cat_ 262
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
-
- DANA’S FAMOUS RIVALS PASS
-
- _The Deaths of Raymond, Bennett, and Greeley Leave Him the
- Dominant Figure of the American Newspaper Field.--Dana’s
- Dream of a Paper Without Advertisements_ 293
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
-
- “THE SUN” AND THE GRANT SCANDALS
-
- _Dana’s Relentless Fight Against the Whisky Ring, the Crédit
- Mobilier, “Addition, Division, and Silence,” the Safe
- Burglary Conspiracy and the Boss Shepherd Scandal_ 304
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
-
- “THE SUN” AND “HUMAN INTEREST”
-
- _Something About Everything, for Everybody.--A Wonderful
- Four-Page Paper.--A Comparison of the Styles of “Sun”
- Reporters in Three Periods Twenty Years Apart_ 313
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
-
- “SUN” REPORTERS AND THEIR WORK
-
- _Cummings, Ralph, W. J. Chamberlin, Brisbane, Riggs, Dieuaide,
- Spears, O. K. Davis, Irwin, Adams, Denison, Wood, O’Malley,
- Hill, Cronyn.--Spanish War Work_ 328
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
-
- SOME GENIUS IN AN OLD ROOM
-
- _Lord, Managing Editor for Thirty-Two Years.--Clarke, Magician
- of the Copy Desk.--Ethics, Fair Play and Democracy.--“The
- Evening Sun” and Those Who Make It_ 369
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
-
- THE FINEST SIDE OF “THE SUN”
-
- _Literary Associations of an Editorial Department That
- Has Encouraged and Attracted Men of Imagination and
- Talent.--Mitchell, Hazeltine, Church, and Their Colleagues_ 402
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX
-
- “THE SUN” AND YELLOW JOURNALISM
-
- _The Coming and Going of a Newspaper Disease.--Dana’s Attitude
- Toward President Cleveland.--Dana’s Death.--Ownerships of
- Paul Dana, Laffan, Reick, and Munsey_ 413
-
- _Bibliography_ 435
-
- _Chronology_ 437
-
- _Index_ 439
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- BENJAMIN H. DAY, FOUNDER OF “THE SUN” _Frontispiece_
-
- PAGE
- BENJAMIN H. DAY, A BUST 22
-
- THE FIRST ISSUE OF “THE SUN” 28
-
- THE FIRST HOME OF “THE SUN” 34
-
- THE SECOND HOME OF “THE SUN” 34
-
- BARNEY WILLIAMS, THE FIRST NEWSBOY 50
-
- RICHARD ADAMS LOCKE, AUTHOR OF THE MOON HOAX 68
-
- THE FIRST INSTALMENT OF THE MOON HOAX 96
-
- A MOON SCENE, FROM LOCKE’S GREAT DECEPTION 96
-
- MOSES YALE BEACH, SECOND OWNER OF “THE SUN” 124
-
- AN EXTRA OF “THE SUN” 136
-
- THE THIRD HOME OF “THE SUN” 136
-
- MOSES SPERRY BEACH 166
-
- ALFRED ELY BEACH 170
-
- CHARLES A. DANA AT THIRTY-EIGHT 204
-
- MR. DANA AT FIFTY 224
-
- THE FIRST NUMBER OF “THE SUN” UNDER DANA 236
-
- THE HOME OF “THE SUN” FROM 1868 TO 1915 236
-
- MR. DANA IN HIS OFFICE 248
-
- JOSEPH PULITZER 258
-
- ELIHU ROOT 258
-
- JUDGE WILLARD BARTLETT 258
-
- MR. DANA AT SEVENTY 270
-
- AMOS JAY CUMMINGS 280
-
- DANIEL F. KELLOGG 290
-
- AMOS B. STILLMAN 290
-
- JOHN B. BOGART 290
-
- JAMES GORDON BENNETT, SR. 300
-
- HORACE GREELEY 300
-
- HENRY J. RAYMOND 300
-
- JULIAN RALPH 316
-
- ARTHUR BRISBANE 330
-
- EDWARD G. RIGGS 350
-
- CHESTER SANDERS LORD 370
-
- SELAH MERRILL CLARKE 380
-
- SAMUEL A. WOOD 390
-
- OSCAR KING DAVIS 390
-
- THOMAS M. DIEUAIDE 390
-
- SAMUEL HOPKINS ADAMS 390
-
- WILL IRWIN 398
-
- FRANK WARD O’MALLEY 398
-
- EDWIN C. HILL 398
-
- PAUL DANA 404
-
- WILLIAM M. LAFFAN 410
-
- WILLIAM C. REICK 416
-
- FRANK A. MUNSEY 422
-
- EDWARD PAGE MITCHELL 430
-
-
-
-
-THE STORY OF “THE SUN”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-SUNRISE AT 222 WILLIAM STREET
-
- _Benjamin H. Day, with No Capital Except Youth and Courage,
- Establishes the First Permanent Penny Newspaper.--The Curious
- First Number Entirely His Own Work._
-
-
-In the early thirties of last century the only newspapers in the city
-of New York were six-cent journals whose reading-matter was adapted to
-the politics of men, and whose only appeal to women was their size,
-perfectly suited to deep pantry-shelves.
-
-Dave Ramsey, a compositor on one of these sixpennies, the _Journal
-of Commerce_, had an obsession. It was that a penny paper, to be
-called the _Sun_, would be a success in a city full of persons whose
-interest was in humanity in general, rather than in politics, and whose
-pantry-shelves were of negligible width. Why his mind fastened on the
-_Sun_ as the name of this child of his vision is not known; perhaps it
-was because there was a daily in London bearing that title. It was a
-short name, easily written, easily spoken, easily remembered.
-
-Benjamin H. Day, another printer, worked beside Dave Ramsey in 1830.
-Ramsey reiterated his idea to his neighbour so often that Day came to
-believe in it, although it is doubtful whether he had the great faith
-that possessed Ramsey. Now that due credit has been given to Ramsey for
-the idea of the penny _Sun_, he passes out of the record, for he never
-attempted to put his project into execution.
-
-Nor was Day’s enthusiasm for a penny _Sun_ so big that he plunged into
-it at once. He was a business man rather than a visionary. With the
-savings from his wages as a compositor he went into the job-printing
-business in a small way. He still met his old chums and still talked of
-the _Sun_, but it is likely that he never would have come to start it
-if it had not been for the cholera.
-
-There was an epidemic of this plague in New York in 1832. It killed
-more than thirty-five hundred people in that year, and added to the
-depression of business already caused by financial disturbances and a
-wretched banking system. The job-printing trade suffered with other
-industries, and Day decided that he needed a newspaper--not to reform,
-not to uplift, not to arouse, but to push the printing business of
-Benjamin H. Day. Incidentally he might add lustre to the fame of the
-President, Andrew Jackson, or uphold the hands of the mayor of New
-York, Gideon Lee; but his prime purpose was to get the work of printing
-handbills for John Smith, the grocer, or letter-heads for Richard
-Robinson, the dealer in hay. Incidentally he might become rich and
-powerful, but for the time being he needed work at his trade.
-
-Ben Day was only twenty-three years old. He was the son of Henry Day, a
-hatter of West Springfield, Massachusetts, and Mary Ely Day; and sixth
-in descent from his first American ancestor, Robert Day. Shortly after
-the establishment of the Springfield _Republican_ by Samuel Bowles,
-in 1824, young Day went into the office of that paper, then a weekly,
-to learn the printer’s trade. That was two years before the birth of
-the second and greater Samuel Bowles, who was later to make the
-_Republican_, as a daily, one of the greatest of American newspapers.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- BENJAMIN H. DAY
- A Bust in the Possession of Mrs. Florence A. Snyder, Summit, N. J.
-]
-
-Day learned well his trade from Sam Bowles. When he was twenty, and a
-first-class compositor, he went to New York, and worked at the case in
-the offices of the _Evening Post_ and the _Commercial Advertiser_. He
-married, when he was twenty-one, Miss Eveline Shepard. At the time of
-the _Sun’s_ founding Mr. Day lived, with his wife and their infant son,
-Henry, at 75 Duane Street, only a few blocks from the newspaper offices.
-
-Day was a good-looking young man with a round, calm, resolute face. He
-possessed health, industry, and character. Also he had courage, for
-a man with a family was taking no small risk in launching, without
-capital, a paper to be sold at one cent.
-
-The idea of a penny paper was not new. In Philadelphia, the _Cent_
-had had a brief, inglorious existence. In Boston, the _Bostonian_ had
-failed to attract the cultured readers of the modern Athens. Eight
-months before Day’s hour arrived the _Morning Post_ had braved it in
-New York, selling first at two cents and later at one cent, but even
-with Horace Greeley as one of the founders it lasted only three weeks.
-
-When Ben Day sounded his friends, particularly the printers, as to
-their opinion of his project, they cited the doleful fate of the
-other penny journals. He drew, or had designed, a head-line for
-the _Sun_ that was to be, and took it about to his cronies. A. S.
-Abell, a printer on the _Mercantile Advertiser_, poked the most fun
-at him. A penny paper, indeed! But this same Abell lived to stop
-scoffing, to found another _Sun_--this one in Baltimore--and to buy a
-half-million-dollar estate out of the profits of it. He was the second
-beneficiary of the penny _Sun_ idea.
-
-William M. Swain, another journeyman printer, also made light of
-Day’s ambition. He lived to be Day’s foreman, and later to own the
-Philadelphia _Public Ledger_. He told Day that the penny _Sun_ would
-ruin him. As Day had not much enthusiasm at the outset, surely his
-friends did not add to it, unless by kindling his stubbornness.
-
-As for capital, he had none at all, in the money sense. He did have a
-printing-press, hardly improved from the machine of Benjamin Franklin’s
-day, some job-paper, and plenty of type. The press would throw off
-two hundred impressions an hour at full speed, man power. He hired a
-room, twelve by sixteen feet, in the building at 222 William Street.
-That building was still there, in the shadow of the Brooklyn Bridge
-approach, when the _Sun_ celebrated its fiftieth anniversary in 1883;
-but a modern six-story envelope factory is on the site to-day.
-
-There is no question as to the general authorship of the first
-paper. Day was proprietor, publisher, editor, chief pressman, and
-mailing-clerk. He was not a lazy man. He stayed up all the night before
-that fateful Tuesday, September 3, 1833, setting with his own hands
-some advertisements that were regularly appearing in the six-cent
-papers, for he wanted to make a show of prosperity.
-
-He also wrote, or clipped from some out-of-town newspaper, a poem that
-would fill nearly a column. He rewrote news items from the West and
-South--some of them not more than a month old. As for the snappy local
-news of the day, he bought, in the small hours of that Tuesday morning,
-a copy of the _Courier and Enquirer_, the livest of the six-cent
-papers, took it to the single room in William Street, clipped out or
-rewrote the police-court items, and set them up himself. A boy, whose
-name is unknown to fame, assisted him at devil’s work. A journeyman
-printer, Parmlee, helped with the press when the last quoin had been
-made tight in the fourth and last of the little pages.
-
-The sun was well up in the sky before its namesake of New York
-came slowly, hesitatingly, almost sadly, up over the horizon of
-journalism--never to set! In the years to follow, the _Sun_ was to have
-changes in ownership, in policy, in size, and in style, but no week-day
-was to come when it could not shine. Of all the morning newspapers
-printed in New York on that 3rd of September, 1833, there is only one
-other--the _Journal of Commerce_--left.
-
-But young Mr. Day, wiping the ink from his hands at noon, and waiting
-in doubt to see whether the public would buy the thousand _Suns_ he had
-printed, could not foresee this. Neither could he know that, by this
-humble effort to exalt his printing business, he had driven a knife
-into the sclerotic heart of ancient journalism. The sixpenny papers
-were to laugh at this tiny intruder--to laugh and laugh, and to die.
-
-The size of the first _Sun_ was eleven and one-quarter by eight inches,
-not a great deal bigger than a sheet of commercial letter paper, and
-considerably less than one-quarter the size of a page of the _Sun_ of
-to-day. Compared with the first _Sun_, the present newspaper is about
-sixteen times larger. The type was a good, plain face of agate, with
-some verse on the last page in nonpareil.
-
-An almost perfect reprint of the first _Sun_ was issued as a supplement
-to the paper on its twentieth birthday, in 1853, and again--to the
-number of about one hundred and sixty thousand copies--on its fiftieth
-birthday, in 1883. Many of the persons who treasure the replicas of
-1883 believe them to be original first numbers, as they were not
-labelled “Presented gratuitously to the subscribers of the _Sun_,” as
-was the issue of 1853. Hardly a month passes by but the _Sun_ receives
-one of them from some proud owner. It is easy, however, to tell the
-reprint from the original, for Mr. Day in his haste committed an error
-at the masthead of the editorial or second page of the first number.
-The date-line there reads “September 3, 1832,” while in the reprints
-it is “September 3, 1833,” as it should have been, but wasn’t, in the
-original. And there are minor typographical differences, invisible to
-the layman.
-
-Of the thousand, or fewer, copies of the first _Sun_, only five are
-known to exist--one in the bound file of the _Sun’s_ first year, held
-jealously in the _Sun’s_ safe; one in the private library of the editor
-of the _Sun_, Edward Page Mitchell; one in the Public Library at Fifth
-Avenue and Forty-second Street, New York; and two in the library of the
-American Type Founders Company, Jersey City.
-
-There were three columns on each of the four pages. At the top of the
-first column on the front page was a modest announcement of the _Sun’s_
-ambitions:
-
- The object of this paper is to lay before the public, at a
- price within the means of every one, ALL THE NEWS OF THE
- DAY, and at the same time afford an advantageous medium for
- advertising.
-
-It was added that the subscription in advance was three dollars a year,
-and that yearly advertisers were to be accommodated with ten lines
-every day for thirty dollars per annum--ten cents a day, or one cent a
-line. That was the old fashion of advertising. The friendly merchant
-bought thirty dollars’ worth of space, say in December, and inserted an
-advertisement of his fur coats or snow-shovels. The same advertisement
-might be in the paper the following July, for the newspapers made no
-effort to coordinate the needs of the seller and the buyer. So long as
-the merchant kept his name regularly in print, he felt that was enough.
-
-The leading article on the first page was a semi-humorous story about
-an Irish captain and his duels. It was flanked by a piece of reprint
-concerning microscopic carved toys. There was a paragraph about a
-Vermont boy so addicted to whistling that he fell ill of it. Mr. Day’s
-apprentice may have needed this warning.
-
-The front-page advertising, culled from other newspapers and printed
-for effect, consisted of the notices of steamship sailings. In one of
-these Commodore Vanderbilt offered to carry passengers from New York
-to Hartford, by daylight, for one dollar, on his splendid low-pressure
-steamboat Water Witch. Cornelius Vanderbilt was then thirty-nine years
-old, and had made the boat line between New York and New Brunswick, New
-Jersey, pay him forty thousand dollars a year. When the _Sun_ started,
-the commodore was at the height of his activity, and he stuck to the
-water for thirty years afterward, until he had accumulated something
-like forty million dollars.
-
-E. K. Collins had not yet established his famous Dramatic line of
-clipper-ships between New York and Liverpool, but he advertised the
-“very fast sailing coppered ship Nashville for New Orleans.” He was
-only thirty then.
-
-Cooks were advertised for by private families living in Broadway, near
-Canal Street--pretty far up-town to live at that day--and in Temple
-Street, near Liberty, pretty far down-town now.
-
-On the second page was a bit of real news, the melancholy suicide of
-a young Bostonian of “engaging manners and amiable disposition,” in
-Webb’s Congress Hall, a hotel. There were also two local anecdotes; a
-paragraph to the effect that “the city is nearly full of strangers
-from all parts of this country and Europe”; nine police-court items,
-nearly all concerning trivial assaults; news of murders committed in
-Florida, at Easton, Pennsylvania, and at Columbus, Ohio; a report of an
-earthquake at Charlottesville, Virginia, and a few lines of stray news
-from Mexico.
-
-The third page had the arrivals and clearances at the port of New
-York, a joke about the cholera in New Orleans, a line to say that the
-same disease had appeared in the City of Mexico, an item about an
-insurrection in the Ohio penitentiary, a marriage announcement, a death
-notice, some ship and auction advertisements, and the offer of a reward
-of one thousand dollars for the recovery of thirteen thousand six
-hundred dollars stolen from the mail stage between Boston and Lynn and
-the arrest of the thieves.
-
-The last page carried a poem, “A Noon Scene,” but the atmosphere was of
-the Elysian Fields over in Hoboken rather than of midday in the city.
-When Day scissored it, probably he did so with the idea that it would
-fill a column. Another good filler was the bank-note table, copied from
-a six-cent contemporary. The quotations indicated that not much of the
-bank currency of the day was accepted at par.
-
-The rest of the page was filled with borrowed advertising. The Globe
-Insurance Company, of which John Jacob Astor was a director, announced
-that it had a capital of a million dollars. The North River Insurance
-Company, whose directorate included William B. Astor, declared its
-willingness to insure against fire and against “loss or damage by
-inland navigation.” At that time the boilers of river steamboats had an
-unpleasant trick of blowing up; hence Commodore Vanderbilt’s mention
-of the low pressure of the Water Witch. John A. Dix, then Secretary
-of State of the State of New York, and later to be the hero of the
-“shoot him on the spot” order, advertised an election. Castleton House
-Academy, on Staten Island, offered to teach and board young gentlemen
-at twenty-five dollars a quarter.
-
-[Illustration: THE FIRST ISSUE OF “THE SUN”]
-
-Such was the first _Sun_. Part of it was stale news, rewritten. Part
-was borrowed advertising. It is doubtful whether even the police-court
-items were original, although they were the most human things in
-the issue, the most likely to appeal to the readers whom Day hoped
-to reach--people to whom the purchase of a paper at six cents was
-impossible, and to whom windy, monotonous political discussions were a
-bore.
-
-In those early thirties, daily journalism had not advanced very far.
-Men were willing, but means and methods were weak. The first English
-daily was the _Courrant_, issued in 1702. The _Orange Postman_, put out
-the following year, was the first penny paper. The London _Times_ was
-not started until 1785. It was the first English paper to use a steam
-press, as the _Sun_ was the first American paper.
-
-The first American daily was the _Pennsylvania Packet_, called later
-the _General Advertiser_, begun in Philadelphia in 1784. It died in
-1837. Of the existing New York papers only the _Globe_ dates back to
-the eighteenth century, having been founded in 1797 as the _Commercial
-Advertiser_. Next to it in age is the _Evening Post_, started in 1801.
-
-The weakness of the early dailies was largely due to the fact that
-their publishers looked almost entirely to advertising for the support
-of the papers. On the other hand, the editors were politicians or
-highbrows who thought more of a speech by Lord Piccadilly on empire
-than of a good street tragedy; more of an essay by Lady Geraldine Glue
-than of a first-class report of a kidnapping.
-
-Another great obstacle to success--one for which neither editor
-nor publisher was responsible--was the lack of facilities for the
-transmission of news. Fulton launched the Clermont twenty-six years
-before Day launched the _Sun_, but even in Day’s time steamships
-were nothing to brag of, and the first of them was yet to cross the
-Atlantic. When the _Sun_ was born, the most important railroad in
-America was thirty-four miles long, from Bordentown to South Amboy,
-New Jersey. There was no telegraph, and the mails were of pre-historic
-slowness.
-
-It was hard to get out a successful daily newspaper without daily
-news. A weekly would have sufficed for the information that came in,
-by sailing ship and stage, from Europe and Washington and Boston. Ben
-Day was the first man to reconcile himself to an almost impossible
-situation. He did so by the simple method of using what news was
-nearest at hand--the incidental happenings of New York life. In this
-way he solved his own problem and the people’s, for they found that the
-local items in the _Sun_ were just what they wanted, while the price of
-the paper suited them well.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-THE FIELD OF THE LITTLE “SUN”
-
- _A Very Small Metropolis Which Day and His Partner, Wisner, Awoke
- by Printing Small Human Pieces About Small Human Beings and
- Having Boys Cry the Paper._
-
-
-How far could the little _Sun_ hope to cast its beam in a stodgy if not
-naughty world? The circulation of all the dailies in New York at the
-time was less than thirty thousand. The seven morning and four evening
-papers, all sold at six cents a copy, shared the field thus:
-
-
- MORNING PAPERS
-
- _Morning Courier and New York Enquirer_ 4,500
- _Democratic Chronicle_ 4,000
- New York _Standard_ 2,400
- New York _Journal of Commerce_ 2,300
- New York _Gazette and General Advertiser_ 1,500
- New York _Daily Advertiser_ 1,400
- _Mercantile Advertiser and New York Advocate_ 1,200
-
-
- EVENING PAPERS
-
- _Evening Post_ 3,000
- _Evening Star_ 2,500
- New York _Commercial Advertiser_ 2,100
- New York _American_ 1,600
- -----
- Total 26,500
-
-
-New York was the American metropolis, but it was of about the present
-size of Indianapolis or Seattle. Of its quarter of a million
-population, only eight or ten thousand lived above Twenty-third Street.
-Washington Square, now the residence district farthest down-town, had
-just been adopted as a park; before that it had been the Potter’s
-Field. In 1833 rich New Yorkers were putting up some fine residences
-there--of which a good many still stand. Sixth Street had had its name
-changed to Waverley Place in honor of Walter Scott, recently dead, the
-literary king of the day.
-
-Wall Street was already the financial centre, with its Merchants’
-Exchange, banks, brokers, and insurance companies. Canal Street
-was pretty well filled with retail stores. Third Avenue had been
-macadamized from the Bowery to Harlem. The down-town streets were
-paved, and some were lighted with gas at seven dollars a thousand cubic
-feet.
-
-Columbia College, in the square bounded by Murray, Barclay, Church, and
-Chapel Streets, had a hundred students; now it has more than a hundred
-hundred. James Kent was professor of law in the Columbia of that day,
-and Charles Anthon was professor of Greek and Latin. A rival seat of
-learning, the University of the City of New York, chartered two years
-earlier, was temporarily housed at 12 Chambers Street, with a certain
-Samuel F. B. Morse as professor of sculpture and painting. There
-were twelve schools, harbouring six thousand pupils, whose welfare
-was guarded by the Public School Society of New York, Lindley Murray
-secretary. The National Academy of Design, incorporated five years
-before, guided the budding artist in Clinton Hall, and Mr. Morse was
-its president, while it had for its professor of mythology one William
-Cullen Bryant.
-
-Albert Gallatin was president of the National Bank, at 13 Wall Street.
-Often at the end of his day’s work he would walk around to the
-small shop in William Street where his young friend Delmonico, the
-confectioner, was trying to interest the gourmets of the city in his
-French cooking. Gideon Lee, besides being mayor, was president of
-the Leather Manufacturers’ Bank at 334 Pearl Street. He was the last
-mayor of New York to be appointed by the common council, for Dix’s
-advertisement in the first _Sun_ called an election by which the people
-of the city gained the right to elect a mayor by popular vote.
-
-A list of the solid citizens of the New York of that year would
-include Peter Schermerhorn, Nicholas Fish, Robert Lenox, Sheppard
-Knapp, Samuel Swartwout, Henry Beekman, Henry Delafield, John Mason,
-William Paulding, David S. Kennedy, Jacob Lorillard, David Lydig,
-Seth Grosvenor, Elisha Riggs, John Delafield, Peter A. Jay, C. V. S.
-Roosevelt, Robert Ray, Preserved Fish, Morris Ketchum, Rufus Prime,
-Philip Hone, William Vail, Gilbert Coutant, and Mortimer Livingston.
-
-These men and their fellows ran the banks and the big business of
-that day. They read the six-cent papers, mostly those which warned
-the public that Andrew Jackson was driving the country to the devil.
-It would be years before the _Sun_ would bring the light of common,
-everyday things into their dignified lives--if it ever did so. Day,
-the printer, did not look to them to read his paper, although he hoped
-for some small part of their advertising. It is likely that one of the
-Gouverneurs--Samuel L.--read the early _Sun_, but he was postmaster,
-and it was his duty to examine new and therefore suspicionable
-publications.
-
-Incidentally, Postmaster Gouverneur had one clerk to sort all the mail
-that came into the city from the rest of the world. It was a small
-New York upon which the timid _Sun_ cast its still smaller beams. The
-mass of the people had not been interested in newspapers, because the
-newspapers brought nothing into their lives but the drone of American
-and foreign politics. A majority of them were in sympathy with Tammany
-Hall, particularly since 1821, when the property qualification was
-removed from the franchise through Democratic effort.
-
-New York had literary publications other than the six-cent papers. The
-_Knickerbocker Magazine_ was founded in January of 1833, with Charles
-Hoffman, assistant editor of the _American Magazine_, as editor.
-Among the contributors engaged were William Cullen Bryant and James
-K. Paulding. The subscription-list, it was proudly announced, had
-no fewer than eight hundred names on it. The _Mechanics’ Magazine_,
-the _Sporting Magazine_, the _American Ploughboy_, the _Journal of
-Public Morals_, and the _Youth’s Temperance Lecturer_ were among the
-periodicals that contended for public favour.
-
-Bryant was a busy man, for he was the chief editor of the _Evening
-Post_ as well as a magazine contributor and a teacher. Fame had come to
-him early, for “Thanatopsis” was published when he was twenty-three,
-and “To a Water-fowl” appeared a year later, in 1818. Now, in his
-thirties, he was no longer the delicate youth, the dreamy poet. One
-April day in 1831 Bryant and William L. Stone, one of the editors of
-the _Commercial Advertiser_, had a rare fight in front of the City
-Hall, the poet beginning it with a cowskin whip swung at Stone’s head,
-and the spectators ending it after Stone had seized the whip. These two
-were editors of sixpenny “respectables.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE FIRST HOME OF “THE SUN,” 222 WILLIAM STREET
- (_Under the Arrow_)
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE SECOND HOME OF “THE SUN”
-
- Nassau Street, from Frankfort to Spruce, in the Early Forties.
- “The Sun’s” Second Home Is Shown at the Right End of the Block.
- The Tammany Hall Building Became “The Sun’s” Fourth Home in
- 1868.
-]
-
-Irving and Cooper, Bryant and Halleck, Nathaniel P. Willis and George
-P. Morris were the largest figures of intellectual New York. In 1833
-Irving returned from Europe after a visit that had lasted seventeen
-years. He was then fifty, and had written his best books. Cooper,
-half a dozen years younger, had long since basked in the glory that
-came to him with the publication of “The Spy,” “The Pilot,” and “The
-Last of the Mohicans.” He and Irving were guests at every cultured
-function.
-
-Prescott was finishing his first work, “The History of Ferdinand and
-Isabella.” Bancroft was beginning his “History of the United States.”
-George Ticknor had written his “Life of Lafayette.” Hawthorne had
-published only “Fanshawe” and some of the “Twice Told Tales.” Poe was
-struggling along in Baltimore. Holmes, a medical student, had written a
-few poems. Dr. John William Draper, later to write his great “History
-of the Intellectual Development of Europe,” arrived from Liverpool that
-year to make New York his home.
-
-Longfellow was professor of modern languages at Bowdoin, and unknown to
-fame as a poet. Whittier had written “Legends of New England” and “Moll
-Pitcher.” Emerson was in England. Richard Henry Dana and Motley were at
-Harvard. Thoreau was helping his father to make lead-pencils. Parkman,
-Lowell, and Herman Melville were schoolboys.
-
-Away off in Buffalo was a boy of fourteen who clerked in his uncle’s
-general store by day, selling steel traps to Seneca braves, and by
-night read Latin, Greek, poetry, history, and the speeches of Andrew
-Jackson. His name was Charles Anderson Dana.
-
-The leading newspaperman of the day in New York was James Watson Webb,
-a son of the General Webb who held the Bible upon which Washington took
-the oath of office as first President. J. Watson Webb had been in the
-army and, as a journalist, was never for peace at any price. He united
-the _Morning Courier_ and the _Enquirer_, and established a daily
-horse express between New York and Washington, which is said to have
-cost seventy-five hundred dollars a month, in order to get news from
-Congress and the White House twenty-four hours before his rivals.
-
-Webb was famed as a fighter. He had a row with Duff Green in Washington
-in 1830. In January, 1836, he thrashed James Gordon Bennett in Wall
-Street. He incited a mob to drive Wood, a singer, from the stage
-of the Park Theater. In 1838 he sent a challenge to Representative
-Cilley, of Maine, a classmate of Longfellow and Hawthorne at Bowdoin.
-Cilley refused to fight, on the ground that he had made no personal
-reflections on Webb’s character; whereupon Representative Graves, of
-Kentucky, who carried the card for Webb, challenged Cilley for himself,
-as was the custom. They fought with rifles on the Annapolis Road, and
-Cilley was killed at the third shot.
-
-In 1842 Webb fought a duel with Representative Marshall, of Kentucky,
-and not only was wounded, but on his return to New York was sentenced
-to two years in prison “for leaving the State with the intention of
-giving or receiving a challenge.” At the end of two weeks, however, he
-was pardoned.
-
-Having deserted Jackson and become a Whig, Webb continued to own and
-edit the _Courier and Enquirer_ until 1861, when it was merged with the
-_World_. His quarrels, all of political origin, brought prestige to his
-paper. Ben Day had no duelling-pistols. His only chance to advertise
-the _Sun_ was by its own light and its popular price.
-
-Beyond Webb, Day had no lively journalist with whom to contend at the
-outset, and Webb probably did not dream that the _Sun_ would be worthy
-of a joust. Perhaps fortunately for Day, Horace Greeley had just
-failed in his attempt to run a one-cent paper. This was the _Morning
-Post_, which Greeley started in January, 1833, with Francis V. Story, a
-fellow printer, as his partner, and with a capital of one hundred and
-fifty dollars. It ran for three weeks only.
-
-Greeley and Story still had some type, bought on credit, and they
-issued a tri-weekly, the _Constitutionalist_, which, in spite of its
-dignified title, was the avowed organ of the lotteries. Its columns
-contained the following card:
-
- Greeley & Story, No. 54 Liberty Street, New York, respectfully
- solicit the patronage of the public to their business of
- letterpress printing, particularly lottery-printing, such as
- schemes, periodicals, and so forth, which will be executed on
- favorable terms.
-
-It must be remembered that at that time lotteries were not under a
-cloud. There were in New York forty-five lottery offices, licensed at
-two hundred and fifty dollars apiece annually, and the proceeds were
-divided between the public schools and a home for deaf-mutes. That was
-the last year of legalized lotteries. After they disappeared Greeley
-started the _New Yorker_, the best literary weekly of its time. It was
-not until April, 1841, that he founded the _Tribune_.
-
-Doubtless there were many young New Yorkers of that period who would
-have made bang-up reporters, but apparently, until Day’s time, with few
-exceptions they did not work on morning newspapers. One exception was
-James Gordon Bennett, whose work for Webb on the _Courier and Enquirer_
-helped to make it the leading American paper.
-
-Nathaniel P. Willis and George P. Morris would probably have been good
-reporters, for they knew New York and had excellent styles, but they
-insisted on being poets. With Morris it was not a hollow vocation,
-for the author of “Woodman, Spare That Tree,” could always get fifty
-dollars for a song. He and Willis ran the _Mirror_ and later the _New
-Mirror_, and wrote verse and other fanciful stuff by the bushel. Philip
-Hone would have been the best reporter in New York, as his diary
-reveals, but he was of the aristocracy, and he seems to have scorned
-newspapermen, particularly Webb and Bennett.
-
-But somehow, by that chance which seemed to smile on the _Sun_, Ben
-Day got clever reporters. He wanted one to do the police-court work,
-for he saw, from the first day of the paper, that that was the kind
-of stuff that his readers devoured. To them the details of a beating
-administered by James Hawkins to his wife were of more import than
-Jackson’s assaults on the United States Bank.
-
-When George W. Wisner, a young printer who was out of work, applied to
-the _Sun_ for a job, Day told him that he would give him four dollars
-a week if he would get up early every day and attend the police-court,
-which held its sessions from 4 A.M. on. The people of the city were
-quite as human then as they are to-day. Unregenerate mortals got drunk
-and fought in the streets. Others stole shoes. The worst of all beat
-their wives. Wisner was to be the Balzac of the daybreak court in a
-year when Balzac himself was writing his “Droll Stories.”
-
-The second issue of the _Sun_ continued the typographical error of the
-day before. The year in the date-line of the second page was “1832.”
-The big news in this paper was under date of Plymouth, England, August
-1, and it told of the capture of Lisbon by Admiral Napier on the 25th
-of July. Day--or perhaps it was Wisner--wrote an editorial article
-about it:
-
- To us as Americans there can be little of interest in the
- triumph of one member of a royal family of Europe over another;
- and although we can but rejoice at the downfall of the modern
- Nero who so lately filled the Portuguese throne, yet if rumor
- speak the truth the victorious Pedro is no better than he
- should be.
-
-The editor lamented the general lack of news:
-
- With the exception of the interesting news from Portugal there
- appears to be very little worthy of note. Nullification has
- blown over; the President’s tour has terminated; Black Hawk has
- gone home; the new race for President is not yet commenced, and
- everything seems settled down into a calm. Dull times, these,
- for us newspaper-makers. We wish the President or Major Downing
- or some other distinguished individual would happen along again
- and afford us material for a daily article. Or even if the
- sea-serpent would be so kind as to pay us a visit, we should be
- extremely obliged to him and would honor his snakeship with a
- most tremendous puff.
-
-Theatrical advertising appeared in this number, the Park Theater
-announcing the comedy of “Rip Van Winkle,” as redramatized by Mr.
-Hackett, who played _Rip_. Mr. Gale was playing “Mazeppa” at the
-Bowery. Perhaps these advertisements were borrowed from a six-cent
-paper, but there was one “help wanted” advertisement that was not
-borrowed. It was the upshot of Day’s own idea, destined to bring
-another revolution in newspaper methods:
-
- TO THE UNEMPLOYED--A number of steady men can find employment
- by vending this paper. A liberal discount is allowed to those
- who buy to sell again.
-
-Before that day there had been no newsboys; no papers were sold in
-the streets. The big, blanket political organs that masqueraded as
-newspapers were either sold over the counter or delivered by carriers
-to the homes of the subscribers. Most of the publishers considered it
-undignified even to angle for new subscribers, and one of them boasted
-that his great circulation of perhaps two thousand had come unsolicited.
-
-The first unemployed person to apply for a job selling _Suns_ in the
-streets was a ten-year-old-boy, Bernard Flaherty, born in Cork. Years
-afterward two continents knew him as Barney Williams, Irish comedian,
-hero of “The Emerald Ring,” and “The Connie Soogah,” and at one time
-manager of Wallack’s old Broadway Theatre.
-
-When Day got some regular subscribers, he sent carriers on routes. He
-charged them sixty-seven cents a hundred, cash, or seventy-five cents
-on credit. The first of these carriers was Sam Messenger, who delivered
-the _Sun_ in the Fulton Market district, and who later became a rich
-livery-stable keeper. Live lads like these, carrying out Day’s idea,
-wrought the greatest change in journalism that ever had been made,
-for they brought the paper to the people, something that could not
-be accomplished by the six-cent sheets with their lofty notions and
-comparatively high prices.
-
-On the third day of the _Sun’s_ life, with Wisner at the pen and
-Barney Flaherty “hollering” in the startled streets, the editor again
-expressed, this time more positively, his yearning that something would
-happen:
-
- We newspaper people thrive best on the calamities of others.
- Give us one of your real Moscow fires, or your Waterloo
- battle-fields; let a Napoleon be dashing with his legions
- through the world, overturning the thrones of a thousand years
- and deluging the world with blood and tears; and then we of the
- types are in our glory.
-
-The yearner had to wait thirty years for another Waterloo, but he got
-his “real Moscow fire” in about two years, and so close that it singed
-his eyebrows.
-
-Lacking a Napoleon to exalt or denounce, Mr. Day used a bit of that
-same page for the publication of homelier news for the people:
-
- The following are the drawn numbers of the New York
- consolidated lotteries of yesterday afternoon:
-
- 62 6 59 46 61 34 65 37 8 42
-
-
-So Horace Greeley and his partner, with their tri-weekly paper, could
-not have been keeping all of the lottery patronage away from the _Sun_.
-
-Over in the police column Mr. Wisner was supplying gems like the
-following:
-
- A complaint was made by several persons who “thought it no sin
- to step to the notes of a sweet violin” and gathered under a
- window in Chatham Street, where a little girl was playing on a
- violin, when they were showered from a window above with the
- contents of a dye-pot or something of like nature. They were
- directed to ascertain their showerer.
-
-The big story on the first page of the fourth issue of the _Sun_ was a
-conversation between _Envy_ and _Candor_ in regard to the beauties of
-a Miss H., perhaps a fictitious person. But on the second page, at the
-head of the editorial column, was a real editorial article approving
-the course of the British government in freeing the slaves in the West
-Indies:
-
- We supposed that the eyes of men were but half open to this
- case. We imagined that the slave would have to toil on for
- years and _purchase_ what in justice was already _his own_.
- We did not once dream that light had so far progressed as to
- prepare the British nation for the colossal stride in justice
- and humanity and benevolence which they are about to make.
- The abolition of West Indian slavery will form a brilliant
- era in the annals of the world. It will circle with a halo of
- imperishable glory the brows of the transcendent spirits who
- wield the present destinies of the British Empire.
-
- Would to Heaven that the honor of leading the way in this
- godlike enterprise had been reserved to our own country! But as
- the opportunity for this is passed, we trust we shall at least
- avoid the everlasting disgrace of long refusing to imitate so
- bright and glorious an example.
-
-Thus the _Sun_ came out for the freedom of the slave twenty-eight years
-before that freedom was to be accomplished in the United States through
-war. The _Sun_ was the _Sun_ of Day, but the hand was the hand of
-Wisner. That young man was an Abolitionist before the word was coined.
-
-“Wisner was a pretty smart young fellow,” said Mr. Day nearly fifty
-years afterward, “but he and I never agreed. I was rather Democratic in
-my notions. Wisner, whenever he got a chance, was always sticking in
-his damned little Abolitionist articles.”
-
-There is little doubt that Wisner wrote the article facing the _Sun_
-against slavery while he was waiting for something to turn up in the
-police-court. Then he went to the office, set up the article, as well
-as his piece about the arrest of Eliza Barry, of Bayard Street, for
-stealing a wash-tub, and put the type in the form. Considering that
-Wisner got four dollars a week for his break-o’-day work, he made
-a very good morning of that; and it is worthy of record that the
-next day’s _Sun_ did not repudiate his assault on human servitude,
-although on September 10 Mr. Day printed an editorial grieving over the
-existence of slavery, but hitting at the methods of the Abolitionists.
-
-These early issues were full of lively little “sunny” pieces, for
-instance:
-
- Passing by the Beekman Street church early this morning, we
- discovered a milkman replenishing his lacteous cargo with
- Adam’s ale. We took the liberty to ask him, “Friend, why do ye
- do thus?” He replied, “None of your business”; and we passed
- on, determined to report him to the Grahamites.
-
-A poem on Burns, by Halleck--perhaps reprinted from one of the author’s
-published volumes of verse--added literary tone to that morning’s _Sun_.
-
-In the next issue was some verse by Willis, beginning:
-
- Look not upon the wine when it
- Is red within the cup!
-
-Then, and for some years afterward, the _Sun_ exhibited a special
-aversion to alcohol in text and head-lines. “Cursed Effects of Rum!”
-was one of its favourite head-lines.
-
-The _Sun_ was a week old before it contained dramatic criticism, its
-first subject in that field being the appearance of Mr. and Mrs. Wood
-at the Park Theatre in “Cinderella,” a comic opera. The paper’s first
-animal story was printed on September 12, recording the fact that on
-the previous Sunday about sixty wild pigeons stayed in a tree at the
-Battery nearly half an hour.
-
-On September 14 the _Sun_ printed its first illustration--a two-column
-cut of “Herschel’s Forty-Feet Telescope.” This was Sir W. Herschel,
-then dead some ten years, and the telescope was on his grounds at
-Slough, near Windsor, England. Another knighted Herschel with another
-telescope in a far land was to play a big part in the fortunes of the
-_Sun_, but that comes later. In the issue with the cut of the telescope
-was a paragraph about a rumour that Fanny Kemble, who had just
-captivated American theatregoers, had been married to Pierce Butler, of
-Philadelphia--as, indeed, she had.
-
-Broadway seems to have had its lure as early as 1833, for in the _Sun_
-of September 17, on the first page, is a plaint by “Citizen”:
-
- They talk of the pleasures of the country, but would to God I
- had never been persuaded to leave the labor of the city for
- such woful pleasures. Oh, Broadway, Broadway! In an evil hour
- did I forsake thee for verdant walks and flowery landscapes
- and that there tiresome piece of made water. What walk is so
- agreeable as a walk through the streets of New York? What
- landscape more flowery than those of the print-shops? And what
- water was made by man equal to the Hudson?
-
-This was followed by uplifting little essays on “Suicide” and
-“Robespierre.” The chief news of the day--that John Quincy Adams had
-accepted a nomination from the Anti-Masons--was on an inside page.
-What was possibly of more interest to the readers, it was announced
-that thereafter a ton of coal would be two thousand pounds instead
-of twenty-two hundred and forty--Lackawanna, broken and sifted, six
-dollars and fifty cents a ton.
-
-On Saturday, September 21, when it was only eighteen days old, the
-_Sun_ adopted a new head-line. The letters remained the same, but
-the eagle device of the first issue was supplanted by the solar orb
-rising over hills and sea. This design was used only until December 2,
-when its place was taken by a third emblem--a printing-press shedding
-symbolical effulgence upon the earth.
-
-The _Sun’s_ first book-notice appeared on September 23, when it
-acknowledged the sixtieth volume of the “Family Library” (Harpers),
-this being a biography of Charlemagne by G. P. R. James. “It treats of
-a most important period in the history of France.” The _Sun_ had little
-space then for book-reviews or politics. Of its attitude toward the
-great financial fight then being waged, this lone paragraph gives a
-good view:
-
- The _Globe_ of Monday contains in six columns the reasons which
- prompted the President to remove the public deposits from the
- United States Bank, which were read to his assembled cabinet on
- the 18th instant.
-
-Nicholas Biddle and his friends could fill other papers with arguments,
-but the _Sun_ kept its space for police items, stories of authenticated
-ghosts, and yarns about the late Emperor Napoleon. The removal of
-William J. Duane as Secretary of the Treasury got two lines on a page
-where a big shark caught off Barnstable got three lines, and the
-feeding of the anaconda at the American Museum a quarter of a column.
-Miss Susan Allen, who bought a cigar on Broadway and was arrested
-when she smoked it while she danced in the street, was featured more
-prominently than the expected visit to New York of Mr. Henry Clay,
-after whom millions of cigars were to be named. For the satisfaction of
-universal curiosity it must be reported that Miss Allen was discharged.
-
-On October 1 of that same year--1833--the _Sun_ came out for better
-fire-fighting apparatus, urging that the engines should be drawn by
-horses, as in London. In the same issue it assailed the gambling-house
-in Park Row, and scorned the allegation of Colonel Hamilton, a British
-traveller, that the tooth-brush was unknown in America. Slowly the
-paper was getting better, printing more local news; and it could afford
-to, for the penny _Sun_ idea had taken hold of New York, and the sales
-were larger every week.
-
-Wisner was stretching the police-court pieces out to nearly two
-columns. Now and then, perhaps when Mr. Day was away fishing, the
-reporter would slip in an Abolition paragraph or a gloomy poem on the
-horrors of slavery. But he was so valuable that, while his chief did
-not raise his salary of four dollars a week, he offered him half the
-paper, the same to be paid for out of the profits. And so, in January
-of 1834, Wisner became a half-owner of the _Sun_. Benton, another _Sun_
-printer, also wanted an interest, and left when he could not get it.
-
-Before it was two months old the _Sun_ had begun to take an interest
-in aeronautics. It printed a full column, October 16, 1833, on the
-subject of Durant’s balloon ascensions, and quoted Napoleon as saying
-that the only insurmountable difficulty of the balloon in war was the
-impossibility of guiding its course. “This difficulty Dr. Durant is now
-endeavoring to obviate.” And the _Sun_ added:
-
- May we not therefore look to the time, in perspective, when
- our atmosphere will be traversed with as much facility as our
- waters?
-
-In the issue of October 17 a skit, possibly by Mr. Day himself, gave a
-picture of the trials of an editor of the period:
-
- SCENE--An editor’s closet--editor solus.
-
- “Well, a pretty day’s work of it I shall make. News, I have
- nothing--politics, stale, flat, and unprofitable--miscellany,
- enough of it--miscellany bills payable, and a miscellaneous
- list of subscribers with tastes as miscellaneous as the tongues
- of Babel. Ha! Footsteps! Drop the first person singular and
- don the plural. WE must now play the editor.”
-
- (Enter Devil)--“Copy, sir!”
-
- (Enter A.)--“I missed my paper this morning, sir, I don’t want
- to take it--”
-
- (Enter B.)--“There is a letter ‘o’ turned upside down in my
- advertisement this morning, sir! I--I--”
-
- (Enter C.)--“You didn’t notice my new work, my treatise on a
- flea, this morning, sir! You have no literary taste! Sir--”
-
- (Enter D.)--“Sir, your boy don’t leave my paper, sir--I live in
- a blind alley; you turn out of ---- Street to the right--then
- take a left-hand turn--then to the right again--then go under
- an arch--then over a kennel--then jump a ten-foot fence--then
- enter a door--then climb five pair of stairs--turn fourteen
- corners--and you can’t miss my door. I want your boy to leave
- my paper first--it’s only a mile out of his way--if he don’t,
- I’ll stop--”
-
- (Enter E.)--“Sir, you have abused my friend; the article
- against Mr. ---- as a candidate is intolerable--it is
- scandalous--I’ll stop my paper--I’ll cane you--I’ll--”
-
- (Enter F.)--“Mr. Editor, you are mealy-mouthed, you lack
- independence, your remarks upon Mr. ----, the candidate for
- Congress, are too tame. If you don’t put it on harder I’ll stop
- my--”
-
- (Enter G.)--“Your remarks upon profane swearing are personal,
- d----n you, sir, you mean me--before I’ll patronize you longer
- I’ll see you in ----”
-
- (Enter H.)--“Mr. ----, we are very sorry you do not say more
- against the growing sin of profanity. Unless you put your veto
- on it more decidedly, no man of correct moral principles will
- give you his patronage--I, for one--”
-
- (Enter I.)--“Bad luck to the dirty sowl of him, where does he
- keep himself? By the powers, I’ll strike him if I can get at
- his carcass, and I’ll kick him anyhow! Why do you fill your
- paper with dirty lies about Irishmen at all?”
-
- (Enter J.)--“Why don’t you give us more anecdotes and
- sich, Irish stories and them things--I don’t like the long
- speeches--I--”
-
- (Devil)--“Copy, sir!”
-
-The day after this evidence of unrest appeared the _Sun_ printed,
-perhaps with a view to making all manner of citizens gnash their teeth,
-a few extracts from the narrative of Colonel Hamilton, “the British
-traveler in America”:
-
- In America there are no bells and no chambermaids.
-
- I have heard, since my arrival in America, the toast of “a
- bloody war in Europe” drank with enthusiasm.
-
- The whole population of the Southern and Western States are
- uniformly armed with daggers.
-
- At present an American might study every book within the limits
- of the Union and still be regarded in many parts of Europe,
- especially in Germany, as a man comparatively ignorant.
-
-The editorial suggested that the colonel “had better look wild for the
-lake that burns with fire and brimstone.”
-
-The union printers were lively even in the first days of the _Sun_,
-which announced, on October 21, 1833, that the _Journal of Commerce_
-paid its journeymen only ten dollars a week, and added:
-
- The proprietors of other morning papers cheerfully pay twelve
- dollars. Therefore, the office of the _Journal of Commerce_
- is what printers term a rat office--and the term “rat,” with
- the followers of the same profession with Faust, Franklin, and
- Stanhope, is a most odious term.
-
-The “pork-barrel” was foreshadowed in an item printed when the _Sun_
-was just a month old:
-
- At the close of the present year the Treasury of the nation
- will contain twelve million dollars. This rich and increasing
- revenue will probably be a bone of contention at the next
- session of Congress.
-
-At the end of its first month the _Sun_ was getting more and more
-advertising. Its news was lively enough, considering the times. Rum,
-the cholera in Mexico, assassinations in the South, the police-court,
-the tour of Henry Clay, and poems by Walter Scott were its long suit.
-The circulation of the little paper was now about twelve hundred
-copies, and the future seemed promising, even if Mr. Day did print,
-at suspiciously frequent intervals, articles inveighing against the
-debtor’s-prison law.
-
-The Astor House--now half a ruin--was at first to be called the Park
-Hotel, for the _Sun_ of October 29, 1833, announced editorially:
-
- THE PARK HOTEL--Mr. W. B. Astor gives notice that he will
- receive proposals for building the long-contemplated hotel in
- Broadway, between Barclay and Vesey Streets.
-
-An advertisement which the _Sun_ saw fit to notice editorially
-was inserted by a young man in search of a wife--“a young woman
-who understands the use of the needle, and who is willing to be
-industrious.” The editorial comment was:
-
- The advertisement was handed to us by a respectable-looking
- young man, and of course we could not refuse to publish
- it--though if we were in want of a wife we think we should take
- a different course to obtain one.
-
-Sometimes the police items, flecked with poetry, and presumably written
-by Wisner, were tantalizingly reticent, as:
-
- Maria Jones was accused of stealing clothing, and committed.
- Certain affairs were developed of rather a singular and comical
- nature in relation to her.
-
-Nothing more than that. Perhaps Wisner rather enjoyed being questioned
-by admiring friends when he went to dinner at the American House that
-day.
-
-Bright as the police reporter was, the ship-news man of that day lacked
-snap. The arrival from Europe of James Fenimore Cooper, who could have
-told the _Sun_ more foreign news than it had ever printed, was disposed
-of in twelve words. But it must be remembered that the interview was
-then unknown. The only way to get anything out of a citizen was to
-enrage him, whereupon he would write a letter. But the _Sun_ did say, a
-couple of days later, that Cooper’s newest novel, “The Headsman,” was
-being sold in London at seven dollars and fifty cents a copy--no doubt
-in the old-fashioned English form, three volumes at half a guinea each.
-
-The _Sun_ blew its own horn for the first time on November 9, 1833:
-
- Its success is now beyond question, and it has exceeded
- the most sanguine anticipations of its publishers in its
- circulation and advertising patronage. Scarcely two months
- has it existed in the typographical firmament, and it has a
- daily circulation of upward of two thousand copies, besides
- a steadily increasing advertising patronage. Although of a
- character (we hope) deserving the encouragement of all classes
- of society, it is more especially valuable to those who cannot
- well afford to incur the expense of subscribing to a “blanket
- sheet” and paying ten dollars per annum.
-
- In conclusion we may be permitted to remark that the penny
- press, by diffusing useful knowledge among the operative
- classes of society, is effecting the march of intelligence
- to a greater degree than any other mode of instruction.
-
-The same article called attention to the fact that the “penny” papers
-of England were really two-cent papers. The _Sun’s_ price had been
-announced as “one penny” on the earliest numbers, but on October 8,
-when it was a little more than a month old, the legend was changed to
-read “Price one cent.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _From the Collection of Charles Burnham_
-
- BARNEY WILLIAMS, THE COMEDIAN, WHO WAS THE FIRST NEWSBOY OF
- “THE SUN”
-]
-
-The _Sun_ ran its first serial in the third month of its existence.
-This was “The Life of Davy Crockett,” dictated or authorized by the
-frontiersman himself. It must have been a relief to the readers to get
-away from the usual dull reprint from foreign papers that had been
-filling the _Sun’s_ first page. In those days the first pages were
-always the dullest, but Crockett’s lively stories about bear-hunts
-enlivened the _Sun_.
-
-Other celebrities were often mentioned. Aaron Burr, now old and feeble,
-was writing his memoirs. Martin Van Buren had taken lodgings at the
-City Hotel. The Siamese Twins were arrested in the South for beating
-a man. “Mr. Clay arrived in town last evening and attended the new
-opera.” This was “Fra Diavolo,” in which Mr. and Mrs. Wood sang at the
-Park Theatre. “It is said that Dom Pedro has dared his brother Miguel
-to single combat, which has been refused.” A week later the _Sun_
-gloated over the fact that Pedro--Pedro I of Brazil, who was invading
-Portugal on behalf of his daughter, Maria da Gloria--had routed the
-usurper Miguel’s army.
-
-On December 5, 1833, the _Sun_ printed the longest news piece it had
-ever put in type--the message of President Jackson to the Congress.
-This took up three of the four pages, and crowded out nearly all the
-advertising.
-
-On December 17, in the fourth month of its life, the _Sun_ announced
-that it had procured “a machine press, on which one thousand
-impressions can be taken in an hour. The daily circulation is now
-nearly FOUR THOUSAND.” It was a happy Christmas for Day and Wisner. The
-_Sun_ surely was shining!
-
-The paper retained its original size and shape during the whole of
-1834, and rarely printed more than four pages. As it grew older, it
-printed more and more local items and developed greater interest
-in local affairs. The first page was taken up with advertising and
-reprint. A State election might have taken place the day before, but on
-page 1 the _Sun_ worshippers looked for a bit of fiction or history.
-What were the fortunes of William L. Marcy as compared to a two-column
-thriller, “The Idiot’s Revenge,” or “Captain Chicken and Gentle Sophia”?
-
-The head-lines were all small, and most of them italics. Here are
-samples:
-
- _INGRATITUDE OF A CAT._
-
- _PERSONALITY OF NAPOLEON._
-
- _WONDERFUL ANTICS OF FLEAS._
-
- _BROUGHT TO IT BY RUM._
-
-The news paragraphs were sometimes models of condensation:
-
- PICKPOCKETS--On Friday night a Gentleman lost $100 at the Opera
- and then $25 at Tammany Hall.
-
- The Hon. Daniel Webster will leave town this morning for
- Washington.
-
- John Baker, the person whom we reported a short time since
- as being brought before the police for stealing a ham, died
- suddenly in his cell in Bellevue in the greatest agony--an
- awful warning to drunkards.
-
- James G. Bennett has become sole proprietor and editor of the
- Philadelphia _Courier_.
-
- Colonel Crockett, it is expected, will visit the Bowery Theater
- this evening.
-
- RUMOR--It was rumored in Washington on the 6th that a duel
- would take place the next day between two members of the House.
-
- SUDDEN DEATH--Ann McDonough, of Washington Street, attempted to
- drink a pint of rum on a wager, on Wednesday afternoon last.
- Before it was half swallowed Ann was a corpse. Served her right!
-
- Bayington, the murderer, we learn by a contemporary, was
- formerly employed in this city on the _Journal of Commerce_. No
- wonder he came to an untimely fate.
-
- DUEL--We understand that a duel was fought at Hoboken on
- Friday morning last between a gentleman of Canada and a French
- gentleman of this city, in which the latter was wounded. The
- parties should be arrested.
-
- LAMENTABLE DEATH--The camelopard shipped at Calcutta for New
- York died the day after it was embarked. “We could have better
- spared a better” _crittur_, as Shakespeare doesn’t say.
-
-The _Sun_, although read largely by Jacksonians, did not take the side
-of any political party. It favoured national and State economy and city
-cleanliness. It dismissed the New York Legislature of 1834 thus:
-
- The Legislature of this State closed its arduous duties
- yesterday. It has increased the number of our banks and fixed a
- heavy load of debt upon posterity.
-
-Nothing more. If the readers wanted more they could fly to the ample
-bosoms of the sixpennies; but apparently they were satisfied, for
-in April of 1834 the _Sun’s_ circulation reached eight thousand, and
-Colonel Webb, of the _Courier and Enquirer_, was bemoaning the success
-of “penny trash.” The _Sun_ replied to him by saying that the public
-had been “imposed upon by ten-dollar trash long enough.” The _Journal
-of Commerce_ also slanged the _Sun_, which promptly announced that the
-_Journal_ was conducted by “a company of rich, aristocratical men,” and
-that it would take sides with any party to gain a subscriber.
-
-The influence of Partner Wisner, the Abolitionist, was evident in many
-pages of the _Sun_. On June 23, 1834, it printed a piece about Martin
-Palmer, who was “pelted down with stones in Wall Street on suspicion of
-being a runaway slave,” and paid its respects to Boudinot, a Southerner
-in New York who was reputed to be a tracker of runaways. It was he who
-had set the crowd after the black:
-
- The man who will do this will do anything; he would dance on
- his mother’s grave; he would invade the sacred precincts of the
- tomb and rob a corpse of its winding-sheet; he has no SOUL. It
- is said that this useless fellow is about to commence a suit
- against us for a libel. Try it, Mr. Boudinot!
-
-During the anti-abolition riots of that year the _Sun_ took a firm
-stand against the disturbers, although there is little doubt that many
-of them were its own readers.
-
-The paper made a vigorous little crusade against the evils of the
-Bridewell in City Hall Park, where dozens of wretches suffered in
-the filth of the debtors’ prison. The _Sun_ was a live wire when the
-cholera re-appeared, and it put to rout the sixpenny papers which tried
-to make out that the disease was not cholera, but “summer complaint.”
-Incidentally, the advertising columns of that day, in nearly all the
-papers were filled with patent “cholera cures.”
-
-The _Sun_ had an eye for urban refinement, too, and begged the
-aldermen to see to it that pigs were prevented from roaming in City
-Hall Park. In the matter of silver forks, then a novelty, it was more
-conservative, as the following paragraph, printed in November, 1834,
-would indicate:
-
- EXTREME NICETY--The author of the “Book of Etiquette,” recently
- printed in London, says: “Silver forks are now common at every
- respectable table, and for my part I cannot see how it is
- possible to eat a dinner comfortably without them.” The booby
- ought to be compelled to cut his beefsteak with a piece of old
- barrel-hoop on a wooden trencher.
-
-Not even abolition or etiquette, however, could sidetrack the _Sun’s_
-interest in animals. In one issue it dismissed the adjournment of
-Congress in three words and, just below, ran this item:
-
- THE ANACONDA--Most of those who have seen the beautiful serpent
- at Peale’s Museum will recollect that in the snug quarters
- allotted to him there are two blankets, on one of which he
- lies, and the other is covered over him in cold weather.
- Strange to say that on Monday night, after Mr. Peale had fed
- the serpent with a chicken, according to custom, the serpent
- took it into his head to swallow one of the blankets, which
- is a seven-quarter one, and this blanket he has now in his
- stomach. The proprietor feels much anxiety.
-
-Almost every newspaper editor in that era had a theatre feud at one day
-or another. The _Sun’s_ quarrel was with Farren, the manager of the
-Bowery, where Forrest was playing. So the _Sun_ said:
-
- DAMN THE YANKEES--We are informed by a correspondent (though we
- have not seen the announcement ourselves) that Farren, the chap
- who damned the Yankees so lustily the other day, and who is now
- under bonds for a gross outrage on a respectable butcher near
- the Bowery Theater, is intending to make his appearance on the
- Bowery stage THIS EVENING!
-
-Five hundred citizens gathered at the theatre that night, waited until
-nine o’clock, and then charged through the doors, breaking up the
-performance of “Metamora.” The _Sun_ described it:
-
-The supernumeraries scud from behind the scenes like quails--the
-stock actors’ teeth chattered--_Oceana_ looked imploringly at the
-good-for-nothing Yankees--_Nahmeeoke_ trembled--_Guy of Godalwin_
-turned on his heel, and _Metamora_ coolly shouldered his tomahawk and
-walked off the stage.
-
-The management announced that Farren was discharged. The mayor of New
-York and Edwin Forrest made conciliatory speeches, and the crowd went
-away.
-
-The attacks of Colonel Stone, editor of the six-cent _Commercial_,
-aroused the _Sun_ to retaliate in kind. A column about the colonel
-ended thus:
-
- He was then again cowskinned by Mr. Bryant of the _Post_, and
- was most unpoetically flogged near the American Hotel. He has
- always been the slave of avarice, cowardice, and meanness....
- The next time he sees fit to attack the penny press we hope he
- will confine himself to facts.
-
-A month later the _Sun_ went after Colonel Stone again:
-
- The colonel ... for the sake of an additional glass of wine
- and a couple of real Spanish cigars, did actually perpetrate
- a most excellent and true article, the first we have seen of
- his for a long time past. Now we have serious thoughts that
- the colonel will yet become quite a decent fellow, and may
- ultimately ascend, after a long course of training, to a level
- with the penny dailies which have soared so far above him in
- the heavens of veracity.
-
-It must be said of Colonel Stone that he was a man of literary and
-political attainments. He was editor of the _Commercial Advertiser_ for
-more than twenty years.
-
-The colonel did not reform to the _Sun’s_ liking at once, but the feud
-lessened, and presently it was the _Transcript_--a penny paper which
-sprang up when the _Sun’s_ success was assured--to which the _Sun_ took
-its biggest cudgels. One of the _Transcript’s_ editors, it said, had
-passed a bogus three-dollar bill on the Bank of Troy. Another walked
-“on both sides of the street, like a twopenny postman,” while a third
-“spent his money at a theatre with females,” while his family was in
-want. But, added the _Sun_, “we never let personalities creep in.”
-
-The New York _Times_--not the present _Times_--had also started up, and
-it dared to boast of a circulation “greater than any in the city except
-the _Courier_.” Said the _Sun_:
-
- If the daily circulation of the _Sun_ be not larger than that
- of the _Times_ and _Courier_ both, then may we be hung up by
- the ears and flogged to death with a rattle-snake’s skin.
-
-The _Sun_ took no risk in this. By November of 1834 its circulation was
-above ten thousand. On December 3 it published the President’s message
-in full and circulated fifteen thousand copies. At the beginning of
-1835 it announced a new press--a Napier, built by R. Hoe & Co.--new
-type, and a bigger paper, circulating twenty thousand. The print paper
-was to cost four-fifths of a cent a copy, but the _Sun_ was getting
-lots of advertising. With the increase in size, that New Year’s Day,
-the _Sun_ adopted the motto, “It Shines for All.” which it is still
-using to-day. This motto doubtless was suggested by the sign of the
-famous Rising Sun Tavern, or Howard’s Inn, which then stood at the
-junction of Bedford and Jamaica turnpikes, in East New York. The sign,
-which was in front of the tavern as early as 1776, was supported on
-posts near the road and bore a rude picture of a rising sun and the
-motto which Day adopted.
-
-In the same month--January, 1835--the bigger and better _Sun_ printed
-its first real sports story. The sporting editor, who very likely was
-also the police reporter and perhaps Partner Wisner as well, heard that
-there was to be a fight in the fields near Hoboken between Williamson,
-of Philadelphia, and Phelan, of New York. He crossed the ferry, hired
-a saddle-horse in Hoboken, and galloped to the ringside. It was bare
-knuckles, London rules, and only thirty seconds’ interval between
-rounds:
-
- At the end of three minutes Williamson fell. (Cheers and cries
- of “Fair Play!”) After breathing half a minute, they went at it
- again, and Phelan was knocked down. (Cheers and cries of “Give
- it to him!”) In three minutes more Williamson fell, and the
- adjoining woods echoed back the shouts of the spectators.
-
-The match lasted seventy-two minutes and ended in the defeat of
-Williamson. The _Sun’s_ report contained no sporting slang, and the
-reporter did not seem to like pugilism:
-
- And this is what is called “sports of the ring!” We can
- cheerfully encourage foot-races or any other humane and
- reasonable amusement, but the Lord deliver us from the “ring.”
-
-The following day the _Sun_ denounced prize-fighting as “a European
-practice, better fitted for the morally and physically oppressed
-classes of London than the enlightened republican citizens of New York.”
-
-As prosperity came, the news columns improved. The sensational was not
-the only pabulum fed to the reader. Beside the story of a duel between
-two midshipmen he would find a review of the Burr autobiography, just
-out. Gossip about Fanny Kemble’s quarrel with her father--the _Sun_
-was vexed with the actress because she said that New York audiences
-were made up of butchers--would appear next to a staid report of the
-doings of Congress. The attacks on Rum continued, and the _Sun_ was
-quick to oppose the proposed “licensing of houses of prostitution and
-billiard-rooms.”
-
-The success of Mr. Day’s paper was so great that every printer and
-newspaperman in New York longed to run a penny journal. On June 22,
-1835, the paper’s name appeared at the head of the editorial column on
-Page 2 as _The True Sun_, although on the first page the bold head-line
-_THE SUN_, remained as usual. An editorial note said:
-
- We have changed our inside head to _True Sun_ for reasons which
- will hereafter be made known.
-
-On the following day the _True Sun_ title was entirely missing, and its
-absence was explained in an editorial article as follows:
-
- Having understood on Wednesday (June 21) that a daily paper
- was about being issued in this city as nearly like our own as
- it could be got up, under the title of _The True Sun_, for the
- avowed purpose of benefitting the proprietors at our expense,
- we yesterday changed our inside title, being determined to
- place an injunction upon any such piratical proceedings.
- Yesterday morning the anticipated _Sun_ made its appearance,
- and at first sight we immediately abandoned our intention of
- defending ourselves legally, being convinced that it is a
- mere catchpenny second-hand concern which (had it our whole
- list and patronage) would in one month be among the “Things
- that were.” It is published by William F. Short and edited
- by Stephen B. Butler, who announces that his “politics are
- Whig.”... Mr. Short, with the ingenuity of a London pickpocket,
- though without the honesty, has made up his paper as nearly
- like ours as was possible and given it the name of _The (true)
- Sun_ for the purpose of imposing on the public.... We hereby
- publish William F. Short and Stephen B. Butler to our editorial
- brethren and to the printing profession in general as _Literary
- Scoundrels_.
-
-A day later (June 24, 1835) the _Sun_ declared that in establishing
-the _True Sun_ “Short, who is one of the printers of the _Messenger_,
-actually purloined the composition of his reading matter”; and it
-printed a letter from William Burnett, publisher of the _Weekly
-Messenger_, to support its charge of larceny.
-
-On June 28, six days after the _True Sun’s_ first appearance, the _Sun_
-announced the failure of the pretender. The _True Sun’s_ proprietors,
-it said, “have concluded to abandon their piratical course.”
-
-Another _True Sun_ was issued by Benjamin H. Day in 1840, two years
-after he sold the _Sun_ to Moses Y. Beach. A third _True Sun_,
-established by former employees of the _Sun_ on March 20, 1843, ran for
-more than a year. A daily called the _Citizen and True Sun_, started in
-1845, had a short life.
-
-When a contemporary did not fail the _Sun_ poked fun at it:
-
- MAJOR NOAH’S SINGULARITY--The _Evening Star_ of yesterday comes
- out in favor of the French, lottery, gambling, and phrenology
- for ladies. Is the man crazy?
-
-The editor whose sanity was questioned was the famous Mordecai Manuel
-Noah, one of the most versatile men of his time. He was a newspaper
-correspondent at fifteen. When he was twenty-eight, President Madison
-appointed him to be consul-general at Tunis, where he distinguished
-himself by his rescue of several Americans who were held as slaves
-in the Barbary States. On his return to New York, in 1816, he again
-entered journalism, and was successively connected with the _National
-Advocate_, the _Enquirer_, the _Commercial Advertiser_, the _Times and
-Messenger_, and the _Evening Star_. In 1825 he attempted to establish a
-great Jewish colony on Grand Island, in the Niagara River, but he found
-neither sympathy nor aid among his coreligionists, and the scheme was a
-failure.
-
-Noah wrote a dozen dramas, all of which have been forgotten, although
-he was the most popular playwright in America at that day. His _Evening
-Star_ was a good paper, and the _Sun’s_ quarrels with it were not
-serious.
-
-For their attacks on Attree, the editor of the _Transcript_, Messrs.
-Day and Wisner got themselves indicted for criminal libel. They took it
-calmly:
-
- Bigger men than we have passed through that ordeal. There is
- Major Noah, the Grand Mogul of the editorial tribe, who has not
- only been indicted, but, we believe, placed at the bar. Then
- there’s Colonel Webb; no longer ago than last autumn he was
- indicted by the grand jury of Delaware County. The colonel, it
- is said, didn’t consider this a fair business transaction,
- and, brushing up the mahogany pistol, he took his coach and
- hounds, drove up to good old Delaware, and bid defiance to
- the whole posse comitatus of the county. The greatest men in
- the country have some time in the course of their lives been
- indicted.
-
-A few weeks later, when Attree, who had left the _Transcript_ to write
-“horribles” for the _Courier_, was terribly beaten in the street, the
-_Sun_ denounced the assault and tried to expose the assailants.
-
-In February, 1835, a few days after the indictment of the partners,
-Mr. Wisner was challenged to a duel by a quack dentist whose medicines
-the _Sun_ had exposed. The _Sun_ announced editorially that Wisner
-accepted the challenge, and that, having the choice of weapons, he
-chose syringes charged with the dentist’s own medicine, the distance
-five paces. No duel!
-
-It would seem that the _Sun_ owners sought a challenge from the fiery
-James Watson Webb of the mahogany pistol, for they made many a dig at
-his sixpenny paper. Here is a sample:
-
- OUTRAGEOUS--The _Courier and Enquirer_ of Saturday morning is
- just twice as large as its usual size. The sheet is now large
- enough for a blanket and two pairs of pillow-cases, and it
- contains, in printers’ language, 698,300 ems--equal to eight
- volumes of the ordinary-sized novels of the present day. If
- the reading matter were printed in pica type and put in one
- unbroken line, it would reach from Nova Zembla to Terra del
- Fuego. Such a paper is an insult to a civilized community.
-
-A little later, when Colonel Webb’s paper boasted of “the largest
-circulation,” the _Sun_ offered to bet the colonel a thousand
-dollars--the money to go to the Washington Monument Association--that
-the _Sun_ had a circulation twice as great as that of the big sixpenny
-daily.
-
-It must not be thought, however, that the _Sun_ did not attempt to
-treat the serious matters of the day. It handled them very well,
-considering the lack of facilities. The war crisis with France, happily
-dispelled; the amazing project of the Erie Railroad to build a line as
-far west as Chautauqua County, New York; the anti-abolitionist riots
-and the little religious rows; the ambitions of Daniel Webster and the
-approach of Halley’s comet--all these had their half-column or so.
-
-When Matthias the Prophet, the Dowie of that day, was brought to trial
-in White Plains, Westchester County, on a charge of having poisoned
-a Mr. Elijah Pierson, the _Sun_ sent a reporter to that then distant
-court. It is possible that this reporter was Benjamin H. Day himself.
-At any rate, Day attended the trial, and there made the acquaintance
-of a man who that very summer made the _Sun_ the talk of the world and
-brought to the young paper the largest circulation of any daily.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-RICHARD ADAMS LOCKE’S MOON HOAX
-
- _A Magnificent Fake Which Deceived Two Continents, Brought to “The
- Sun” the Largest Circulation in the World and, in Poe’s Opinion,
- Established Penny Papers._
-
-
-The man whom Day met at the murder trial in White Plains was Richard
-Adams Locke, a reporter who was destined to kick up more dust than
-perhaps any other man of his profession. As he comes on the stage, we
-must let his predecessor, George W. Wisner, pass into the wings.
-
-Wisner was a good man, as a reporter, as a writer of editorial
-articles, and as part owner of the paper. His campaign for Abolition
-irritated Mr. Day at first, but the young man’s motives were so pure
-and his articles so logical that Day recognized the justice of the
-cause, even as he realized the foolish methods employed by some of the
-Abolitionists. Wisner set the face of the _Sun_ against slavery, and
-Day kept it so, but there were minor matters of policy upon which the
-partners never agreed, never could agree.
-
-When Wisner’s health became poor, in the summer of 1835, he expressed
-a desire to get away from New York. Mr. Day paid him five thousand
-dollars for his interest in the paper--a large sum in those days,
-considering the fact that Wisner had won his share with no capital
-except his pen. Wisner went West and settled at Pontiac, Michigan.
-There his health improved, his fortune increased, and he was at one
-time a member of the Michigan Legislature.
-
-When Day found that Locke was the best reporter attending the trial of
-Matthias the Prophet, he hired him to write a series of articles on the
-religious fakir. These, the first “feature stories” that ever appeared
-in the _Sun_, were printed on the front page.
-
-A few weeks later, while the Matthias articles were still being sold
-on the streets in pamphlet form, Locke went to Day and told him that
-his boss, Colonel Webb of the _Courier and Enquirer_, had discharged
-him for working for the _Sun_ “on the side.” Wisner was about to leave
-the paper, and Day was glad to hire Locke, for he needed an editorial
-writer. Twelve dollars a week was the alluring wage, and Locke accepted
-it.
-
-Locke was then thirty-five--ten years senior to his employer. Let his
-contemporary, Edgar Allan Poe, describe him:
-
- He is about five feet seven inches in height, symmetrically
- formed; there is an air of distinction about his whole
- person--the _air noble_ of genius. His face is strongly pitted
- by the smallpox, and, perhaps from the same cause, there
- is a marked obliquity in the eyes; a certain calm, clear
- _luminousness_, however, about these latter amply compensates
- for the defect, and the forehead is truly beautiful in its
- intellectuality. I am acquainted with no person possessing so
- fine a forehead as Mr. Locke.
-
-Locke was nine years older than Poe, who at this time had most of his
-fame ahead of him. Poe was quick to recognize the quality of Locke’s
-writings; indeed, the poet saw, perhaps more clearly than others of
-that period, that America was full of good writers--a fact of which
-the general public was neglectful. This was Poe’s tribute to Locke’s
-literary gift:
-
- His prose style is noticeable for its concision, luminosity,
- completeness--each quality in its proper place. He has that
- _method_ so generally characteristic of genius proper.
- Everything he writes is a model in its peculiar way, serving
- just the purposes intended and nothing to spare.
-
-The _Sun’s_ new writer was a collateral descendant of John Locke, the
-English philosopher of the seventeenth century. He was born in 1800,
-but his birthplace was not New York, as his contemporary biographers
-wrote. It was East Brent, Somersetshire, England. His early American
-friends concealed this fact when writing of Locke, for they feared that
-his English birth (all the wounds of war had not healed) would keep him
-out of some of the literary clubs. He was educated by his mother and
-by private tutors until he was nineteen, when he entered Cambridge.
-While still a student he contributed to the _Bee_, the _Imperial
-Magazine_, and other English publications. When he left Cambridge he
-had the hardihood to start the London _Republican_, the title of which
-describes its purpose. This was a failure, for London declined to warm
-to the theories of American democracy, no matter how scholarly their
-expression.
-
-Abandoning the _Republican_, young Locke devoted himself to literature
-and science. He ran a periodical called the _Cornucopia_ for about six
-months, but it was not a financial success, and in 1832, with his wife
-and infant daughter, he went to New York. Colonel Webb put him at work
-on his paper.
-
-Locke could write almost anything. In Cambridge and in Fleet Street he
-had picked up a wonderful store of general information. He could turn
-out prose or poetry, politics or pathos, anecdotes or astronomy.
-
-While he lived in London, Locke was a regular reader of the Edinburgh
-_New Philosophical Journal_, and he brought some copies of it to
-America. One of these, an issue of 1826, contained an article by Dr.
-Thomas Dick, of Dundee, a pious man, but inclined to speculate on the
-possibilities of the universe. In this article Dr. Dick suggested the
-feasibility of communicating with the moon by means of great stone
-symbols on the face of the earth. The people of the moon--if there
-were any--would fathom the diagrams and reply in a similar way. Dr.
-Dick explained afterward that he wrote this piece with the idea of
-satirizing a certain coterie of eccentric German astronomers.
-
-Now it happened that Sir John Frederick William Herschel, the greatest
-astronomer of his time, and the son of the celebrated astronomer
-Sir William Herschel, went to South Africa in January, 1834, and
-established an observatory at Feldhausen, near Cape Town, with the
-intention of completing his survey of the sidereal heavens by examining
-the southern skies as he had swept the northern, thus to make the first
-telescopic survey of the whole surface of the visible heavens.
-
-Locke knew about Sir John and his mission. The Matthias case had blown
-over, the big fire in Fulton Street was almost forgotten, and things
-were a bit dull on the island of Manhattan. The newspapers were in a
-state of armed truce. As Locke and his fellow journalists gathered at
-the American Hotel bar for their after-dinner brandy, it is probable
-that there was nothing, not even the great sloth recently arrived at
-the American Museum, to excite a good argument.
-
-Locke needed money, for his salary of twelve dollars a week could ill
-support the fine gentleman that he was; so he laid a plan before Mr.
-Day. It was a plot as well as a plan, and the first angle of the plot
-appeared on the second page of the _Sun_ on August 21, 1835:
-
- CELESTIAL DISCOVERIES--The Edinburgh _Courant_ says--“We
- have just learnt from an eminent publisher in this city that
- Sir John Herschel, at the Cape of Good Hope, has made some
- astronomical discoveries of the most wonderful description, by
- means of an immense telescope of an entirely new principle.”
-
-Nothing further appeared until Tuesday, August 25, when three columns
-of the _Sun’s_ first page took the newspaper and scientific worlds by
-the ears. Those were not the days of big type. The _Sun’s_ heading read:
-
- GREAT ASTRONOMICAL DISCOVERIES.
-
- LATELY MADE
- BY SIR JOHN HERSCHEL, LL.D., F.R.S., &c.
-
- At the Cape of Good Hope.
-
- [_From Supplement to the Edinburgh Journal of Science._]
-
-It may as well be said here that although there had been an Edinburgh
-_Journal of Science_, it ceased to exist several years before 1835. The
-periodical to which Dr. Dick, of Dundee, contributed his moon theories
-was, in a way, the successor to the _Journal of Science_, but it was
-called the _New Philosophical Journal_. The likeness of names was not
-great, but enough to cause some confusion. It is also noteworthy that
-the sly Locke credited to a supplement, rather than to the _Journal of
-Science_ itself, the revelations which he that day began to pour before
-the eyes of _Sun_ readers. Thus he started:
-
- In this unusual addition to our _Journal_ we have the happiness
- of making known to the British public, and thence to the whole
- civilized world, recent discoveries in astronomy which will
- build an imperishable monument to the age in which we live, and
- confer upon the present generation of the human race proud
- distinction through all future time. It has been poetically
- said that the stars of heaven are the hereditary regalia of man
- as the intellectual sovereign of the animal creation. He may
- now fold the zodiac around him with a loftier consciousness of
- his mental supremacy.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- RICHARD ADAMS LOCKE, AUTHOR OF THE MOON HOAX
- From an Engraving in the Possession of His Granddaughter, Mrs.
- F. Winthrop White of New Brighton, S. I.
-]
-
-After solemnly dwelling on the awe which mortal man must feel upon
-peering into the secrets of the sky, the article declared that Sir John
-“paused several hours before he commenced his observations, that he
-might prepare his own mind for discoveries which he knew would fill the
-minds of myriads of his fellow men with astonishment.” It continued:
-
- And well might he pause! From the hour the first human pair
- opened their eyes to the glories of the blue firmament above
- them, there has been no accession to human knowledge at all
- comparable in sublime interest to that which he has been the
- honored agent in supplying. Well might he pause! He was about
- to become the sole depository of wondrous secrets which had
- been hid from the eyes of all men that had lived since the
- birth of time.
-
-At the end of a half-column of glorification, the writer got down to
-brass tacks:
-
- To render our enthusiasm intelligible, we will state at
- once that by means of a telescope, of vast dimensions and
- an entirely new principle, the younger Herschel, at his
- observatory in the southern hemisphere, has already made the
- most extraordinary discoveries in every planet of our solar
- system; has discovered planets in other solar systems; has
- obtained a distinct view of objects in the moon, fully equal to
- that which the unaided eye commands of terrestrial objects at
- the distance of one hundred yards; has affirmatively settled
- the question whether this satellite be inhabited, and by what
- orders of beings; has firmly established a new theory of
- cometary phenomena; and has solved or corrected nearly every
- leading problem of mathematical astronomy.
-
-And where was the _Journal of Science_ getting this mine of
-astronomical revelation for its supplement? The mystery is explained at
-once:
-
- We are indebted to the devoted friendship of Dr. Andrew
- Grant, the pupil of the elder, and for several years past the
- inseparable coadjutor of the younger Herschel. The amanuensis
- of the latter at the Cape of Good Hope, and the indefatigable
- superintendent of his telescope during the whole period of
- its construction and operations, Dr. Grant has been able to
- supply us with intelligence equal in general interest at
- least to that which Dr. Herschel himself has transmitted to
- the Royal Society. For permission to indulge his friendship
- in communicating this invaluable information to us, Dr. Grant
- and ourselves are indebted to the magnanimity of Dr. Herschel,
- who, far above all mercenary considerations, has thus signally
- honored and rewarded his fellow laborer in the field of science.
-
-Regarding the illustrations which, according to the implications of
-the text, accompanied the supplement, the writer was specific. Most
-of them, he stated, were copies of “drawings taken in the observatory
-by Herbert Home, Esq., who accompanied the last powerful series of
-reflectors from London to the Cape. The engraving of the belts of
-Jupiter is a reduced copy of an imperial folio drawing by Dr. Herschel
-himself. The segment of the inner ring of Saturn is from a large
-drawing by Dr. Grant.”
-
-A history of Sir William Herschel’s work and a description of his
-telescopes took up a column of the _Sun_, and on top of this came the
-details--as the _Journal_ printed them--of Sir John’s plans to outdo
-his father by revolutionary methods and a greater telescope. Sir John,
-it appeared, was in conference with Sir David Brewster:
-
- After a few minutes’ silent thought, Sir John diffidently
- inquired whether it would not be possible to effect a
- _transfusion of artificial light through the focal object of
- vision!_ Sir David, somewhat startled at the originality of the
- idea, paused a while, and then hesitatingly referred to the
- refrangibility of rays and the angle of incidence. Sir John,
- grown more confident, adduced the example of the Newtonian
- reflector, in which the refrangibility was corrected by the
- second speculum and the angle of incidence restored by the
- third.
-
- “And,” continued he, “why cannot the illuminated microscope,
- say the hydro-oxygen, be applied to render distinct and, if
- necessary, even to magnify, the focal object?”
-
- Sir David sprang from his chair in an ecstasy of conviction,
- and, leaping half-way to the ceiling, exclaimed:
-
- “Thou art the man!”
-
-Details of the casting of a great lens came next. It was twenty-four
-feet in diameter, and weighed nearly fifteen thousand pounds after it
-was polished; its estimated magnifying-power was forty-two thousand
-times. As he saw it safely started on its way to Africa, Sir John
-“expressed confidence in his ultimate ability to study even the
-entomology of the moon, in case she contained insects upon her surface.”
-
-Thus ended the first instalment of the story. Where had the _Sun_ got
-the _Journal of Science_ supplement? An editorial article answered that
-“it was very politely furnished us by a medical gentleman immediately
-from Scotland, in consequence of a paragraph which appeared on Friday
-last from the Edinburgh _Courant_.” The article added:
-
- The portion which we publish to-day is introductory to
- celestial discoveries of higher and more universal interest
- than any, in any science yet known to the human race. Now
- indeed it may be said that we live in an age of discovery.
-
-It cannot be said that the whole town buzzed with excitement that day.
-Perhaps this first instalment was a bit over the heads of most readers;
-it was so technical, so foreign. But in Nassau and Ann Streets,
-wherever two newspapermen were gathered together, there was buzzing
-enough. What was coming next? Why hadn’t they thought to subscribe to
-the Edinburgh _Journal of Science_, with its wonderful supplement?
-
-Nearly four columns of the revelations appeared on the following
-day--August 26, 1835. This time the reading public came trooping into
-camp, for the _Sun’s_ reprint of the _Journal of Science_ supplement
-got beyond the stage of preliminaries and predictions, and began to
-tell of what was to be seen on the moon. Scientists and newspapermen
-appreciated the detailed description of the mammoth telescope and the
-work of placing it, but the public, like a child, wanted the moon--and
-got it. Let us plunge in at about the point where the public plunged:
-
- The specimen of lunar vegetation, however, which they had
- already seen, had decided a question of too exciting an
- interest to induce them to retard its exit. It had demonstrated
- that the moon has an atmosphere constituted similarly to our
- own, and capable of sustaining organized and, therefore, most
- probably, animal life.
-
- “The trees,” says Dr. Grant, “for a period of ten minutes were
- of one unvaried kind, and unlike any I have seen except the
- largest class of yews in the English churchyards, which they in
- some respects resemble. These were followed by a level green
- plain which, as measured by the painted circle on our canvas
- of forty-nine feet, must have been more than half a mile in
- breadth.”
-
-The article had explained that, by means of a great reflector, the
-lunar views were thrown upon a big canvas screen behind the telescope.
-
- Then appeared as fine a forest of firs, unequivocal firs, as I
- have ever seen cherished in the bosom of my native mountains.
- Wearied with the long continuance of these, we greatly reduced
- the magnifying power of the microscope without eclipsing either
- of the reflectors, and immediately perceived that we had been
- insensibly descending, as it were, a mountainous district of
- highly diversified and romantic character, and that we were
- on the verge of a lake, or inland sea; but of what relative
- locality or extent, we were yet too greatly magnified to
- determine.
-
- On introducing the feeblest achromatic lens we possessed, we
- found that the water, whose boundary we had just discovered,
- answered in general outline to the Mare Nubicum of Riccoli.
- Fairer shores never angel coasted on a tour of pleasure. A
- beach of brilliant white sand, girt with wild, castellated
- rocks, apparently of green marble, varied at chasms, occurring
- every two or three hundred feet, with grotesque blocks of chalk
- or gypsum, and feathered and festooned at the summits with the
- clustering foliage of unknown trees, moved along the bright
- wall of our apartment until we were speechless with admiration.
-
-A column farther on, in a wonderful valley of this wonderful moon, life
-at last burst upon the seers:
-
- In the shade of the woods on the southeastern side we beheld
- continuous herds of brown quadrupeds, having all the external
- characteristics of the bison, but more diminutive than any
- species of the _bos_ genus in our natural history. Its tail
- was like that of our _bos grunniens_; but in its semicircular
- horns, the hump on its shoulders, the depth of its dewlap,
- and the length of its shaggy hair, it closely resembled the
- species to which I have compared it.
-
- It had, however, one widely distinctive feature, which we
- afterward found common to nearly every lunar quadruped we have
- discovered; namely, a remarkable fleshy appendage over the
- eyes, crossing the whole breadth of the forehead and united to
- the ears. We could most distinctly perceive this hairy veil,
- which was shaped like the upper front outline of the cap known
- to the ladies as Mary Queen of Scots cap, lifted and lowered by
- means of the ears. It immediately occurred to the acute mind
- of Dr. Herschel that this was a providential contrivance to
- protect the eyes of the animal from the great extremes of light
- and darkness to which all the inhabitants of our side of the
- moon are periodically subjected.
-
- The next animal perceived would be classed on earth as a
- monster. It was of a bluish lead color, about the size
- of a goat, with a head and beard like him, and a _single
- horn_, slightly inclined forward from the perpendicular. The
- female was destitute of the horn and beard, but had a much
- longer tail. It was gregarious, and chiefly abounded on the
- acclivitous glades of the woods. In elegance of symmetry
- it rivaled the antelope, and like him it seemed an agile,
- sprightly creature, running with great speed and springing from
- the green turf with all the unaccountable antics of the young
- lamb or kitten.
-
- This beautiful creature afforded us the most exquisite
- amusement. The mimicry of its movements upon our white-painted
- canvas was as faithful and luminous as that of animals within
- a few yards of a camera obscura when seen pictured upon its
- tympan. Frequently, when attempting to put our fingers upon
- its beard, it would suddenly bound away into oblivion, as if
- conscious of our earthly impertinence; but then others would
- appear, whom we could not prevent nibbling the herbage, say or
- do what we would to them.
-
-So, at last, the people of earth knew something concrete about the live
-things of the moon. Goats with beards were there, and every New Yorker
-knew goats, for they fed upon the rocky hills of Harlem. And the moon
-had birds, too:
-
- On examining the center of this delightful valley we found
- a large, branching river, abounding with lovely islands and
- water-birds of numerous kinds. A species of gray pelican
- was the most numerous, but black and white cranes, with
- unreasonably long legs and bill, were also quite common. We
- watched their piscivorous experiments a long time in hopes
- of catching sight of a lunar fish; but, although we were not
- gratified in this respect, we could easily guess the purpose
- with which they plunged their long necks so deeply beneath
- the water. Near the upper extremity of one of these islands
- we obtained a glimpse of a strange amphibious creature of a
- spherical form, which rolled with great velocity across the
- pebbly beach, and was lost sight of in the strong current which
- set off from this angle of the island.
-
-At this point clouds intervened, and the Herschel party had to call
-it a day. But it had been a big day, and nobody who read the _Sun_
-wondered that the astronomers tossed off “congratulatory bumpers of
-the best ‘East India particular,’ and named this place of wonders the
-Valley of the Unicorn.” So ended the _Sun_ story of August 26, but an
-editorial paragraph assured the patrons of the paper that on the morrow
-there would be a treat even richer.
-
-What did the other papers say? In the language of a later and less
-elegant period, most of them ate it up--some eagerly, some grudgingly,
-some a bit dubiously, but they ate it, either in crumbs or in hunks.
-The _Daily Advertiser_ declared:
-
- No article has appeared for years that will command so general
- a perusal and publication. Sir John has added a stock of
- knowledge to the present age that will immortalize his name and
- place it high on the page of science.
-
-The _Mercantile Advertiser_, knowing that its lofty readers were
-unlikely to see the moon revelations in the lowly _Sun_, hastened
-to begin reprinting the articles in full, with the remark that the
-document appeared to have intrinsic evidence of authenticity.
-
-The _Times_, a daily then only a year old, and destined to live only
-eighteen months more--later, of course, the title was used by a
-successful daily--said that everything in the _Sun_ story was probable
-and plausible, and had an “air of intense verisimilitude.”
-
-The New York _Sunday News_ advised the incredulous to be patient:
-
- Our doubts and incredulity may be a wrong to the learned
- astronomer, and the circumstances of this wonderful discovery
- may be correct.
-
-The _Courier and Enquirer_ said nothing at all. Like the _Journal
-of Commerce_, it hated the _Sun_ for a lucky upstart. Both of these
-sixpenny respectables stood silent, with their axes behind their backs.
-Their own readers, the Livingstons and the Stuyvesants, got not a
-line about the moon from the blanket sheets, but they sent down into
-the kitchen and borrowed the _Sun_ from the domestics, on the shallow
-pretext of wishing to discover whether their employees were reading a
-moral newspaper--as indeed they were.
-
-The _Herald_, then about four months old, said not a word about the
-moon story. In fact, that was a period in which it said nothing at all
-about any subject, for the fire of that summer had unfortunately wiped
-out its plant. On the very days when the moon stories appeared, Mr.
-Bennett stood cracking his knuckles in front of his new establishment,
-the basement of 202 Broadway, trying to hurry the men who were
-installing a double-cylinder press. Being a wise person, he advertised
-his progress in the _Sun_. It may have vexed him to see the circulation
-of the _Sun_--which he had imitated in character and price--bound
-higher and higher as he stood helpless.
-
-The third instalment of the literary treasure so obligingly imported by
-the “medical gentleman immediately from Scotland” introduced to _Sun_
-readers new and important regions of the moon--the Vagabond Mountains,
-the Lake of Death, craters of extinct volcanoes twenty-eight hundred
-feet high, and twelve luxuriant forests divided by open plains “in
-which waved an ocean of verdure, and which were probably prairies like
-those of North America.” The details were satisfying:
-
- Dr. Herschel has classified not less than thirty-eight species
- of forest trees and nearly twice this number of plants, found
- in this tract alone, which are widely different to those found
- in more equatorial latitudes. Of animals he classified nine
- species of mammalia and five of oviparia. Among the former is
- a small kind of reindeer, the elk, the moose, the horned bear,
- and the biped beaver.
-
- The last resembles the beaver of the earth in every other
- respect than its destitution of a tail and its invariable
- habit of walking upon only two feet. It carries its young in
- its arms, like a human being, and walks with an easy, gliding
- motion. Its huts are constructed better and higher than those
- of many tribes of human savages, and from the appearance of
- smoke in nearly all of them there is no doubt of its being
- acquainted with the use of fire.
-
-The largest lake described was two hundred and sixty-six miles long and
-one hundred and ninety-three wide, shaped like the Bay of Bengal, and
-studded with volcanic islands. One island in a large bay was pinnacled
-with quartz crystals as brilliant as fire. Near by roamed zebras three
-feet high. Golden and blue pheasants strutted about. The beach was
-covered with shell-fish. Dr. Grant did not say whether the fire-making
-beavers ever held a clambake there.
-
-The _Sun_ of Friday, August 28, 1835, was a notable issue. Not yet two
-years old, Mr. Day’s newspaper had the satisfaction of announcing that
-it had achieved the largest circulation of any daily in the world.
-It had, it said, 15,440 regular subscribers in New York and 700 in
-Brooklyn, and it sold 2,000 in the streets and 1,220 out of town--a
-grand total of 19,360 copies, as against the 17,000 circulation of the
-London _Times_. The double-cylinder Napier press in the building at
-Nassau and Spruce Streets--the corner where the _Tribune_ is to-day,
-and to which the _Sun_ had moved on August 3--had to run ten hours
-a day to satisfy the public demand. People waited with more or less
-patience until three o’clock in the afternoon to read about the moon.
-
-That very issue contained the most sensational instalment of all the
-moon series, for through that mystic chain which included Dr. Grant,
-the supplement of the Edinburgh _Journal of Science_, the “medical
-gentleman immediately from Scotland,” and the _Sun_, public curiosity
-as to the presence of human creatures on the orb of night was satisfied
-at last. The astronomers were looking upon the cliffs and crags of a
-new part of the moon:
-
- But whilst gazing upon them in a perspective of about half
- a mile we were thrilled with astonishment to perceive four
- successive flocks of large winged creatures, wholly unlike any
- kind of birds, descend with a slow, even motion from the cliffs
- on the western side and alight upon the plain. They were first
- noticed by Dr. Herschel, who exclaimed:
-
- “Now gentlemen, my theories against your proofs, which you have
- often found a pretty even bet, we have here something worth
- looking at. I was confident that if ever we found beings in
- human shape it would be in this longitude, and that they would
- be provided by their Creator with some extraordinary powers of
- locomotion. First, exchange for my Number D.”
-
- This lens, being soon introduced, gave us a fine half-mile
- distance; and we counted three parties of these creatures, of
- twelve, nine, and fifteen in each, walking erect toward a small
- wood near the base of the eastern precipices. Certainly they
- were like human beings, for their wings had now disappeared,
- and their attitude in walking was both erect and dignified.
-
- Having observed them at this distance for some minutes, we
- introduced lens H._z_., which brought them to the apparent
- proximity of eighty yards--the highest clear magnitude we
- possessed until the latter end of March, when we effected an
- improvement in the gas burners.
-
- About half of the first party had passed beyond our canvas; but
- of all the others we had a perfectly distinct and deliberate
- view. They averaged four feet in height, were covered, except
- on the face, with short and glossy copper-colored hair, and had
- wings composed of a thin membrane, without hair, lying snugly
- upon their backs, from the top of the shoulders to the calves
- of the legs.
-
- The face, which was of a yellowish flesh-color, was a slight
- improvement upon that of the large orang-utan, being more open
- and intelligent in its expression, and having a much greater
- expanse of forehead. The mouth, however, was very prominent,
- though somewhat relieved by a thick beard upon the lower jaw,
- and by lips far more human than those of any species of the
- _Simia_ genus.
-
- In general symmetry of body and limbs they were infinitely
- superior to the orang-utan; so much so that, but for their long
- wings, Lieutenant Drummond said they would look as well on a
- parade-ground as some of the old cockney militia. The hair on
- the head was a darker color than that of the body, closely
- curled, but apparently not woolly, and arranged in two curious
- semi-circles over the temples of the forehead. Their feet could
- only be seen as they were alternately lifted in walking; but
- from what we could see of them in so transient a view, they
- appeared thin and very protuberant at the heel.
-
- Whilst passing across the canvas, and whenever we afterward saw
- them, these creatures were evidently engaged in conversation;
- their gesticulation, more particularly the varied action of the
- hands and arms, appeared impassioned and emphatic. We hence
- inferred that they were rational beings, and, although not
- perhaps of so high an order as others which we discovered the
- next month on the shores of the Bay of Rainbows, that they were
- capable of producing works of art and contrivance.
-
- The next view we obtained of them was still more favorable. It
- was on the borders of a little lake, or expanded stream, which
- we then for the first time perceived running down the valley to
- the large lake, and having on its eastern margin a small wood.
- Some of these creatures had crossed this water and were lying
- like spread eagles on the skirts of the wood.
-
- We could then perceive that their wings possessed great
- expansion, and were similar in structure to those of the bat,
- being a semi-transparent membrane expanded in curvilineal
- divisions by means of straight radii, united at the back by
- the dorsal integuments. But what astonished us very much
- was the circumstance of this membrane being continued from
- the shoulders to the legs, united all the way down, though
- gradually decreasing in width. The wings seemed completely
- under the command of volition, for those of the creatures whom
- we saw bathing in the water spread them instantly to their full
- width, waved them as ducks do theirs to shake off the water,
- and then as instantly closed them again in a compact form.
-
- Our further observation of the habits of these creatures, who
- were of both sexes, led to results so very remarkable that I
- prefer they should be first laid before the public in Dr.
- Herschel’s own work, where I have reason to know that they are
- fully and faithfully stated, however incredulously they may be
- received....
-
- The three families then almost simultaneously spread their
- wings, and were lost in the dark confines of the canvas before
- we had time to breathe from our paralyzing astonishment. We
- scientifically denominated them the _vespertilio-homo_, or
- man-bat; and they are doubtless innocent and happy creatures,
- notwithstanding some of their amusements would but ill comport
- with our terrestrial notions of decorum.
-
-So ended the account, in Dr. Grant’s words, of that fateful day. The
-editor of the supplement, perhaps a cousin of the “medical gentleman
-immediately arrived from Scotland,” added that although he had of
-course faithfully obeyed Dr. Grant’s injunction to omit “these highly
-curious passages,” he did not “clearly perceive the force of the
-reasons assigned for it,” and he added:
-
- From these, however, and other prohibited passages, which will
- be published by Dr. Herschel with the certificates of the
- civil and military authorities of the colony, and of several
- Episcopal, Wesleyan, and other ministers who, in the month of
- March last, were permitted under the stipulation of temporary
- secrecy to visit the observatory and become eye-witnesses
- of the wonders which they were requested to attest, we are
- confident his forthcoming volumes will be at once the most
- sublime in science and the most intense in general interest
- that ever issued from the press.
-
-New York now stopped its discussion of human slavery, the high cost of
-living--apples cost as much as four cents apiece in Wall Street--and
-other familiar topics, and devoted its talking hours to the man-bats
-of the moon. The _Sun_ was stormed by people who wanted back numbers
-of the stories, and flooded with demands by mail. As the text of the
-_Journal of Science_ article indicated that the original narrative had
-been illustrated, there was a cry for pictures.
-
-Mr. Day was busy with the paper and its overworked press, but he
-gave Mr. Locke a free hand, and that scholar took to Norris & Baker,
-lithographers, in the Union Building, Wall Street, the drawings which
-had been intrusted to his care by the “medical gentleman immediately
-from Scotland.” Mr. Baker, described by the _Sun_ as quite the most
-talented lithographic artist of the city, worked day and night on his
-delightful task, that the illustrations might be ready when the _Sun’s_
-press should have turned out, in the hours when it was not printing
-_Suns_, a pamphlet containing the astronomical discoveries.
-
-“Dr. Herschel’s great work,” said the _Sun_, “is preparing for
-publication at ten guineas sterling, or fifty dollars; and we shall
-give all the popular substance of it for twelve or thirteen cents.”
-The pamphlets were to be sold two for a quarter; the lithographs at
-twenty-five cents for the set.
-
-Most newspapers that mentioned the discovery of human creatures on
-the moon were credulous. The _Evening Post_, edited by William Cullen
-Bryant and Fitz-Greene Halleck--“the chanting cherubs of the _Post_,”
-as Colonel Webb was wont to call them--only skirted the edge of doubt:
-
- That there should be winged people in the moon does not
- strike us as more wonderful than the existence of such a
- race of beings on earth; and that there does or did exist
- such a race rests on the evidence of that most veracious of
- voyagers, _Peter Wilkins_, whose celebrated work not only gives
- an account of the general appearance and habits of a most
- interesting tribe of flying Indians, but also of those more
- delicate and engaging traits which the author was enabled to
- discover by reason of the conjugal relations he entered into
- with one of the females of the winged tribe.
-
-_Peter Wilkins_ was the hero of Robert Paltock’s imaginative book, “The
-Life and Adventures of Peter Wilkins, a Cornish Man,” published in
-London in 1750. Paltock’s winged people, said Southey, were “the most
-beautiful creatures of imagination that were ever devised.”
-
-The instalment of the discoveries printed on August 29 revealed to the
-reader the great Temple of the Moon, built of polished sapphire, with a
-roof of some yellow metal, supported by columns seventy feet high and
-six feet in diameter:
-
- It was open on all sides, and seemed to contain neither seats,
- altars, nor offerings, but it was a light and airy structure,
- nearly a hundred feet high from its white, glistening floor to
- the glowing roof, and it stood upon a round, green eminence
- on the eastern side of the valley. We afterward, however,
- discovered two others which were in every respect facsimiles of
- this one; but in neither did we perceive any visitants except
- flocks of wild doves, which alighted on its lustrous pinnacles.
-
- Had the devotees of these temples gone the way of all living,
- or were the latter merely historical monuments? What did the
- ingenious builders mean by the globe surrounded with flames?
- Did they, by this, record any past calamity of _their_ world,
- or predict any future one of _ours_? I by no means despair
- of ultimately solving not only these, but a thousand other
- questions which present themselves respecting the object in
- this planet; for not the millionth part of her surface has yet
- been explored, and we have been more desirous of collecting
- the greatest possible number of new facts than of indulging in
- speculative theories, however seductive to the imagination.
-
-The conclusion of this astounding narrative, which totalled eleven
-thousand words, was printed on August 31. In the valley of the temple a
-new set of man-bats was found:
-
- We had no opportunity of seeing them actually engaged in any
- work of industry or art; and, so far as we could judge, they
- spent their happy hours in collecting various fruits in the
- woods, in eating, flying, bathing, and loitering about upon the
- summits of precipices.
-
-One night, when the astronomers finished work, they neglectfully left
-the telescope facing the eastern horizon. The risen sun burned a hole
-fifteen feet in circumference through the reflecting chamber, and
-ruined part of the observatory. When the damage was repaired, the moon
-was invisible, and so Dr. Herschel turned his attention to Saturn.
-Most of the discoveries here were technical, as the _Sun_ assured its
-readers, and the narrative came to an end. An editorial note added:
-
- This concludes the supplement with the exception of forty pages
- of illustrative and mathematical notes, which would greatly
- enhance the size and price of this work without commensurably
- adding to its general interest. In order that our readers may
- judge for themselves whether we have withheld from them any
- matter of general comprehension and interest, we insert one of
- the notes from those pages of the supplement which we thought
- it useless to reprint; and it may be considered a fair sample
- of the remainder. For ourselves, we know nothing of mathematics
- beyond counting dollars and cents, but to geometricians
- the following new method of measuring the height of the
- lunar mountains, adopted by Sir John Herschel, may be quite
- interesting.
-
-Perhaps the pretended method of measuring lunar mountains was
-not interesting to laymen, but it may have been the cause of an
-intellectual tumult at Yale. At all events, a deputation from that
-college hurried to the steamboat and came to New York to see the
-wonderful supplement. The collegians saw Mr. Day, and voiced their
-desire.
-
-“Surely,” he replied, “you do not doubt that we have the supplement in
-our possession? I suppose the magazine is somewhere up-stairs, but I
-consider it almost an insult that you should ask to see it.”
-
-On their way out the Yale men heard, perhaps from the “devil,” that one
-Locke was interested in the matter of the moon, that he had handled
-the supplement, and that he was to be seen at the foot of the stairs,
-smoking his cigar and gazing across City Hall Park. They advanced
-upon him, and he, less brusque than Mr. Day, told the scientific
-pilgrims that the supplement was in the hands of a printer in William
-Street--giving the name and address.
-
-As the Yale men disappeared in the direction of the printery, Locke
-started for the same goal, and more rapidly. When the Yalensians
-arrived, the printer, primed by Locke, told them that the precious
-pamphlet had just been sent to another shop, where certain
-proof-reading was to be done. And so they went from post to pillar
-until the hour came for their return to New Haven. It would not do to
-linger in New York, for Professors Denison Olmsted and Elias Loomis
-were that very day getting their first peep at Halley’s comet, about
-to make the regular appearance with which it favours the earth every
-seventy-six years.
-
-But Yale was not the only part of intellectual New England to be deeply
-interested in the moon and its bat-men. The _Gazette_ of Hampshire,
-Massachusetts, insisted that Edward Everett, who was then running for
-Governor, had these astronomical discoveries in mind when he declared
-that “we know not how soon the mind, in its researches into the
-labyrinth of nature, would grasp some clue which would lead to a new
-universe and change the aspect of the world.”
-
-Harriet Martineau, who was touring America at the time, wrote in
-her “Sketches of Western Travel” that the ladies of Springfield,
-Massachusetts, subscribed to a fund to send missionaries to the
-benighted luminary. When the _Sun_ articles reached Paris, they were at
-once translated into illustrated pamphlets, and the caricaturists of
-the Paris newspapers drew pictures of the man-bats going through the
-streets singing “_Au Clair de la Lune_.” London, Edinburgh, and Glasgow
-made haste to issue editions of the work.
-
-Meanwhile, of course, Sir John Herschel was busy with his telescope at
-the Cape, all unaware of his expanded fame in the north. Caleb Weeks,
-of Jamaica, Long Island, the Adam Forepaugh of his day, was setting out
-for South Africa to get a supply of giraffes for his menagerie, and he
-had the honour of laying in the great astronomer’s hand a clean copy of
-the pamphlet. To say that Sir John was amazed at the _Sun’s_ enterprise
-would be putting it mildly. When he had read the story through, he went
-to Caleb Weeks and said that he was overcome; that he never could hope
-to live up to the fame that had been heaped upon him.
-
-In New York, meanwhile, Richard Adams Locke had spilled the beans.
-There was a reporter named Finn, once employed by the _Sun_, but later
-a scribe for the _Journal of Commerce_. He and Locke were friends.
-One afternoon Gerard Hallock, who was David Hale’s partner in the
-proprietorship of the _Journal of Commerce_, called Finn to his office
-and told him to get extra copies of the _Sun_ containing the moon
-story, as the _Journal_ had decided, in justice to its readers, that it
-must reprint it.
-
-Perhaps at the _Sun_ office, perhaps in the tap-room of the Washington
-Hotel, Finn met Locke, and they went socially about to public places.
-Finn told Locke of the work on which he was engaged, and said that, as
-the moon story was already being put into type at the _Journal_ office,
-it was likely that it would be printed on the morrow.
-
-“Don’t print it right away,” said Locke. “I wrote it myself.”
-
-The next day the _Journal_, instead of being silently grateful for the
-warning, denounced the alleged discoveries as a hoax. Mr. Bennett, who
-by this time had the _Herald_ once more in running order, not only
-cried “Hoax!” but named Locke as the author.
-
-Probably Locke was glad that the suspense was over. He is said to have
-told a friend that he had not intended the story as a hoax, but as
-satire.
-
-“It is quite evident,” he said, as he saw the whole country take the
-marvellous narrative seriously, “that it is an abortive satire; and I
-am the best self-hoaxed man in the whole community.”
-
-But while the _Sun’s_ rivals denounced the hoax, the _Sun_ was not
-quick to admit that it had gulled not only its own readers but almost
-all the scientific world. Barring the casual conversation between
-Locke and Finn, there was no evidence plain enough to convince the
-layman that it was a hoax. The _Sun_ fenced lightly and skilfully
-with all controverters. On September 16, more than two weeks after
-the conclusion of the story, it printed a long editorial article on
-the subject of the authenticity of the discoveries, mentioning the
-wide-spread interest that had been displayed in them:
-
- Most of those who incredulously regard the whole narrative as
- a hoax are generously enthusiastic in panegyrizing not only
- what they are pleased to denominate its ingenuity and talent,
- but also its useful effect in diverting the public mind, for
- a while, from that bitter apple of discord, the abolition of
- slavery, which still unhappily threatens to turn the milk of
- human kindness into rancorous gall. That the astronomical
- discoveries have had this effect is obvious from our exchange
- papers. Who knows, therefore, whether these discoveries in
- the moon, with the visions of the blissful harmony of her
- inhabitants which they have revealed, may not have had the
- effect of reproving the discords of a country which might be
- happy as a paradise, which has valleys not less lovely than
- those of the Ruby Colosseum, of the Unicorn, or of the Triads;
- and which has not inferior facilities for social intercourse to
- those possessed by the _vespertiliones-homines_, or any other
- _homines_ whatever?
-
- Some persons of little faith but great good nature, who
- consider the “moon story,” as it is vulgarly called, an adroit
- fiction of our own, are quite of the opinion that this was the
- amiable moral which the writer had in view. Other readers,
- however, construe the whole as an elaborate satire upon the
- monstrous fabrications of the political press of the country
- and the various genera and species of its party editors. In
- the blue goat with the single horn, mentioned as it is in
- connection with the royal arms of England, many persons fancy
- they perceive the characteristics of a notorious foreigner who
- is the supervising editor of one of our largest morning papers.
-
- We confess that this idea of intended satire somewhat shook our
- own faith in the genuineness of the extracts from the Edinburgh
- _Journal of Science_ with which a gentleman connected with our
- office furnished us as “from a medical gentleman immediately
- from Scotland.”
-
- Certain correspondents have been urging us to come out and
- confess the whole to be a hoax; but this we can by no means do
- until we have the testimony of the English or Scotch papers
- to corroborate such a declaration. In the mean time let every
- reader of the account examine it and enjoy his own opinion.
- Many intelligent and scientific persons will believe it true,
- and will continue to do so to their lives’ end; whilst the
- skepticism of others would not be removed though they were in
- Dr. Herschel’s observatory itself.
-
-The New York showmen of that day were keen for novelty, and the moon
-story helped them to it. Mr. Hannington, who ran the diorama in the
-City Saloon--which was not a barroom, but an amusement house--on
-Broadway opposite St. Paul’s Church, put on “The Lunar Discoveries; a
-Brilliant Illustration of the Scientific Observation of the Surface of
-the Moon, to Which Will Be Added the Reported Lunar Observations of
-Sir John Herschel.” Hannington had been showing “The Deluge” and “The
-Burning of Moscow,” but the wonders of the moon proved to be far more
-attractive to his patrons. The _Sun_ approved of this moral spectacle:
-
- Hannington forever and still years afterward, say we! His
- panorama of the lunar discoveries, in connexion with the
- beautiful dioramas, are far superior to any other exhibition in
- this country.
-
-Not less popular than Hannington’s panorama was an extravaganza put
-on by Thomas Hamblin at the Bowery Theatre, and called “Moonshine, or
-Lunar Discoveries.” A _Sun_ man went to review it, and had to stand up;
-but he was patient enough to stay, and he wrote this about the show:
-
- It is quite evident that Hamblin does not believe a word of the
- whole story, or he would never have taken the liberties with
- it which he has. The wings of the man-bats and lady-bats, who
- are of an orange color and look like angels in the jaundice,
- are well contrived for effect; and the dialogue is highly witty
- and pungent. Major Jack Downing’s blowing up a whole flock of
- winged lunarians with a combustible bundle of Abolition tracts,
- after vainly endeavoring to catch a long aim at them with his
- rifle, is capital; as are also his puns and jokes upon the
- splendid scenery of the Ruby Colosseum. Take it altogether, it
- is the most amusing thing that has been on these boards for a
- long time.
-
-Thus the moon eclipsed the regular stars of the New York stage. Even
-Mrs. Duff, the most pathetic _Isabella_ that ever appeared in “The
-Fatal Marriage,” saw her audiences thin out at the Franklin Theatre.
-Sol Smith’s drolleries in “The Lying Valet,” at the Park Theatre, could
-not rouse the laughter that the burlesque man-bats caused at the Bowery.
-
-All this time there was a disappointed man in Baltimore; disappointed
-because the moon stories had caused him to abandon one of the most
-ambitious stories he had attempted. This was Edgar Allan Poe, and the
-story he dropped was “Hans Pfaall.”
-
-In the spring of 1835 the Harpers issued an edition of Sir John
-Herschel’s “Treatise on Astronomy,” and Poe, who read it, was
-deeply interested in the chapter on the possibility of future lunar
-investigations:
-
- The theme excited my fancy, and I longed to give free rein to
- it in depicting my day-dreams about the scenery of the moon; in
- short, I longed to write a story embodying these dreams. The
- obvious difficulty, of course, was that of accounting for the
- narrator’s acquaintance with the satellite; and the equally
- obvious mode of surmounting the difficulty was the supposition
- of an extraordinary telescope.
-
-Poe spoke of this ambition to John Pendleton Kennedy, of Baltimore,
-already the author of “Swallow Barn,” and later to have the honour of
-writing, as the result of a jest by Thackeray, the fourth chapter of
-the second volume of “The Virginians.” Kennedy assured Poe that the
-mechanics of telescope construction were so fixed that it would be
-impossible to impart verisimilitude to a tale based on a superefficient
-telescope. So Poe resorted to other means of bringing the moon close to
-the reader’s eye:
-
- I fell back upon a style half plausible, half bantering, and
- resolved to give what interest I could to an actual passage
- from the earth to the moon, describing the lunar scenery as if
- surveyed and personally examined by the narrator.
-
-Poe wrote the first part of “Hans Pfaall,” and published it in the
-_Southern Literary Messenger_, of which he was then editor, at
-Richmond, Virginia. Three weeks afterward the first instalment of
-Locke’s moon story appeared in the _Sun_. At the moment Poe believed
-that his idea had been kidnapped:
-
- No sooner had I seen the paper than I understood the jest,
- which not for a moment could I doubt had been suggested by
- my own _jeu d’esprit_. Some of the New York journals--the
- _Transcript_, among others--saw the matter in the same light,
- and published the moon story side by side with “Hans Pfaall,”
- thinking that the author of the one had been detected in the
- author of the other.
-
- Although the details are, with some exceptions, very
- dissimilar, still I maintain that the general features
- of the two compositions are nearly identical. Both are
- hoaxes--although one is in a tone of mere banter, the other of
- down-right earnest; both hoaxes are on one subject, astronomy;
- both on the same point of that subject, the moon; both
- professed to have derived exclusive information from a foreign
- country; and both attempt to give plausibility by minuteness of
- scientific detail. Add to all this, that nothing of a similar
- nature had even been attempted before these two hoaxes, the one
- of which followed immediately upon the heels of the other.
-
- Having stated the case, however, in this form, I am bound to
- do Mr. Locke the justice to say that he denies having seen my
- article prior to the publication of his own; I am bound to add,
- also, that I believe him.
-
-Nor can any unbiassed person who reads, for purpose of comparison, the
-“Astronomical Discoveries” and “Hans Pfaall” suspect that Locke based
-his hoax on the story of the Rotterdam debtor who blew his creditors
-to bits and sailed to the moon in a balloon. Chalk and cheese are much
-more alike than these two products of genius.
-
-Poe may have intended to fall back upon “a style half plausible,
-half bantering,” as he described it, but there is not the slightest
-plausibility about “Hans Pfaall.” It is as near to humour as the great,
-dark mind could get. “Mere banter,” as he later described it, is
-better. The very episode of the dripping pitcher of water, used to wake
-_Hans_ at an altitude where even alcohol would freeze, is enough proof,
-if proof at all were necessary, to strip the tale of its last shred
-of verisimilitude. No child of twelve would believe in _Hans_, while
-Locke’s fictitious “Dr. Grant” deceived nine-tenths--the estimate is
-Poe’s--of those who read the narrative of the great doings at the Cape
-of Good Hope.
-
-Locke had spoiled a promising tale for Poe--who tore up the second
-instalment of “Hans Pfaall” when he “found that he could add very
-little to the minute and authentic account of Sir John Herschel”--but
-the poet took pleasure, in later years, in picking the _Sun’s_ moon
-story to bits.
-
-“That the public were misled, even for an instant,” Poe declared in his
-critical essay on Locke’s writings, “merely proves the gross ignorance
-which, ten or twelve years ago, was so prevalent on astronomical
-topics.”
-
-According to Locke’s own description of the telescope, said Poe,
-it could not have brought the moon nearer than five miles; yet Sir
-John--Locke’s Sir John--saw flowers and described the eyes of birds.
-Locke had an ocean on the moon, although it had been established beyond
-question that the visible side of the moon is dry. The most ridiculous
-thing about the moon story, said Poe, was that the narrator described
-the entire bodies of the man-bats, whereas, if they were seen at all by
-an observer on the earth, they would manifestly appear as if walking
-heels up and head down, after the fashion of flies on a ceiling.
-
-And yet the hoax, Poe admits, “was, upon the whole, the greatest hit
-in the way of sensation--of merely popular sensation--ever made by any
-similar fiction either in America or Europe.” Whether Locke intended it
-as satire or not--a debatable point--it was a hoax of the first water.
-It deceived more persons, and for a longer time, than any other fake
-ever written: and, as the _Sun_ pointed out, it hurt nobody--except,
-perhaps, the feelings of Dr. Dick, of Dundee--and it took the public
-mind away from less agreeable matters. Some of the wounded scientists
-roared, but the public, particularly the New York public, took the
-exposure of Locke’s literary villainy just as Sir John Herschel
-accepted it--with a grin.
-
-As for the inspiration of the moon story, the record is nebulous.
-If Poe was really grieved at his first thought that Locke had taken
-from him the main imaginative idea--that the moon was inhabited--then
-Poe was oversensitive or uninformed, for that idea was at least two
-centuries old.
-
-Francis Godwin, an English bishop and author, who was born in 1562, and
-who died just two centuries before the _Sun_ was first printed, wrote
-“The Man in the Moone, or a Discourse of a Voyage Thither by Domingo
-Gonsales, the Speedy Messenger.” This was published in London in 1638,
-five years after the author’s death.
-
-In the same year there appeared a book called “The Discovery of a World
-in the Moone,” which contained arguments to prove the moon habitable.
-It was written by John Wilkins--no relative of the fictitious _Peter_
-of Paltock’s story, but a young English clergyman who later became
-Bishop of Chester, and who was the first secretary of the Royal
-Society. Two years later Wilkins added to his “Discovery of a World” a
-“Discourse Concerning the Possibility of a Passage Thither.”
-
-Cyrano de Bergerac, he of the long nose and the passion for poetry and
-duelling, later to be immortalized by Rostand, read these products
-of two Englishmen’s fancy, and about 1650 he turned out his joyful
-“Histoire Comique des Etats et Empires de la Lune.” But Bergerac had
-also been influenced by Dante and by Lucian, the latter being the
-supposed inspiration of the fanciful narratives of Rabelais and Swift.
-Perhaps these writers influenced Godwin and Wilkins also; so the
-trail, zigzagged and ramifying, goes back to the second century. It is
-hard to indict a man for being inspired, and in the case of the moon
-story there is no evidence of plagiarism. If “Hans Pfaall” were to be
-compared with Locke’s story for hoaxing qualities, it would only suffer
-by the comparison. It would appear as the youthful product of a tyro,
-as against the cunning work of an artist of almost devilish ingenuity.
-
-Is there any doubt that the moon hoax was the sole work of Richard
-Adams Locke? So far as concerns the record of the _Sun_, the comments
-of Locke’s American contemporaries, and the belief of Benjamin H. Day,
-expressed in 1883 in a talk with Edward P. Mitchell, the answer must
-be in the negative. Yet it must be set down, as a literary curiosity
-at least, that it has been believed in France and by at least one
-English antiquary of repute that the moon hoax was the work of a
-Frenchman--Jean Nicolas Nicollet, the astronomer.
-
-Nicollet was born at Cluses, in Savoy, in 1786. First a cowherd, he did
-not learn to read until he was twelve. Once at school his progress was
-rapid, and at nineteen he become preceptor of mathematics at Chambry.
-He went to Paris, where in 1817 he was appointed secretary-librarian
-of the Observatory, and he studied astronomy with Laplace, who refers
-to Nicollet’s assistance in his works. In 1823 he was appointed to the
-government bureau of longitudes, and at the same time was professor of
-mathematics in the College of Louis le Grand.
-
-He became a master of English, and through this knowledge and his own
-mathematical genius he was able to assemble, for the use of the French
-life-insurance companies, all that was known, and much that he himself
-discovered, of actuarial methods; this being incorporated in his letter
-to M. Outrequin on “Assurances Having for Their Basis the Probable
-Duration of Human Life.” He also wrote “Memoirs upon the Measure of an
-Arc of Parallel Midway Between the Pole and the Equator” (1826), and
-“Course of Mathematics for the Use of Mariners” (1830).
-
-In 1831 Nicollet failed in speculation, losing not only his own fortune
-but that of others. He came to the United States, arriving early in
-1832, the very year that Locke came to America. It is probable that
-he was in New York, but there is no evidence as to the length of
-his stay. It is known, however, that he was impoverished, and that
-he was assisted by Bishop Chanche, of Natchez, to go on with his
-chosen work--an exploration of the Mississippi and its tributaries.
-He made astronomical and barometrical observations, determined the
-geographical position and elevation of many important points, and
-studied Indian lore.
-
-The United States government was so well pleased with Nicollet’s
-work that it sent him to the Far West for further investigations,
-with Lieutenant John C. Frémont as assistant. His “Geology of the
-Upper Mississippi Region and of the Cretaceous Formation of the Upper
-Missouri” was one of the results of his journeys. After this he tried,
-through letters, to regain his lost standing in France by seeking
-election to the Paris Academy of Sciences, but he was black-balled,
-and, broken-hearted, he died in Washington in 1843.
-
-The Englishman who believed that Nicollet was the author of the moon
-hoax was Augustus De Morgan, father of the late William De Morgan, the
-novelist, and himself a distinguished mathematician and litterateur.
-He was professor of mathematics at University College, London, at the
-time when the moon pamphlet first appeared in England. His “Budget
-of Paradoxes,” an interesting collection of literary curiosities
-and puzzles, which he had written, but not carefully assembled, was
-published in 1872, the year after his death.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE FIRST INSTALLMENT OF THE MOON HOAX
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- A MOON SCENE, FROM LOCKE’S GREAT DECEPTION
-]
-
-Two fragments, printed separately in this volume, refer to the moon
-hoax. The first is this:
-
- “Some Account of the Great Astronomical Discoveries Lately
- Made by Sir John Herschel at the Cape of Good Hope.”--Second
- Edition, London, 12mo, 1836.
-
-This is a curious hoax, evidently written by a person versed in
-astronomy and clever at introducing probable circumstances and
-undesigned coincidences. It first appeared in a newspaper. It makes Sir
-J. Herschel discover men, animals, _et cetera_, in the moon, of which
-much detail is given. There seems to have been a French edition, the
-original, and English editions in America, whence the work came into
-Britain; but whether the French was published in America or at Paris
-I do not know. There is no doubt that it was produced in the United
-States by M. Nicollet, an astronomer, once of Paris, and a fugitive of
-some kind.
-
-About him I have heard two stories. First, that he fled to America with
-funds not his own, and that this book was a mere device to raise the
-wind. Secondly, that he was a protégé of Laplace, and of the Polignac
-party, and also an outspoken man. That after the Revolution he was so
-obnoxious to the republican party that he judged it prudent to quit
-France; which he did in debt, leaving money for his creditors, but
-not enough, with M. Bouvard. In America he connected himself with an
-assurance office. The moon story was written, and sent to France,
-chiefly with the intention of entrapping M. Arago, Nicollet’s especial
-foe, into the belief of it. And those who narrate this version of the
-story wind up by saying that M. Arago _was_ entrapped, and circulated
-the wonders through Paris until a letter from Nicollet to M. Bouvard
-explained the hoax.
-
-I have no personal knowledge of either story; but as the poor man had
-to endure the first, it is but right that the second should be told
-with it.
-
-The second fragment reads as follows:
-
- “The Moon Hoax; or, the Discovery That the Moon Has a Vast
- Population of Human Beings.” By Richard Adams Locke.--New
- York, 1859.
-
-This is a reprint of the hoax already mentioned. I suppose “R. A.
-Locke” is the name assumed by M. Nicollet. The publisher informs us
-that when the hoax first appeared day by day in a morning newspaper,
-the circulation increased fivefold, and the paper obtained a permanent
-footing. Besides this, an edition of sixty thousand was sold off in
-less than one month.
-
-This discovery was also published under the name of A. R. Grant.
-Sohnke’s “Bibliotheca Mathematica” confounds this Grant with Professor
-R. Grant of Glasgow, the author of the “History of Physical Astronomy,”
-who is accordingly made to guarantee the discoveries in the moon. I
-hope Adams Locke will not merge in J. C. Adams, the codiscoverer of
-Neptune. Sohnke gives the titles of three French translations of “The
-Moon Hoax” at Paris, of one at Bordeaux, and of Italian translations at
-Parma, Palermo, and Milan.
-
-A correspondent, who is evidently fully master of details, which he has
-given at length, informs me that “The Moon Hoax” first appeared in the
-New York _Sun_, of which R. A. Locke was editor. It so much resembled
-a story then recently published by Edgar A. Poe, in a Southern paper,
-“Adventures of Hans Pfaall,” that some New York journals published
-the two side by side. Mr. Locke, when he left the New York _Sun_,
-started another paper, and discovered the manuscript of Mungo Park;
-but this did not deceive. The _Sun_, however, continued its career,
-and had a great success in an account of a balloon voyage from England
-to America, in seventy-five hours, by Mr. Monck Mason, Mr. Harrison
-Ainsworth, and others.
-
-I have no doubt that M. Nicollet was the author of “The Moon Hoax,”
-written in a way which marks the practised observatory astronomer
-beyond all doubt, and by evidence seen in the most minute details.
-Nicollet had an eye to Europe. I suppose that he took Poe’s story
-and made it a basis for his own. Mr. Locke, it would seem, when he
-attempted a fabrication for himself, did not succeed.
-
-In his remark that “there seems to have been a French edition, the
-original,” Augustus De Morgan was undoubtedly misled, for every
-authority consultable agrees that the French pamphlets were merely
-translations of the story originally printed in the _Sun_; and De
-Morgan had learned this when he wrote his second note on the subject.
-
-The M. Arago whom De Morgan believes Nicollet sought to entrap was
-Dominique François Arago, the celebrated astronomer. In 1830, as a
-reward for his many accomplishments, he was made perpetual secretary
-of the Paris Academy of Sciences, and in the following year--the
-year of Nicollet’s fall from grace--he was elected to the Chamber of
-Deputies. As to the intimation that Arago was really misled by the moon
-story, it is unlikely. W. N. Griggs, a contemporary of Locke, insists
-in a memoir of that journalist that the narrative was read by Arago to
-the members of the Academy, and was received with mingled denunciation
-and laughter. But hoaxing Arago in a matter of astronomy would have
-been a difficult feat. Surely the discrepancies pointed out by Poe
-would have been noticed immediately.
-
-It is, however, easy to understand De Morgan’s belief that Nicollet
-was the author of the moon story. Much of the narrative, particularly
-parts which have here been omitted, is made up of technicalities which
-could have come only from the pen of a man versed in the intricacies
-of astronomical science. They were not put into the story to interest
-_Sun_ readers, for they are far over the layman’s head, but for the
-purpose of adding verisimilitude to a yarn which, stripped of the
-technical trimmings, would have been pretty bald.
-
-It was plain to De Morgan that Nicollet was one of the few men alive in
-1835 who could have woven the scientific fabric in which the hoax was
-disguised. It was also apparent to him that Nicollet, jealous of the
-popularity of Arago, might have had a motive for launching a satire, if
-not a hoax. And then there was Nicollet’s presence in America at the
-time of the moon story’s publication, Nicollet’s knowledge of English,
-and Nicollet’s poverty. The coincidences are interesting, if nothing
-more.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Let us see what the French said about Nicollet and the story that came
-to the _Sun_ from “a medical gentleman immediately from Scotland.” In
-a sketch of Nicollet printed in the “Biographie Universelle” (Michaud,
-Paris, 1884), the following appears:
-
- There has been attributed to him an article which appeared in
- the daily papers of France, and which, in the form of a letter
- dated from the United States, spoke of an improvement in the
- telescope invented by the learned astronomer Herschel, who was
- then at the Cape of Good Hope. It has been generally and with
- much probability attributed to Nicollet.
-
- With the aid of this admirable improvement Herschel was
- supposed to have succeeded in discovering on the surface of the
- moon live beings, buildings of various kinds, and a multitude
- of other interesting things. The description of these objects
- and the ingenious method employed by the English astronomer to
- attain his purpose was so detailed, and covered with a veneer
- of science so skilfully applied, that the general public was
- startled by the announcement of the discovery, of which North
- America hastened to send us the news.
-
- It has even been said that several astronomers and physicists
- of our country were taken in for a moment. That seems hardly
- probable to us. It was easy to perceive that it was a hoax
- written by a learned and mischievous person.
-
-The “Nouvelle Biographie Générale” (Paris, 1862), says of Nicollet:
-
- He is believed to be the author of the anonymous pamphlet
- which appeared in 1836 on the discoveries in the moon made by
- Herschel at the Cape of Good Hope.
-
-Cruel, consistent Locke, never to have written down the details of
-the conception and birth of the best invention that ever spoofed the
-world! He leaves history to wonder whether it be possible that, with
-one word added, the French biographer was right, and that it was “a
-hoax written by a learned and _a_ mischievous person.” Certain it is
-that Nicollet never wrote all of the moon story; certain, too, that
-Locke wrote much, if not all of it. The calculations of the angles of
-reflection might have been Nicollet’s, but the blue unicorn is the
-unicorn of Locke.
-
-No man can say when the germ of the story first took shape. It might
-have been designed at any time after Herschel laid the plans for his
-voyage to the Cape of Good Hope, and that was at least two years before
-it appeared in the _Sun_. Was Nicollet in New York then, and did he and
-Locke lay their heads together across a table at the American Hotel and
-plan the great deceit?
-
-There was one head full of figures and the stars; another crammed with
-the imagination that brought forth the fire-making biped beavers and
-the fascinating, if indecorous, human bats. If they never met, more is
-the pity. Whether they met, none can say. Go to ask the ghosts of the
-American Hotel, and you find it gone, and in its place the Woolworth
-Building, earth’s spear levelled at the laughing moon.
-
-Whatever happened, the credit must rest with Richard Adams Locke.
-Even if the technical embellishments of the moon story were borrowed,
-still his was the genius that builded the great temple, made flowers
-to bloom in the lunar valleys, and grew the filmy wings on the
-_vespertilio-homo_. His was the art that caused the bricklayer of
-Cherry Street to sit late beside his candle, spelling out the rare
-story with joyous labour. It must have been a reward to Locke, even to
-the last of his seventy years, to know that he had made people read
-newspapers who never had read them before; for that is what he really
-accomplished by this huge, complex lie.
-
-“From the epoch of the hoax,” wrote Poe, “the Sun shone with
-unmitigated splendor. Its success firmly established the ‘penny system’
-throughout the country, and (through the _Sun_) consequently we are
-indebted to the genius of Mr. Locke for one of the most important steps
-ever yet taken in the pathway of human progress.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-DAY FINDS A RIVAL IN BENNETT
-
- _The Success of “The Sun” Leads to the Founding of the
- “Herald.”--Enterprises and Quarrels of a Furious Young
- Journalism.--The Picturesque Webb.--Maria Monk._
-
-
-The usefulness of Richard Adams Locke as a _Sun_ reporter did not end
-with the moon hoax. Far from expressing regret that its employee had
-gulled half the earth, the _Sun_ continued to meet exposure with a
-calm and almost flippant front, insisting that it would never admit
-the non-existence of the man-bats until official contradiction arrived
-from Edinburgh or the Cape of Good Hope. The paper realized the value,
-in public interest, of Locke’s name, and was proud to announce, in
-November of 1835, that it had commissioned Locke to write another
-series of articles, telling the story of the “Life and Adventures of
-Manuel Fernandez, otherwise Richard C. Jackson, convicted of the murder
-of John Roberts, and to be executed at the Bellevue Prison, New York,
-on Thursday next, the 19th instant.”
-
-This was a big beat, for the young men of the _Courier and Enquirer_,
-and perhaps of the _Herald_, had been trying to get a yarn from
-the criminal, a Spaniard who had served in foreign wars, had been
-captured by savages in Africa, and had had many other adventures.
-Fernandez was convicted of killing another sailor for his attention
-to Fernandez’s mistress, a Mrs. Schultz; and for about three weeks
-Locke spent several hours a day in the condemned man’s cell. The “Life
-and Adventures,” which was printed on the first page of the _Sun_, ran
-serially from November 14 to November 25, and was read with avidity.
-
-It was ironical that the hero of the story, who had expressed to Locke
-an eagerness to have his career set before the public in its true
-light, was prevented from reading the later instalments; for the law,
-taking no cognizance of the literary side of the matter, went about its
-business, and Fernandez was hanged in the Bellevue yard on the 19th, a
-morning when the _Sun’s_ narrative had wrecked the sailor off the coast
-of Wales. Mr. Locke reported the execution and drew upon the autopsy to
-verify the “Adventures.”
-
- It is an interesting fact that the corpse of Fernandez
- exhibited marks of all those serious injuries which are
- recorded in the course of our narrative of his life, more
- particularly that dreadful fracture of his vertebræ which he
- suffered in Leghorn.
-
-The mere word of a “medical gentleman immediately from Scotland” was no
-longer to be relied upon!
-
-The _Sun’s_ story of the great fire of December, 1835, sounds like
-Locke, but it may have been written by one of the other bright young
-men who worked for Benjamin H. Day. Among them were William M. Prall,
-who succeeded Wisner as the court reporter, and Lucius Robinson.
-
-“Robinson seemed to be a young man of excellent ideas, but not very
-highly educated,” Mr. Day remarked about fifty years later.
-
-Perhaps the Day standards were very high. Robinson was twenty six when
-he worked on the _Sun_. He had been educated at an academy in Delhi,
-New York, and after that had studied law and been admitted to the bar.
-He was too poor to practise at once, and went into newspaper work to
-make a living. After leaving the _Sun_ he was elected district attorney
-of Greene County, and in 1843 was appointed master of chancery in
-New York. He left the Democratic party when the Republican party was
-organized, but returned to his old political allegiance after the Civil
-War. In 1876 he was elected Governor of New York--an achievement which
-still left him a little less famous than his fellow reporter, Locke.
-
-“Give us one of your real Moscow fires,” sighed the _Sun_ in the first
-week of its existence.
-
-The prayer was answered a little more than two years later, when about
-twenty blocks south of Wall Street, between Broad Street and the
-East River, were consumed. The fire started late in the evening of
-Wednesday, December 16, and all that the _Sun_ printed about it the
-next morning was one triple-leaded paragraph:
-
- POSTSCRIPT--HALF PAST 1 O’CLOCK--A TREMENDOUS CONFLAGRATION
- is now raging in the lower part of the city. The Merchants’
- Exchange is in flames. Nearly all the blocks in the triangle
- bounded by William and Wall Streets and the East River are
- consumed! Several hundred buildings are already down, and the
- firemen have given out. God only knows when the fire will be
- arrested.
-
-On Friday morning the _Sun_ had two and a half columns about the fire,
-and gave an approximately correct estimate that seven hundred buildings
-had been burned, at a loss of twenty million dollars. The calamity
-provided an opportunity for the fine writing then indulged in, and the
-fire reporter did not overlook it; nor did he forget Moscow. Here are
-typical extracts:
-
- Where but thirty hours since was the rich and prosperous
- theater of a great and productive commerce, where enterprise
- and wealth energized with bold and commanding efforts, now
- sits despondency in sackcloth and a wide and dreary waste of
- desolation reigns.
-
- It seemed as if God were running in his anger and sweeping away
- with the besom of his wrath the proudest monuments of man.
- Destruction traveled and triumphed on every breeze, and billows
- of fire rolled over and buried in their burning bosoms the
- hopes and fortunes of thousands. Like the devouring elements
- when it fed on Moscow’s palaces and towers, it was literally
- a “sea of fire,” and the terrors of that night of wo and ruin
- rolling years will not be able to efface.
-
- The merchants of the First Ward, like Marius in the ruins of
- Carthage, sit with melancholy moans, gazing at the graves of
- their fortunes, and the mournful mementoes of the dreadful
- devastation that reigns.
-
-On the afternoon of the following day the _Sun_ got out an extra
-edition of thirty thousand copies, its normal morning issue of
-twenty-three thousand being too small to satisfy the popular demand.
-The presses ran without stopping for nearly twenty-four hours.
-
-On Monday, the 21st, the _Sun_ had the enterprise to print a map of
-the burned district. Copies of the special fire editions went all over
-the world. At least one of them ran up against poetic justice. When it
-reached Canton, China, six months after the fire, the English newspaper
-there classed the story of the conflagration with Locke’s “Astronomical
-Discoveries,” and begged its readers not to be alarmed by the new hoax.
-
-The _Sun_ had grown more and more prosperous. In the latter part of
-1835 its four pages, each eleven and one-half by eighteen inches,
-were so taken up with advertising that it was not unusual to find
-reading-matter in only five of the twenty columns. Some days the
-publisher would apologize for leaving out advertisements, on other
-days, for having so little room for news. He promised relief, and it
-came on January 4, 1836, when the paper was enlarged. It remained a
-four-page _Sun_, but the pages were increased in size to fourteen by
-twenty inches. In announcing the enlargement, the third in a year, the
-_Sun_ remarked:
-
- We are now enabled to print considerably more than twenty-two
- thousand copies, on both sides, in less than eight hours. No
- establishment in this country has such facilities, and no daily
- newspaper in the world enjoys so extensive a circulation.
-
-In the first enlarged edition Mr. Day made the boast that the _Sun_
-now had a circulation more than double that of all the sixpenny
-respectables combined. He had a word, too, about the penny papers that
-had sprung up in the _Sun’s_ wake:
-
- One after another they dropped and fell in quick succession
- as they had sprung up; and all, with but one exception worth
- regarding, have gone to the “receptacle of things lost upon
- earth.” Many of these departed ephemerals have struggled hard
- to keep within their nostrils the breath of life; and it is
- a singular fact that with scarcely an exception they have
- employed, as a means of bringing a knowledge of their being
- before the public, the most unlimited and reckless abuse
- of ourselves, the impeachment of our character, public and
- private; the implications, moral and political; in short,
- calumny in all its forms.
-
- As to the last survivor of them worth note, which remains, we
- have only to say, the little world we opened has proved large
- enough for us both.
-
-The exception to the general rule of early mortality was of course the
-_Herald_. In spite of this broad attitude toward his only successful
-competitor, Day could not keep from swapping verbal shots with
-Bennett. The _Sun_ said:
-
- Bennett, whose only chance of dying an upright man will be that
- of hanging perpendicularly upon a rope, falsely charges the
- proprietor of this paper with being an infidel, the natural
- effect of which calumny will be that every reader will believe
- him to be a good Christian.
-
-Day had a dislike for Colonel Webb, of the _Courier and Enquirer_,
-almost as great as his enmity toward Bennett; so when Webb assaulted
-Bennett on January 19, 1836, it was rather a hard story to write. This
-is the _Sun’s_ account of the fray:
-
- Low as he had fallen, both in the public estimation and his
- own, we were astonished to learn last evening that Colonel
- Webb had stooped so far beneath anything of which we had ever
- conceived it possible for him to be guilty, as publicly,
- and before the eyes of hundreds who knew him, to descend to
- a public personal chastisement of that villainous libel on
- humanity of all kinds, the notorious vagabond Bennett. But so
- it is.
-
- As the story is told to us by an eye-witness, the colonel met
- the brawling coward in Wall Street, took him by the throat,
- and with a cowhide striped the human parody from head to foot.
- For the space of nearly twenty minutes, as we are told, did
- the right arm of the colonel ply his weapon with unremitted
- activity, at which time the bystanders, who evidently enjoyed
- the scene mightily, interceded in behalf of the suffering,
- supplicating wretch, and Webb suffered him to run.
-
- Had it been a dog, or any other decent animal, or had the
- colonel himself with a pair of good long tongs removed a
- polecat from his office, we know not that we would have been so
- much surprised; but that he could, by any possibility, have so
- far descended from himself as to come in public contact with
- the veriest reptile that ever defiled the paths of decency, we
- could not have believed.
-
-Webb’s quarrel with Bennett grew out of the _Herald’s_ financial
-articles. Bennett was the first newspaperman to see the news value of
-Wall Street. When he was a writer on the _Courier and Enquirer_, and
-one of Webb’s most useful men, he made a study of stocks, not as a
-speculator, but as an investigator. He had a taste for money matters.
-In 1824, five years after his arrival in America from the land of his
-birth, Scotland, he tried to establish a commercial school in New York
-and to lecture on political economy. He could not make a go of it, and
-so returned to newspaper work as reporter, paragrapher, and poet.
-
-In 1828 he became Washington correspondent of the _Enquirer_, and
-it was at his suggestion that Webb, in 1829, bought that paper and
-consolidated it with his own _Courier_. Bennett was a Tammany Society
-man, therefore a Jacksonian. He left Webb because of Webb’s support of
-Nicholas Biddle, and started a Jackson organ, the _Pennsylvanian_, in
-Philadelphia. This was a failure.
-
-Meanwhile Bennett had seen the _Sun_ rise, and he felt that there
-must be room for another penny paper in New York. With his knowledge
-of stocks he believed that he could make Wall Street news a telling
-feature. In his second issue of the _Herald_, May 11, 1835, he printed
-the first money-market report, and three days later he ran a table
-of sales on the Stock Exchange. At this time, and for three years
-afterward, Bennett visited Wall Street daily and wrote his own reports.
-
-His flings at the United States Bank, of which Webb’s friend Biddle
-was president, and his stories of alleged stock speculations by the
-colonel himself, were the cause of Webb’s animosity toward his former
-associate. Bennett took Webb’s assault calmly, and even wrote it up
-in the _Herald_, suggesting at the end that Webb’s torn overcoat had
-suffered more damage than anything else.
-
-Day’s quarrel with Bennett, which never reached the physical stage, was
-the natural outcome of an intense rivalry among the most successful
-penny papers of that period--the _Sun_, the _Herald_, and the
-_Transcript_. Against the sixpenny respectables these three were one
-for all and all for one, but against one another they were as venomous
-as a young newspaper of that day felt that it had to be to show that it
-was alive.
-
-Day’s antagonism toward Webb was sporadic. Most of the time the young
-owner of the _Sun_ treated the fiery editor of the _Courier and
-Enquirer_ as flippantly as he could, knowing that Webb liked to be
-taken seriously. Day’s constant _bête noire_ was the commercial and
-foreign editor of Webb’s paper, Mr. Hoskin, an Englishman.
-
-On January 21, 1836, the _Sun_ charged that Webb and Hoskin had
-rigged a “diabolical plot” against it. The sixpenny papers had formed
-a combination for the purpose of sharing the expense of running
-horse-expresses from Philadelphia to New York, bringing the Washington
-news more quickly than the penny papers could get it by mail. The _Sun_
-and the _Transcript_ then formed a combination of their own, and in
-this way saved themselves from being beaten on Jackson’s message, sent
-to Congress in December, 1835.
-
-In January, 1836, Jackson sent a special message to Congress. It
-was delivered on Monday, the 18th, and on Wednesday, the 20th, the
-_Sun_ published a column summary of it. Webb made the charge that his
-messenger from Washington had been lured into Day’s offices, and that
-the _Sun_ got its story by opening the package containing the message
-intended for the _Courier and Enquirer._ The _Sun_ replied that it
-received the message legitimately, and that the whole thing was a
-scheme to discredit Mr. Day and his bookkeeper, Moses Y. Beach:
-
- The insinuation of Webb that we violated the sanctity of a seal
- we hurl back in proud defiance to his own brow.
-
-Webb went to the police and to the grand jury, and for a few days it
-looked as if the hostile editors might reach for something of larger
-calibre than pens. Thus the _Sun_ of January 22:
-
- We were informed yesterday at the police office, and
- subsequently by a gentleman from Wall Street, that Webb, of
- the _Courier and Enquirer_, had openly threatened to make a
- personal assault upon us. It was lucky for him that we did not
- hear this threat; but we can now only say that if such, or
- anything similar to it, be his intention, he will find each of
- the three editors of the _Sun_ always provided with a brace
- of “mahogany stock” pistols, to accommodate him in any way he
- likes, or may not like.
-
-The specification of “mahogany stock” referred to Colonel Webb’s own
-supposed predilection for pistols of that description. Mr. Day and his
-aids may have carried these handsome weapons, but it is not on record
-that they made use of them, or that they had occasion to do so. Persons
-gunning for editors seemed to neglect Mr. Day in favour of Mr. Bennett.
-
-No sooner was this fierce clash with Webb over than the _Sun_ found
-itself bombarded from many sides in the war over Maria Monk. This
-woman’s “Awful Disclosures” had just been published in book form
-by Howe & Bates, of 68 Chatham Street, New York. They purported to
-be “a narrative of her sufferings during a residence of five years
-as a novice and two years as a black nun in the Hôtel Dieu Nunnery
-at Montreal.” On January 18, 1836, the _Sun_ began to publish these
-shocking stories, in somewhat condensed and expurgated form. It did
-not vouch for their truth, but declared that it printed them from an
-“imperative sense of duty.” “We have no better means than are possessed
-by any reader,” it cautiously added, “to decide upon their truth or
-falsehood.”
-
-The “Disclosures” ran in the _Sun_ for ten days, during which time
-about one-half of the book was printed. Maria Monk herself was in
-New York, and so cleverly had she devised the imposture that she was
-received in good society as a martyr. Such was the public interest that
-it was estimated by Cardinal Manning, in 1851, that between two hundred
-and two hundred and fifty thousand copies of the volume were sold in
-America and England. The Know-Nothing Party used it for political
-capital, and anti-Catholic riots in several cities were the result of
-its publication.
-
-Its partial appearance in the _Sun_, while it may have helped the
-circulation of the book, undoubtedly hastened the exposure of the
-fraud. The editor of the _Commercial Advertiser_, William Leete Stone,
-liked nothing better than to show up impostors. He had already written
-a life of Matthias the Prophet, and he decided to get at the truth of
-Maria Monk’s revolting story.
-
-Stone was at this time forty-four years old. He had been editor of
-the Herkimer _American_, with Thurlow Weed as his journeyman; of the
-_Northern Whig_, of Hudson, New York; of the Albany _Daily Advertiser_,
-and of the Hartford _Mirror_. In 1821 he came to New York and succeeded
-Zachariah Lewis as editor of the _Commercial Advertiser_. As a Mason
-he had a controversy with John Quincy Adams, who was prominent in the
-anti-Masonic movement.
-
-Stone was prominent politically. In 1825 he and Thurlow Weed
-accompanied Lafayette in his tour of the United States. In 1841
-President William Henry Harrison appointed him minister to The Hague,
-but when Harrison died he was recalled by President Tyler. He was also
-the first superintendent of the New York public schools--an office
-which he held at the time of his death, in 1844.
-
-Stone went to Montreal, visited the Hôtel Dieu, and minutely compared
-the details set down by the Monk woman in regard to the inmates of the
-nunnery and the plan of the building. The result of his investigation
-was to establish the fact that the “Awful Disclosures” were fiction,
-and he exposed the impostor not only in his newspaper, but in his book,
-“Maria Monk and the Nunnery of the Hôtel Dieu.” The adherents of the
-woman abused Stone roundly for this, and the general belief in her fake
-was not entirely dissipated for years; not even after her own evil
-history was told, and after the Protestant residents of Montreal had
-held a mass-meeting to denounce her. Maria Monk died in the city prison
-in New York fourteen years after she had created the most unpleasant
-scandal of the time.
-
-News matters of a genuine kind diverted the types from Maria Monk.
-There was the celebrated murder of Helen Jewett, a case in which Mr.
-Bennett played detective with some success, and the Alamo massacre.
-Crockett, Bowie, and the rest of that band of heroes met their death on
-March 6, 1836, but the details did not reach New York for more than a
-month; it was April 12 when the _Sun_ gave a column to them.
-
-Texas and the Seminole War kept the news columns full until May 10,
-when Colonel Webb again pounced upon James Gordon Bennett. Said the
-_Sun_:
-
- Upon calculating the number of public floggings which that
- miserable scribbler, Bennett, has received, we have pretty
- accurately ascertained that there is not a square inch of his
- body which has not been lacerated somewhere about fifteen
- times. In fact, he has become a common flogging property; and
- Webb has announced his intention to cowskin him every Monday
- morning until the Fourth of July, when he will offer him a
- holiday. We understand that Webb has offered to remit the
- flogging upon the condition that he will allow him to shoot
- him; but Bennett says:
-
- “No; skin for skin, behold, all that a man hath will he give
- for his life!”
-
-The _Sun_ beat the town on a great piece of news that spring.
-“Triumphant News from Texas! Santa Anna Captured!” the head-lines ran.
-
-This appeared on May 18, four weeks after Sam Houston had taken the
-Mexican president; but it was the first intimation New York had had of
-the victory at San Jacinto.
-
-During the investigation of the murder of Helen Jewett and the trial
-of Richard P. Robinson, the suspect, the _Sun_ attacked Bennett for
-the manner in which the _Herald_ handled the case. Bennett saw a good
-yellow story in the murder, for the house in which the murdered girl
-had lived could not be said to be questionable; there was no doubt
-about its character. Bennett’s interviewing of the victim’s associates
-did not please the _Sun_, which pictured the unfortunate women “mobbed
-by several hundred vagabonds of all sizes and ages--amongst whom the
-long, lank figure of the notorious Bennett was most conspicuous.”
-
-When it was not Bennett, it was Colonel Webb or one of his men. The
-_Sun_ went savagely after the proprietor of the _Courier and Enquirer_
-because he led the hissing at the Park Theatre against Mr. and Mrs.
-Joseph Wood, the English opera-singers. The offence of the Woods lay
-in giving a performance on an evening when a benefit was announced for
-Mrs. Conduit, another popular vocalist. The town was divided upon the
-row, but as the Woods and Mrs. Conduit were all English-born, it was
-not a racial feud like the Macready-Forrest affair. The _Sun_ rebuked
-Colonel Webb particularly because, after booing at the Woods, he had
-refused Mr. Wood’s offer to have it out over pistols and coffee.
-
-Wood was not a lily-finger. He had been plain Joe Wood, the pugilist,
-before he married the former Lady Lennox and embraced tenor song in
-a serious way. Society rather took the part of the Woods, for after
-the Park Theatre row a dinner in their compliment was arranged by
-Henry Ogden, Robert C. Wetmore, Duncan C. Pell, John P. Hone, Carroll
-Livingston, and other leading New Yorkers.
-
-The fearlessness of the _Sun_ did not stop with saucing its
-contemporaries. When Robinson was acquitted of the Jewett murder, after
-a trial which the _Sun_ reported to the extent of nearly a page a day,
-the _Sun_ editorially declared:
-
- Our opinion, calmly and dispassionately formed from the
- evidence, is that Richard P. Robinson is guilty of the wilful
- and peculiarly atrocious murder of Helen Jewett.... Any
- good-looking young man, possessing or being able to raise
- among his friends the sum of fifteen hundred dollars to retain
- Messrs. Maxwell, Price, and Hoffman for his counsel, might
- murder any person he chose with perfect impunity.
-
-Robinson’s acquittal was credited largely to Ogden Hoffman, whose
-summing up the _Sun_ described as “the most magnificent production of
-mind, eloquence, and rhetorical talent that ever resounded in a hall of
-justice.” This was the Ogden Hoffman of whom Decatur said, when Hoffman
-left the navy in 1816, that he regretted that the young man should have
-exchanged “an honourable profession for that of a lawyer.” Hoffman
-and his partner Maxwell, who shared in this tremendous fee of fifteen
-hundred dollars, had been district attorneys of New York before the
-time of the Jewett murder, and the _Sun_ inquired what would have been
-Robinson’s fate if Hoffman, and not Phenix, had been the prosecutor.
-
-On August 20, 1836, the _Sun_ announced that its circulation averaged
-twenty-seven thousand copies daily, or fifty-six hundred more than the
-combined sale of the eleven six-cent papers. Of the penny papers the
-Sun credited the _Herald_ with thirty-two hundred and the _Transcript_
-with ten thousand, although both these rivals claimed at least twice
-as much. Columns were filled with the controversy which followed upon
-the publication of these figures. The _Sun_ departed from a scholarly
-argument with the _Transcript_ over the pronunciation of “elegiac,” and
-denounced it as a “nestle-tripe,” whatever that was.
-
-There was a little room left for the news. Aaron Burr’s death got a
-stick; Marcy’s nomination for Governor of New York, an inch; Audubon’s
-arrival in America, four lines. News that looks big now may not have
-seemed so imposing then, as this _Sun_ paragraph of September 22, 1836,
-would show:
-
- Two more States are already spoken of for addition to the
- Union, under the names of Iowa and Wisconsin.
-
-Richard Adams Locke left the _Sun_ in the fall of 1836, and on October
-6, in company with Joseph Price, started the _New Era_, a penny paper
-for which the _Sun_ wished success. In less than a month, however,
-Locke and his former employer were quarrelling about the price of meals
-at the Astor House. That famous hotel was opened in May, 1836, with
-all New York marvelling at the wonders of its walnut furniture, so
-much nicer than the conventional mahogany! Before it was built, it was
-referred to as the Park Hotel. When it opened it was called Astor’s
-Hotel, but in a few months it came to be known by the name which stuck
-to it until it was abandoned in 1913.
-
-But to return to our meal. Said Mr. Locke’s _New Era_:
-
- A paragraph is going the rounds of the papers abusing the Astor
- House. Nothing can be more groundless. Where the arrangements
- are complete, the charges, of course, must be corresponding. We
- suppose the report has been set afloat by some person who was
- kicked out for not paying his bill.
-
-To this horrid insinuation Day replied:
-
- The report they speak of was set afloat by ourselves, after
- paying $1.25 for a breakfast for a lady and her infant a year
- and a half old, served just one hour and seven minutes after
- it was ordered, with coffee black as ink and without milk, and
- that, too, in a room so uncleanly as to be rather offensive.
-
-Locke wanted to make the _New Era_ another _Sun_, but he failed. His
-second hoax, “The Lost Manuscript of Mungo Park,” which purported to
-tell hitherto unrelated adventures of the Scottish explorer, fell down.
-The public knew that the _New Era_ was edited by the author of the moon
-story. When the _New Era_ died, Locke went to the Brooklyn _Eagle_,
-just founded, and he succeeded Henry C. Murphy, the proprietor and
-first editor, when that famous lawyer and writer was running for mayor
-of Brooklyn. Locke afterward was a custom-house employee. He died on
-Staten Island in 1871.
-
-Squabbling with his former friend Locke over hotel service was no
-such sport for Day as tilting at the owner of the _Herald_. The _Sun_
-attacked Bennett in the fall of 1836 for his attitude toward the
-Hamblin benefit. Thomas Sowerby Hamblin was made bankrupt by the Bowery
-Theatre fire on September 22, for the great fires of the previous
-December had ruined practically all the fire-insurance companies of
-New York, and there was not a policy on the theatre which this English
-actor-manager, with James H. Hackett, had made the leading playhouse
-of America. Hamblin did not like Bennett’s articles and the _Sun_ thus
-noted the result of them:
-
- Alas, poor Bennett! He seems destined to be flogged into
- immortal fame, and become the common buffet-block of all
- mankind. Mr. Hamblin paid him a complimentary visit last
- evening [November 17] in his editorial closet and lathered
- him all into lumps and blotches, although the living lie was
- surrounded by his minions and had a brace of loaded pistols
- lying on his desk when the outraged visitor first laid hands on
- him.
-
-When the _Sun’s_ advertising business had increased until its income
-from that source was more than two hundred dollars a day, it bought
-two new presses of the Napier type from Robert Hoe, at a cost of seven
-thousand dollars. These enabled Mr. Day to run off thirty-two hundred
-papers an hour on each press. On the 2nd of January, 1837, the size
-of the _Sun_ was slightly increased, about an inch being added to the
-length and width of each of its four pages.
-
-In February, 1837, the price of flour rose from the normal of about
-$5.50 a barrel to double that amount. The _Sun_ declared that the
-increase was not natural, but rather the result of a combination--a
-suspicion which seems to have been shared by a large number of
-citizens. The bread riots of February 13 and later were the result of
-an agitation for lower prices.
-
-The _Journal of Commerce_ denounced the _Sun_ as an inciter of the
-riots, and suggested that the grand jury should direct its attention
-toward Mr. Day. The _Sun_ not only refused to recede from its stand,
-but suggested that the foreman of the grand jury, the famous Philip
-Hone, had himself incited a riot--the riot against the Abolitionists,
-July 11, 1834--which had a less worthy purpose than the _Sun’s_ stand
-on the matter of flour prices. The _Sun_ was virtuously indignant,
-even more than it had been a short time before, when the Transcript
-charged the _Sun’s_ circulation man, Mr. Young, with biting two of the
-_Transcript’s_ carriers!
-
-The beginning of regular transatlantic steamship service did not find
-in the _Sun_ a completely joyous welcome--thanks, perhaps, to the
-temperament of Lieutenant Hosken, R.N. He was an officer of the Great
-Western, a side-wheeler of no less than thirteen hundred and forty
-tons, with paddles twenty-eight feet in diameter. This new ship, built
-at Bristol, and a marvel of its time, reached New York, April 23, 1838,
-after a passage of only sixteen days! The Sirius, another new vessel,
-got in a few hours ahead of the Great Western, after a voyage of
-eighteen days. The _Sun_ said of this double event:
-
- Of the conduct of the officers in command of the Great Western,
- we regret that we are compelled by reports to place it in no
- very favorable contrast with the gentlemanly demeanor of the
- officers of the Sirius. Every attention has been paid her,
- citizens have turned out to welcome her arrival, she was
- saluted by the battery on Ellis’s Island, _et cetera, et
- cetera_, and thousands of other demonstrations of courtesy
- were made, which proved only throwing pearls before swine.
- A news boat was ordered to keep off or be run down, and
- the hails of that boat and others were answered through a
- speaking-trumpet in a manner which would have done toward the
- savage of Nootka Sound, but is not exactly the style in which
- to meet the courtesies of members of a community upon which
- the line of packets depends in a large part for success. One
- would have thought that all the impudence of Europe was put
- on board a vessel built of large tonnage expressly for its
- embarkation. By the time our corporation officers have run the
- suspender-buttons off their breeches in chase of Lieutenant
- Hosken, R. N., they will discover that they have been fools for
- their pains.
-
- Reverse this account entirely, and it will apply to the
- Sirius--testimony which we are happy to make.
-
-So the _Sun_ was not obsequiously grateful for the arrival of a ship
-whose speed enabled it to announce on April 24 that Queen Victoria had
-issued, on the 6th, the proclamation of the details of her coronation
-at Westminster on June 26, and that O’Connell was taking steps to
-remove the civil disabilities from the Jews.
-
-All this time the _Sun_ was not neglecting the minor local happenings
-about which its patrons liked to read. The police-courts, the theatres,
-and the little scandals had their column or two.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-NEW YORK LIFE IN THE THIRTIES
-
- _A Sprightly City Which Daily Bought Thirty Thousand Copies of “The
- Sun.”--The Rush to Start Penny Papers.--Day Sells “The Sun” for
- Forty Thousand Dollars._
-
-
-No dull city, that New York of Ben Day’s time! Almost a dozen theatres
-of the first class were running. The Bowery, the first playhouse in
-America to have a stage lighted with gas, had already been twice burned
-and rebuilt. The Park, which saw the American début of Macready, Edwin
-Forrest, and James H. Hackett, was offering such actors as Charles
-Kean, Charles and Fanny Kemble, Charles Mathews, Sol Smith, Mr. and
-Mrs. Joseph Wood, and Master Joseph Burke, the Irish Roscius. Forrest,
-then talked of as a candidate for Congress, was the favourite of New
-York. On his appearance, said a _Sun_ review of his acting in “King
-Lear,” the audience uttered “the roar of seven thunders.”
-
-There was vaudeville to be enjoyed at Niblo’s Garden, a circus at
-Vauxhall Garden. Drama held the boards at the Olympic and the National.
-The Franklin was one of the new theatres. It was in Chatham Street,
-between James and Oliver, and it was there that Barney Williams,
-the _Sun’s_ pioneer newsboy, made his first stage appearance, as a
-jig-dancer, when he was about fifteen years old.
-
-Charlotte Cushman, Hackett, Forrest, and Sol Smith were the leading
-American actors of that day, although Junius Brutus Booth had achieved
-some prominence. Edwin Booth, Joseph Jefferson, William J. Florence,
-and Maggie Mitchell were children, all a little older than the _Sun_.
-John T. Raymond was born at Buffalo in 1836, John E. McCullough in
-Ireland the next year, and Lawrence Barrett at Paterson, New Jersey, in
-1838.
-
-The hotels were temples of plenty. English travellers, going to the new
-Astor, the American, Niblo’s, or the New York House, recoiled in horror
-at the appetite of the Yankee. At breakfast they saw the untutored
-American break two or three boiled eggs into a tumbler and eat them
-therefrom--and then they wrote letters to the London _Times_ about
-it. At dinner, served in the hotels about noon--three o’clock was the
-fashionable hour in private houses--the hungry New Yorker, including
-Mr. Day and his brother-in-law, Mr. Beach, would sit down to roast
-beef, venison, prairie-chicken, and a half-dozen vegetables. Bottles of
-brandy stood in the centre of the table for him who would; surely not
-for Mr. Day, who printed daily pieces about the effects of strong drink!
-
-There was gambling on Park Row--Chatham Row, it was called then--games
-in the Elysian Fields of Hoboken on Sundays, and duels there on
-week-days; picnickings in the woods about where the Ritz-Carlton stands
-to-day; horse-racing on the Boulevard, now upper Broadway, and rowing
-races on the Harlem. Those who liked thoroughbred racing went to the
-Union Course on Long Island, or to Saratoga.
-
-Club life was young. Cooper, Halleck, Bryant, and other literary moguls
-had started the Bread and Cheese Club in 1824. The Hone Club, named for
-Mayor Hone, sprang up in 1836, and gave dinners for Daniel Webster,
-William H. Seward, and other great Whigs. In that same year the Union
-Club was founded--the oldest New York club that is still in existence.
-
-The _Sun_ was not as popular in the clubs as it is to-day. A clubman of
-1837 caught reading any newspaper except the _Courier and Enquirer_,
-the _Evening Post_, or one of their like, would have been frowned upon
-by his colleagues.
-
-The _Sun_ found plenty to print.
-
-“We write,” it boasted, “more original editorial matter than any other
-paper in the city, great or small.”
-
-It poked with its paragraphs at the shinplaster, that small form of
-currency issued by private bankers. It made fun of phrenology, then one
-of the fads. It jeered at animal magnetism, another craze. It had the
-Papineau rebellion, the Patriot War, Indian uprisings, and the belated
-news from Europe. It printed extracts from the “Pickwick Papers.”
-Dickens was all the rage.
-
-The _Sun’s_ comment on “Nicholas Nickleby,” when Dickens’s fourth book
-reached New York in 1838, was that it was as well written as “Oliver
-Twist,” and “not so gloomy.” Yet the grimness of the earlier novel had
-a fascination for the youth of that day. It was this book, read by
-candle-light after the store was closed, that so weakened the eyes of
-Charles A. Dana--still clerking in Buffalo--that he believed he would
-have to become a farmer.
-
-The _Sun_ did not mention, in its report of the Patriot War, that Dana
-was a member of the Home Guard in Buffalo, and had ideas of enlisting
-as a regular soldier. The _Sun_ did not know of the youth’s existence;
-nor is it likely that he read Mr. Day’s paper.
-
-A piece of “newspaper news” was printed in the _Sun_ of June 1, 1837--a
-description of the first so-called endless paper roll in operation. Day
-still printed on small, flat sheets, but evidently he was impressed
-with the novelty. The touch about the rag-mill, of course, was fiction:
-
- We have been shown a sheet of paper about a hundred feet in
- length and two feet wide, printed on both sides by a machine at
- one operation. This extraordinary invention enables a person
- to print off any length of paper required for any number of
- copies of a work or a public journal without a single stop, and
- without the assistance of any person except one to put in the
- rags at the extremity of the machine.
-
- This wonderful operation is effected by the placing of the
- types on stereotype plates on the surface of two cylinders,
- which are connected with the paper-making machinery. The paper,
- as it issues from the mill, enters in a properly moistened
- state between the rollers, which are evenly inked by an
- ingenious apparatus, and emerges in a printed form. The number
- of copies can be measured off by the yard or mile. The work
- which we have seen from this press is “Robinson Crusoe,” and
- consists of one hundred and sixty duodecimo pages.
-
- The Bible could be printed off and almost disseminated among
- the Indians in one continuous stream of living truth. The _Sun_
- would occupy a roll about seven feet in diameter, and our issue
- to Boston, Philadelphia, and other cities would be not far from
- a quarter of a mile long, each. The two cents postage on this
- would be but a trifle. The whole length of our paper would be
- about seventy-seven thousand feet, a papyrus which it must be
- confessed it would take Lord Brougham a longer time to unroll
- than the vitrified scrolls of Herculaneum and Pompeii.
-
- All that it is necessary for a man to do on going into a
- paper-mill is to take off his shirt, hand it to the devil who
- officiates at one extremity, and have it come out “Robinson
- Crusoe” at the other. We should like to exchange some of our
- old shirts in this way, as we cannot afford the expense, during
- these hard times, of getting them washed.
-
- Mr. Thomas French, the inventor, is from Ithaca, and is now
- in this city. He has one roll about six inches in diameter
- which is six hundred feet long.
-
-[Illustration: (_From a Picture in the Possession of Mrs. Jennie Beach
-Gasper_)
-
- MOSES YALE BEACH, SECOND OWNER OF “THE SUN”]
-
-No display advertising was printed in the _Sun_ of those years, but
-there was a variety of “liners.” These were adorned with tiny cuts
-of ships, shoes, horses, cows, hats, dogs, clocks, and what not. For
-example--
-
- Came to the premises of F. Reville, Gardener, on the 16th
- inst., a COW, which has since calved. The owner is requested to
- call, prove property, and pay expenses. Bloomingdale, between
- fifth and sixth mile-stones.
-
-That is nearly five miles north of the City Hall, on the West
-Side--a region where now little grows except the rentals of palatial
-apartment-houses. Here are two other advertisements characteristic of
-the time:
-
- A CARD--TO BUTCHERS--Mr. Stamler, having retired to private
- life, would be glad to see his friends, the Butchers, at his
- house, No. 5 Rivington Street, this afternoon, between the
- hours of 2 and 5 P.M., to partake of a collation.
-
- SIX CENTS REWARD!--Run away from the subscriber, on the 30th
- of May, Charles Eldridge, an indented apprentice to the
- Segar-Making business, about 16 years of age, 4 feet high,
- broken back. Had on, when he left, a round jacket and blue
- pantaloons. The above reward and no charges will be paid for
- his delivery to
-
- JOHN DIBBEN, No. 354 Bowery.
-
-
-On June 15, 1837, the name of Benjamin H. Day, which had appeared at
-the masthead of the _Sun_ since its beginning, disappeared. In its
-place was the legend: “Published daily by the proprietor.” This gave
-rise to a variety of rumours, and about a week later, on June 23, the
-_Sun_ said editorially:
-
- Several of our contemporaries are in a maze of wonder because
- we have taken our beautiful cognomen from the imprint of the
- _Sun_. Some of the loafers among them have even flattered
- themselves that our humble self in person had consequently
- disappeared. Not so, gentlemen--for though we may not be
- ambitious that our thirty thousand subscribers should daily
- pronounce our name while poring over advertisements on the
- first page, we nevertheless remain steadily at our post, and
- shall thus continue during the pleasure of a generous public,
- except, perchance, an absence of a few months on a trip to
- Europe, which we purpose to make this season.
-
- With regard to a certain report that we had lost twenty
- thousand dollars by shaving notes, we have nothing to say. Our
- private business transactions cannot in the least interest the
- public at large.
-
-Day’s name never went back. The reason for its disappearance was a
-libel-suit brought by a lawyer named Andrew S. Garr. On May 3, 1837,
-the _Sun_ printed a report of a case in the Court of Chancery, in which
-it was incidentally mentioned that Garr had once been indicted for
-conspiracy to defraud. The reporter neglected to add that Garr had been
-acquitted. At the end of the article was the quotation:
-
- When rogues get quarreling, the truth will out.
-
-Garr sued Day for ten thousand dollars, and Day not only took his name
-from the top of the first column of the first page, but apparently made
-a wash sale of the newspaper.
-
-The case was tried in February, 1838, and on the 16th of that month
-Garr got a verdict for three thousand dollars--“to be extracted,” as
-the _Sun_ said next morning, “from the right-hand breeches-pocket
-of the defendant, who about a year since ceased replenishing that
-fountain of the ‘needful’ from the prolific source of the _Sun’s_ rays
-by virtue of a total, unconditional, and unrevisionary sale of the same
-to its present proprietor.”
-
-The name of that “present proprietor” was not given; but on June 28,
-1838, the following notice appeared at the top of the first page:
-
- Communications intended for the _Sun_ must be addressed to
- Moses Y. Beach, 156 Nassau Street, corner of Spruce.
-
-Day was really out of the _Sun_ then, after having been its master for
-five years lacking sixty-seven days, and the paper passed into the
-actual ownership of Beach, who had married Day’s sister, and who had
-acted as the bookkeeper of the _Sun_ almost from its inception. There
-were those, including Edgar Allan Poe, who believed that Beach was the
-boss of the _Sun_ even in the days of the moon hoax, but they were
-mistaken. The paper, as the _Sun_ itself remarked on December 4, 1835,
-was “altogether ruled by Benjamin H. Day.”
-
-“I owned the whole concern,” said Mr. Day in 1883, “till I sold it to
-Beach. And the silliest thing I ever did in my life was to sell that
-paper!”
-
-And why did Day sell, for forty thousand dollars, a paper which had the
-largest circulation in the world--about thirty thousand copies? The
-answer is that it was not paying as well as it had paid.
-
-There were a couple of years when his profits had been as high as
-twenty thousand dollars. The net return for the six months ending
-October 1, 1836, as announced by the _Sun_ on April 19, 1837, was
-$12,981.88; but at the time when Day sold out, the _Sun_ was about
-breaking even. The advertising, due to general dulness in business--for
-which the bank failures and the big fire were partly to blame--had
-fallen off. It was costing Day three hundred dollars a week more
-for operating expenses and materials than he got for the sales of
-newspapers, and this loss was barely made up by the advertising
-receipts. With what he had saved, and the forty thousand paid to him by
-Beach, he would have a comfortable fortune. He was only twenty-eight
-years old, and there might be other worlds to conquer.
-
-From nothing at all except his own industry and common sense Day had
-built up an enterprise which the _Sun_ itself thus described a few days
-before the change of ownership:
-
- Some idea of the business done in the little three-story
- building at the corner of Nassau and Spruce Streets occupied by
- the _Sun_ for the publication of a penny paper may be formed
- from the fact that the annual outlay for material and wages
- exceeds ninety-three thousand dollars--very nearly two thousand
- a week, and more than three hundred a day for the six working
- days. On this outlay we circulate daily thirty thousand papers.
- Allowing the other nine morning papers an average of three
- thousand circulation--which may fall short in two or three
- cases, while it is a large estimate for all the rest--it will
- appear that the circulation of the _Sun_ newspaper is daily
- more than of all the others united.
-
- That this is not mere gasconade, but susceptible of proof, we
- refer the curious to the paper-makers who furnish the stock for
- this immense circulation; to the type-founders who give us a
- new dress three times a year, and to the Messrs. Hoe & Co., who
- built our two double-cylinder Napier presses, which throw off
- copies of the _Sun_ at the rate of four thousand per hour. We
- invite newspaper publishers to visit our establishment when the
- presses are in operation, and we shall be happy to show them
- what would have astonished Dr. Faust, with all his intimacy
- with a certain _nil admirari_ potentate.
-
-As for the influence of the paper among the people, the _Sun_ dealt
-in no vain exaggeration when it said of itself, a year before Day’s
-departure:
-
- Since the _Sun_ began to shine upon the citizens of New
- York there has been a very great and decided change in the
- condition of the laboring classes and the mechanics. Now every
- individual, from the rich aristocrat who lolls in his carriage
- to the humble laborer who wields a broom in the streets, reads
- the _Sun_; nor can even a boy be found in New York City or the
- neighboring country who will not know in the course of the day
- what is promulgated in the _Sun_ in the morning.
-
- Already can we perceive a change in the mass of the people.
- They think, talk, and act in concert. They understand their
- own interest, and feel that they have numbers and strength to
- pursue it with success.
-
- The _Sun_ newspaper has probably done more to benefit the
- community by enlightening the minds of the common people than
- all the other papers together.
-
-Day found New York journalism a pot of cold, stale water, and left it
-a boiling caldron; not so much by what he wrote as by the way in which
-he made his success. There were better newspapermen than Day before and
-during his time, plenty of them. They had knowledge and experience,
-they knew style, but they did not know the people. In their imagination
-the “gentle reader” was a male between the ages of thirty-five and
-ninety, with a burning interest in politics, and a fancy that the
-universe revolved around either Andrew Jackson or Daniel Webster. Why
-write for any one who did not have fixed notions on the subject of the
-United States Bank or Abolition?
-
-To the mind of the sixpenny editor, the man who did not have six cents
-to spend was a negligible quantity. Nothing was worth printing unless
-it carried an appeal to the professional man or the merchant.
-
-The _Courier and Enquirer_, under Colonel Webb, belched broadsides of
-old-fashioned Democratic doctrine, and Webb hired the best men he could
-find to load the guns. He had Bennett, Noah, James K. Paulding, and,
-later, Charles King and Henry J. Raymond. These were all good writers,
-most of them good newspapermen; but so far as the general public was
-concerned, Colonel Webb might as well have put them in a cage.
-
-The _Journal of Commerce_ was a great sixpenny, but it was not for the
-people to read. From 1828 until the Civil War its editor was Gerard
-Hallock, an enterprising journalist who ran expensive horse-expresses
-to Washington to get the proceedings of Congress, but would not admit
-that the public at large was more interested in a description of
-the murdered Helen Jewett’s gowns than in a new currency bill. The
-clipper-ships that lay off Sandy Hook to get the latest foreign news
-from the European vessels cost Hallock and Webb, who combined in this
-enterprise, twenty thousand dollars a year--probably more than they
-spent on all their local news.
-
-In the solemn sanctum of the _Evening Post_, William Cullen Bryant
-and William Leggett wrote scholarly verse and free-trade editorials.
-They were live men, but their newspaper steed was slow. Leggett could
-urge Bryant to give a beating to Stone, the editor of the _Commercial
-Advertiser_, and he himself fought a duel with Blake, the treasurer of
-the Park Theatre; but these great men had little steam when it came
-to making a popular newspaper. The great editors were of a cult. They
-revolved around one another, too far aloft for the common eye.
-
-Charles King was the most conservative of them all. He was a son of
-Rufus King, Senator from New York and minister to England, and he was
-editor of the _American_, an evening sixpenny, from 1827 to 1845.
-He lacked nothing in scholarship, but his paper was miserably dull,
-and rarely circulated more than a thousand copies. He remained at his
-editorial desk for four years after the _American_ was absorbed by
-the _Courier and Enquirer_, and then he became president of Columbia
-College, a place better suited to him.
-
-Such were the men who ruled the staid, prosy, and expensive newspapers
-of New York when Day and his penny _Sun_ popped up. Most of them are
-better known to fame than Day is, but not one of them did anything
-comparable to the young printer’s achievement in making a popular,
-low-priced daily newspaper--and not only making it, but making it
-stick. For Day started something that went rolling on, increasing in
-size and weight until it controlled the thought of the continent.
-Day was the Columbus, the _Sun_ was the egg. Anybody could do the
-trick--after Day showed how simple it was.
-
-Bennett and his _Herald_ were the first to profit by the example of the
-young Yankee printer. It should have been easy for Bennett, yet he had
-already failed at the same undertaking. He was at work in the newspaper
-field of New York as early as 1824, nine years before Day started the
-_Sun_. He failed as proprietor of the Sunday _Courier_ (1825), and he
-failed again with the Philadelphia _Pennsylvanian_. He had a wealth of
-experience as assistant to Webb and as the Washington correspondent of
-the _Enquirer_.
-
-It was no doubt due to the success of the _Sun_ that Bennett, after two
-failures, established the _Herald_. He saw the human note that Ben Day
-had struck, and he knew, as a comparatively old newspaperman--he was
-forty when he started the _Herald_--what mistakes Day was making in the
-neglect of certain news fields, such as Wall Street. But the value of
-the penny paper Day had already proved, and Day had established, ahead
-of everybody else, the newsboy system, by which the man in the street
-could get a paper whenever he liked without making a yearly investment.
-
-Bennett may have written the constitution of popular journalism, but
-it was Day who wrote its declaration of independence. If it had not
-been for the untrained Day, fifteen years younger than Bennett, it
-is possible that there would have been no _Herald_ to span nearly a
-century under the ownership of father and son; and the two James Gordon
-Bennetts not only owned but absolutely _were_ the _Herald_ from May 10,
-1835, when the father started the paper, until May 14, 1918, when the
-son died.
-
-It had been said of Bennett that he discovered that “a paper
-universally denounced will be read.” Day learned that much a year
-before the _Herald_ was started. Day was sensational, and he seemed
-to court the written assaults of the sixpenny editors. Bennett also
-sought abuse, and did not care when it brought physical pain with it.
-He was still more sensational than Day. If there was nothing else, his
-own personal affairs were made the public’s property. He was about to
-marry, so the _Herald_ printed this:
-
- TO THE READERS OF THE HERALD--Declaration of Love--Caught at
- Last--Going to be Married--New Movement in Civilization.
-
- My ardent desire has been through life to reach the highest
- order of human excellence by the shortest possible cut.
- Association, night and day, in sickness and in health, in war
- and in peace, with a woman of the highest order of excellence
- must produce some curious results in my heart and feelings,
- and these results the future will develop in due time in the
- columns of the _Herald_. Meantime I return my heartfelt thanks
- for the enthusiastic patronage of the public, both of Europe
- and of America. The holy estate of wedlock will only increase
- my desire to be still more useful. God Almighty bless you
- all--JAMES GORDON BENNETT.
-
-James Parton described Bennett as “a man of French intellect and Scotch
-habits.” Bennett was not of Scottish blood, his parents being of
-French descent, but his youth in Scotland, where he was born, probably
-impregnated him with the thrift of his environment. He established
-the no-credit system in the _Herald_ business office. Probably he had
-observed that Colonel Webb had lost a fortune in unpaid subscriptions
-and advertisements.
-
-Bennett was a good business man and an energetic editor. He used all
-the ideas that Day had proved profitable, and many of his own. Perhaps
-the most valuable thing he learned from Day was that it was unwise
-to be a slave to a political party. But his own experience with the
-luckless _Pennsylvanian_, a Jackson organ, may have convinced him of
-the futility of the strictly partisan papers, which neglected the news
-for the sake of the office-holders.
-
-Day’s success with the _Sun_ was responsible for the birth, not only
-of the _Herald_, but of a host of American penny papers, which were
-established at the rate of a dozen a year. Of the New York imitators
-the _Jeffersonian_, published by Childs & Devoe, and the _Man_,
-owned by George H. Evans, an Englishman who was the Henry George of
-his day, were not long for this world. The _Transcript_, started in
-1834, flashed up for a time as a dangerous rival of the _Sun_. Three
-compositors, William J. Stanley, Willoughby Lynde, and Billings
-Hayward, owned it. Its editor was Asa Greene, erstwhile physician
-and bookseller and always humorist. He wrote “The Adventures of Dr.
-Dodimus Duckworth,” “The Perils of Pearl Street,” and “The Travels of
-Ex-Barber Fribbleton in America”--this last a travesty on the books of
-travel turned out by Englishmen who visited the States.
-
-William H. Attree, a former compositor, wrote the _Transcript’s_
-lively police-court stories, the _Sun’s_ rival having learned how
-popular was crime. The _Transcript_ lasted five years, the earlier of
-them so prosperous that the proprietors thought they were going to be
-millionaires. But Reporter Attree went to Texas with the land-boomers,
-and Lynde, who wrote the paragraphs, died. When the paper failed, in
-1839, Hayward went to the _Herald_, where he worked as a compositor all
-the rest of his life.
-
-The other penny papers that sprang up in New York to give battle--while
-the money lasted--to the _Sun_, the _Transcript_, and the _Herald_,
-were the _True Sun_, started by some of Day’s discharged employees;
-the _Morning Star_, run by Major Noah, of the _Evening Star_; the _New
-Era_, already mentioned, which Richard Adams Locke started in 1836
-in company with Jared D. Bell and Joseph Price; the _Daily Whig_, of
-which Horace Greeley was Albany correspondent in 1838; the _Bee_, the
-_Serpent_, the _Light_, the _Express_, the _Union_, the _Rough Hewer_,
-the _News Times_, the _Examiner_, the _Morning Chronicle_, the _Evening
-Chronicle_, the _Daily Conservative_, the _Censor_, and the _Daily
-News_. All these bobbed up, in one city alone, in the five years during
-which Ben Day owned the _Sun_.
-
-Most of them were mushrooms in origin and morning-glories by nature.
-They could not stand the _Sun’s_ rays.
-
-Notable exceptions were two evening papers, the _Express_ and the
-_Daily News_. The _Express_ was established in June, 1836, under the
-editorship of James Brooks and his brother Erastus, graduates of the
-_Advertiser_, of Portland, Maine. It was devoted to Whig politics and
-the shipping of New York. The _Daily News_ took no considerable part in
-journalism until twenty-five years later, when Benjamin Wood bought it.
-
-In other parts of the country the one-cent newspaper, properly
-conducted, met with the favour which the public had showered upon Ben
-Day. William M. Swain, who has been mentioned as a fellow compositor
-with Ben Day, and who tried to dissuade his friend from the folly
-of starting the _Sun_, saw the wisdom of the penny paper, and saw,
-also, that the New York field was filled. He went to Philadelphia and
-established the _Public Ledger_, the first issue appearing on March 25,
-1836. The _Ledger_ was not the first penny sheet to be published in
-Philadelphia, the _Daily Transcript_ having preceded it by a few days.
-These two newspapers soon consolidated, however.
-
-Swain’s _Ledger_ was at once sensational and brave. It came out for
-the abolition of slavery, and its office was twice mobbed. It was
-mobbed again in 1844, during the Native American riots. Swain was a
-big, hard-working man. George W. Childs, his successor as proprietor
-of the _Ledger_, wrote of him that for twenty years it was his habit
-to read every paragraph that went into the paper. Swain made three
-million dollars out of the _Ledger_; but when, during the Civil War,
-the cost of paper compelled nearly all the newspapers to advance
-prices, he tried to keep the _Ledger_ at one cent, and lost a hundred
-thousand dollars within a year. Childs, who had been a newsdealer and
-book-publisher, bought the paper from Swain in 1864, and raised its
-price to two cents.
-
-When Swain went to Philadelphia he had two partners, Arunah S. Abell
-and Azariah H. Simmons, both printers, and, like Swain, former
-associates of Day. Simmons remained with Swain on the _Ledger_ until
-his death in 1855, but Abell--the man who poked more fun than anybody
-else at Day for his penny _Sun_ idea--went to Baltimore and there
-established a _Sun_ of his own, the first copy coming out on May 17,
-1837. It was a success from the start. How well it paid Abell to follow
-Ben Day’s scheme may be judged by the fact that thirty years later
-Abell bought Guilford, a splendid estate near Baltimore, and paid
-$475,000 for it.
-
-Both Swain and Abell were friends of S. F. B. Morse, and they helped
-him to finance the electric telegraph. The Baltimore _Sun_ published
-the famous message--“What hath God wrought?”--sent over the wire from
-Washington to Baltimore on May 24, 1844, when the telegraph first came
-into practical use. Abell was the sole proprietor of the Baltimore
-_Sun_ from 1837 to 1887. He died in 1888 at the age of eighty-two.
-
-Other important newspapers started in the ten years that followed Day’s
-founding of the _Sun_ were the Detroit _Free Press_, the St. Louis
-_Republic_, the New Orleans _Picayune_, the Burlington _Hawkeye_, the
-Hartford _Times_, the New York _Tribune_, the Brooklyn _Eagle_, the
-Cincinnati _Enquirer_, and the Cleveland _Plain Dealer_.
-
-In 1830 there were only 852 newspapers in the United States, which then
-had a population of 12,866,020, and these newspapers had a combined
-yearly circulation of 68,117,000 copies. Ten years later the population
-was 17,069,453, and there were 1,631 newspapers with a combined yearly
-circulation of 196,000,000 copies. In other words, while the population
-increased 32 per cent. in a decade, the total sale of newspapers
-increased 187 per cent. The inexpensive paper had found its readers.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- AN EXTRA OF “THE SUN”
- These Special Editions Were Issued on the Arrival of Every Mail
- Ship from England.
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE THIRD HOME OF “THE SUN”
- Beach and Bennett, Rival Publishers, Had Offices Opposite Each
- Other at Fulton and Nassau Streets.
-]
-
-In his report on newspapers for the Census of 1880, S. N. D. North says
-that from 1830 to 1840--
-
- By the sheer force of its superior circulation, the penny press
- exerted the most powerful newspaper influence that was felt
- in the United States, and during this interval its beneficial
- influence was the most apparent. It taught the higher-priced
- papers that political connection was properly subordinated
- to the other and higher function of the public journal--the
- function of gathering and presenting the news as it is, without
- reference to its political or other effect upon friend or foe.
-
- The advent of the penny press concluded the transition period
- in American journalism, and had three effects which are
- easily traceable. It increased the circulation, decreased the
- price of daily newspapers, and changed the character of the
- reading-matter published.
-
-As Charles H. Levermore wrote in an article on the rise of metropolitan
-journalism in the _American Historical Review_:
-
- Independent journalism, as represented first by the _Sun_
- and the _Herald_, won a complete victory over old-fashioned
- partizan journalism. The time had forever departed when an
- Albany regency could tune the press of the State as easily and
- simply as Queen Elizabeth used to tune the English pulpits. As
- James Parton said, “An editorial is only a man speaking to men;
- but the news is Providence speaking to men.”
-
-Thus Ben Day’s _Sun_ remade American journalism--more by accident than
-design, as he himself remarked at a dinner to Robert Hoe in 1851.
-
-It is evident that Day soon regretted the sale of the _Sun_, for in
-1840 he established a penny paper called the _True Sun_. This he
-presently sold for a fair price, but his itch for journalism did not
-disappear. He started the _Tatler_, but it was not a success. In 1842,
-in conjunction with James Wilson, he founded the monthly magazine,
-_Brother Jonathan_, which reprinted English double-decker novels
-complete in one issue. This later became a weekly, and Day brought out
-illustrated editions semi-annually.
-
-This was a new thing, at least in America, and Day may be called the
-originator of our illustrated periodicals as well as of our penny
-papers. His right-hand men in the editing of _Brother Jonathan_ were
-Nathaniel P. Willis, the poet, and Horatio H. Weld, who was first a
-printer, next an editor, and at last a minister.
-
-Day sold _Brother Jonathan_ for a dollar a year. When the paper famine
-hit the publishing business in 1862, he suspended his publication and
-retired from business. He was well off, and he spent the remaining
-twenty-seven years of his life in ease at his New York home. He died
-on December 21, 1889. His son Benjamin was the inventor of the Ben Day
-process used in making engravings.
-
-Day always watched the fortunes of the _Sun_ with interest, but he
-did not believe that his immediate successors ran it just the right
-way. When the paper passed into the hands of Charles A. Dana, in 1868,
-Day--then not yet threescore--said:
-
-“He’ll make a newspaper of it!”
-
-And it was then he added that the silliest thing he himself ever did
-was to sell the _Sun_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-MOSES Y. BEACH’S ERA OF HUSTLE
-
- _“The Sun” Uses Albany Steamboats, Horse Expresses, Trotting Teams,
- Pigeons, and the Telegraph to Get News.--Poe’s Famous Balloon
- Hoax and the Case of Mary Rogers._
-
-
-The second owner of the _Sun_, Moses Yale Beach, was, like Ben Day,
-a Yankee. He was born in the old Connecticut town of Wallingford on
-January 7, 1800. He had a little education in the common schools, but
-showed more interest in mechanics than in books. When he was fourteen
-he was bound out to a cabinet-maker in Hartford. His skill was so fine
-that he saw the needlessness of serving the customary seven years, and
-his industry so great that he was able, by doing extra work in odd
-times, to get together enough money to buy his freedom from his master.
-He set up a cabinet-shop of his own at Northampton, Massachusetts.
-
-When Beach was twenty, he made the acquaintance of Miss Nancy Day,
-of Springfield, the sister of Benjamin was the inventor of the Ben
-Day process used in Day were married in 1821, and as the business at
-Northampton was not prospering, they settled down in Springfield.
-
-The young man was a good cabinet-maker, but his mind ran to inventions
-rather than to chests and high-boys. Steamboat navigation had not
-yet attained a commercial success, but Beach was a close student of
-the advance made by Robert Fulton and Henry Bell. First, however, he
-devoted his talents as an inventor to a motor in which the power came
-from explosions of gunpowder. He tried this on a boat which he intended
-to run on the Connecticut River between Springfield and Hartford. When
-it failed, he turned back to steam, and he undoubtedly would have made
-a success of this boat line if his money resources had been adequate.
-
-Beach then invented a rag-cutting machine for use in paper-mills, and
-he might have had a fortune out of it if he had taken a patent in time,
-for the process is still used. As it was, the device enabled him to get
-an interest in a paper-mill at Saugerties, New York, where he removed
-in 1829. This mill was prosperous for some years, but in 1835 Beach
-found it more profitable to go to work for his young brother-in-law,
-Mr. Day, who had by this time brought the _Sun_ to the point of assured
-success.
-
-Beach was a great help to Day, not only as the manager of the _Sun’s_
-finances, but as general supervisor of the mechanical department. In
-the three years of his association with Day he picked up a good working
-knowledge of the newspaper business. He recognized the features that
-had made the _Sun_ successful--chiefly the presentation of news that
-interested the ordinary reader--and saw the neglect of this policy was
-keeping the old-fashioned sixpenny papers at a standstill.
-
-He did not underestimate other news. “Other news,” in that day, meant
-the proceedings of Congress and the New York State Legislature, the
-condensed news of Europe, as received from a London correspondent or
-rewritten from the English journals, and such important items as might
-be clipped from the newspapers of the South and West. Many of these
-American papers sent proof-sheets of news articles to the _Sun_ by mail.
-
-When Beach bought the paper there was no express service. There had
-been, in fact, no express service in America except the one which
-Charles Davenport and N. S. Mason operated over the Boston and Taunton
-Railway. But in March, 1839, about a year after Beach got the _Sun_,
-William F. Harnden began an express service--later the Adams Express
-Company--between New York and Boston, using the boats from New York to
-Providence and the rail from Providence to Boston.
-
-This was a big help to the New York papers, for with the aid of the
-express the English papers brought by ships landing at Boston were in
-the New York offices the next day. To a city which still lacked wire
-communication of any kind this was highly important, and there was
-hardly an issue of the _Sun_ in the spring of 1839 that did not contain
-a paragraph laudatory of Mr. Harnden’s enterprise.
-
-The steamship, still a novelty, was the big thing in newspaperdom.
-While the _Sun_ did not neglect the police-court reports and the animal
-stories so dear to its readers, the latest news from abroad usually
-had the place of honour on the second page. The first page remained
-the home of the advertisement and the haunt of the miscellaneous
-article. It was by ship that _Sun_ readers learned of Daguerre and his
-picture-taking device; of Cobden and the Anti-Corn-Law League; of the
-war between Abd-el-Kader and the French; of Don Carlos and his ups and
-downs--mostly downs; of the first British invasion of Afghanistan.
-There was the young queen, Victoria, always interesting, and there were
-the doings of actors known to America:
-
- At the queen’s desire, her tutor, Dr. Davys--father to the Miss
- Davys whose ears the queen boxed--has been appointed Bishop of
- Marlborough.
-
- Charles Kean’s friends say he has been offered the sum of sixty
- pounds a night for sixty nights in New York.
-
-On June 1, 1839, the _Sun_ got out an extra on the arrival, at three
-o’clock that morning, of the Great Western, after a passage of thirteen
-days--the fastest trip up to that time--and fifty-seven thousand
-copies of the paper were sold. The _Sun’s_ own sailing vessels met the
-incoming steamships down the bay. The _Sun_ boasted:
-
- In consequence of our news-boat arrangements we receive our
- papers more than an hour earlier than any other paper in this
- city. On the arrival of the Liverpool [July 1, 1839], we
- proceeded to issue an extra, which will reach Albany with the
- news twelve hours before it will be published in the regular
- editions of their evening papers, and twenty-four hours ahead
- of the morning papers.
-
-The _Sun_ had woodcuts made of all the leading ships, and these, with
-their curly waves, lit up a page wonderfully, if not beautifully. When
-the British Queen arrived on July 28, 1839, there was a half-page
-picture of her. She was the finest ship that had ever been built in
-Great Britain, with her total length of two hundred and seventy-five
-feet--less than one-third as much as some of the modern giants--and her
-paddle-wheels with a diameter of thirty-one feet. Small wonder that the
-_Sun_ favoured New York with a Sunday paper in honour of the event, and
-that the Monday sale, with the same feature, was forty-nine thousand.
-Quoth the _Sun_:
-
- Who will wonder, after this, that the lazy, lumbering
- _lazaroni_ of Wall Street stick up their noses at us?
-
-In January, 1840, when the packet-ships United States and England
-arrived together, the _Sun_ gave the story a front-page display, and
-actually used full-faced type for the subheads of the article.
-
-A tragedy is recalled in one paragraph of the _Sun’s_ account of the
-arrival of the Great Western on April 26, 1841:
-
- Up to the closing of the mail from Liverpool to London on the
- 7th, the steamer President had not arrived.
-
-The President never arrived, and her fate is one of the secrets of
-the sea. She sailed from New York on March 11, 1841, with thirty-one
-passengers, including Tyrone Power, the Irish actor, who had just
-concluded his second American tour. It is conjectured that the
-President sank during the great gale that sprang up her second night
-out.
-
-In getting news from various parts of the United States, the _Sun_ took
-a leaf from the book of Colonel Webb and other journalists who had
-used the horse express. In January, 1841, on the occasion of Governor
-William H. Seward’s message to the Legislature, the _Sun_ beat the
-town. The Legislature received the message at 11 A.M. on January 5:
-
- An express arriving exclusively for the _Sun_ then started, it
- being one o’clock, and at six this morning reached our office,
- thus enabling us to repeat the triumph achieved by us last year
- over the whole combined press of New York, large and small.
- It is but just to say that our express was brought on by the
- horses of the Red Bird Line with unparalleled expedition, in
- spite of wind, hail, and rain.
-
-Nowadays a Governor’s message is in the newspaper-offices days before
-it is sent to the Legislature, and there, treated in the confidence
-that is never betrayed by a decent newspaper, it is prepared for
-printing, so that it may be on the street five minutes after it is
-delivered, if its importance warrants. In the old days the message,
-borne by relays of horse vehicles down the snow-covered post-road from
-Albany to New York, was more important to the newspapers than the
-messages of this period appear to be. With newspapers, as with humans,
-that which is easy to get loses value.
-
-In October, 1841, the _Sun_ spent money freely to secure a quick report
-of the momentous trial of Alexander McLeod for the murder of Amos
-Durfee. War between the United States and Great Britain hinged on the
-outcome. During the rebellion in Upper Canada, in 1837, the American
-steamer Caroline was used by the insurgents to carry supplies down the
-Niagara River to a party of rebels on Navy Island. A party of loyal
-Canadians seized and destroyed the Caroline at Grand Island, and in the
-fight Durfee and eleven others were killed. The Canadian, McLeod, who
-boasted of being a participant, was arrested when he ventured across
-the American border in 1840.
-
-The British government made a demand for his release, insisting that
-what McLeod had done was an act of war, performed under the orders of
-his commanding officer, Captain Drew. President Van Buren replied that
-the American government had several times asked the British government
-whether the destruction of the Caroline was an act of war, and had
-never received a reply; and further, that the Federal government had
-no power to prevent the State of New York from trying persons indicted
-within its jurisdiction.
-
-The whole country realized the hostile attitude of the British
-ministry, and accepted its threat that war would be declared if McLeod
-were not released. The trial took place at Utica, New York, and the
-_Sun_ printed from two to five columns a day about it. It ran a special
-train from Utica to Schenectady. There a famous driver, Otis Dimmick,
-waited with a fine team of horses to take the story to the Albany boat,
-the fastest means of transportation between the State capital and the
-metropolis. The _Sun_ declared that one day Dimmick and his horses made
-the sixteen miles between Schenectady and Albany in forty-nine minutes.
-
-And the end of it all was proof that McLeod, who had boasted of
-killing “a damned Yankee,” had been asleep in Chippewa on the night
-of the Caroline affair, and was nothing worse than a braggart. So the
-war-cloud blew over.
-
-Beach was a man of great faith in railroads and all other forms of
-progress. When the Boston and Albany road was finished, the _Sun_
-related how a barrel of flour was growing in the field in Canandaigua
-on a Monday--the barrel in a tree and the flour in the wheat--and on
-Wednesday, transformed and ready for the baker, it was in Boston.
-
- Sperm candles manufactured by Mr. Penniman at Albany on
- Wednesday morning were burning at Faneuil Hall and at the
- Tremont, in Boston, on the evening of the same day.
-
-The _Sun_ had faith in Morse and his telegraph from the outset. The
-invention was born in Nassau Street, only a block or two from the
-_Sun’s_ office. Morse put the wire into practical use between Baltimore
-and Washington on May 24, 1844. That was a Friday. The _Sun_ said
-nothing about it the next day, and had no Sunday paper; but on Monday
-it said editorially:
-
- MAGNETIC TELEGRAPH--The new invention is completed from
- Baltimore to Washington. The wire, perfectly secured against
- the weather by a covering of rope-yarn and tar, is conducted
- on the top of posts about twenty feet high and one hundred
- yards apart. The nominations of the convention this day are to
- be conveyed to Washington by this telegraph, where they will
- arrive in a few seconds. On Saturday morning the batteries were
- charged and the regular transmission of intelligence between
- Washington and Baltimore commenced.... At half past 11 A.M.,
- the question being asked, what was the news at Washington, the
- answer was almost instantaneously returned: “Van Buren stock is
- rising.” This is indeed the annihilation of space.
-
-It is hardly necessary to say that the convention referred to was the
-Democratic national convention at Baltimore, that Van Buren’s stock,
-high early in the proceedings, fell again, and that James K. Polk was
-the nominee.
-
-But as New York was not fortunate enough to have the first commercial
-telegraph-line, the _Sun_ had to rely on its own efforts for speedy
-news from the convention. It ran special trains from Baltimore,
-“beating the United States mail train and locomotive an hour or two.”
-
-The _Sun_ soon afterward expressed annoyance at a report that it was
-itself a part of a monopoly which was to control the telegraph, and
-that it had bought a telegraph-line from New York to Springfield,
-Massachusetts. It insisted that there should be no monopoly, and that
-the use of the telegraph must be open to all. There was no suggestion
-that Morse intended to control his invention improperly, but the _Sun_
-was not quite satisfied with the government’s lassitude. Morse had
-offered his rights to the government for one hundred thousand dollars,
-and Congress had sneered.
-
-It was not until 1846 that the telegraph was extended to New York,
-and in the meantime the New York papers used such other means as they
-could for the collection of news. Besides trains, ships, horses, and
-the fleet foot of the reporter, there were pigeons. Beach went in for
-pigeons extensively. When the _Sun_ moved from 156 Nassau Street, in
-the summer of 1842, it took a six-story building at the southwest
-corner of Nassau and Fulton Streets, securing about three times as much
-room as it had in the two-story building at Spruce Street. On the top
-of the new building Beach built a pigeon-house, which stood for half a
-century.
-
-The strange, boxlike cote attracted not only the attention of Mr.
-Bennett, whose _Herald_ was quartered just across the street, but
-of all the folk who came and went in that busy region. So many were
-the queries from friends and the quips from enemies concerning the
-pigeon-house that the _Sun_ (December 14, 1843), vouchsafed to explain:
-
- Why, we have had a school of carrier-pigeons in the upper
- apartments of the _Sun_ office since we have occupied the
- building. Did our contemporaries believe that we ever could be
- at fault in furnishing the earliest news to our readers? Or did
- they indulge the hope that in newspaper enterprise they could
- ever catch us napping?
-
- Carrier-pigeons have long been remarked for their sagacity
- and admired for their usefulness. They are, of all birds,
- the most invaluable, and as auxiliary to a newspaper cannot
- be too highly prized. Part of the flock in our possession
- were employed by the London _Morning Chronicle_ in bringing
- intelligence from Dublin to London, and from Paris to London,
- crossing both channels; therefore they are not novices in the
- newspaper express.
-
- If there was delay in the arrival of the Boston steamer, and
- the weather clear, we despatched our choice pigeon, Sam Patch,
- down the Sound, and he invariably came back with a slip of
- delicate tissue-paper tied under his wing, containing the news.
- We thus are apprised of the arrival of the steamer some two
- hours before any one else hears of her. Our men are at their
- cases; the steam is up in our pressroom, and our extras are
- always out first.
-
- We sometimes let one of our carriers fly to the Narrows, and in
- twenty minutes or so we know what is coming in, thirty miles
- from Sandy Hook Light. We despatch them as far as Albany, on
- any important mission; frequently to New Jersey, and in the
- summer-time they sometimes look in at Rockaway and let us know
- what is going on at the pavilion. We have a small sliding door
- in our observatory, on the top of the _Sun_ office, through
- which the little aerials pass. By sending off one every little
- while, we ascertain the details of whatever is important or
- interesting at any given point.
-
- They often fly at the rate of sixty miles an hour, easy! For
- example, a half-dozen will leave Washington at daylight this
- morning and arrive here about noon, beating the mail generally
- ten hours or so. They can come through from Albany in about
- two hours and a half, solar time. They fly exceedingly high,
- and keep so until they make the spires of the city, and then
- descend. We have not lost one by any accident, and believe ours
- is the only flock of value or importance in the country.
-
- We give this brief detail of “them pigeons” because our prying
- friends and neighbors in the newspaper way have such a meager,
- guesswork account of them; and because we dislike any mystery
- or artifice in our business operations.
-
-Speed and more speed was the newspaper demand of the hour, particularly
-among the penny papers. The _Sun_ and the _Herald_ had been battling
-for years, with competitors springing up about them, usually to die
-within the twelvemonth. Now the _Tribune_ had come to remain in the
-fray, even if it had not as much money to spend on news-gathering as
-the _Sun_ and the _Herald_.
-
-Edgar Allan Poe saw the fever that raged among the rivals. He had just
-returned to New York from Philadelphia with his sick wife and his
-mother. He was a recognized genius, but his worldly wealth amounted
-to four dollars and fifty cents. He had written “The Narrative of A.
-Gordon Pym,” “The Murders in the Rue Morgue,” “The Gold Bug,” and other
-immortal stories, but his livelihood had been precarious. He had
-been in turn connected with the _Southern Literary Messenger_, the
-_Gentleman’s Magazine_, and _Graham’s Magazine_, and had twice issued
-the prospectuses for new periodicals of his own, fated never to be born.
-
-His fortunes were at their lowest when he arrived in New York on April
-6, 1844. He and his family found rooms in Greenwich Street, near Cedar,
-now the thick of the business district. “The house is old and looks
-buggy,” he wrote to a friend, but it was the best he could do with less
-than five dollars in his pocket.
-
-He had to have more money. The newspapers seemed to be the most
-available place to get it, and the _Sun_ the livest of them.
-Speed--that was what they wanted. They had been having ocean steamers
-until they were almost sick. Railroads were unromantic. Horses were an
-old story. The telegraph was still regarded as theory, and it hardly
-appealed to the imagination.
-
-Pigeons? Perhaps there was inspiration in the sight of Sam Patch
-preening himself on a cornice of the _Sun’s_ building. A magnified
-pigeon would be an air-ship. Poe sat him down, wrote the “balloon
-hoax,” and sold it to Mr. Beach. It appeared in the _Sun_ of April 13,
-1844.
-
-Beneath a black-faced heading that was supplemented by a woodcut of
-three race-horses flying under the whips of their jockeys and the
-subtitle “By Express,” was the following introduction:
-
- ASTOUNDING INTELLIGENCE BY PRIVATE EXPRESS FROM CHARLESTON,
- VIA NORFOLK!--THE ATLANTIC OCEAN CROSSED IN THREE
- DAYS!!!--ARRIVAL AT SULLIVAN’S ISLAND OF A STEERING BALLOON
- INVENTED BY MR. MONCK MASON.
-
-We stop the press at a late hour to announce that by a private express
-from Charleston, South Carolina, we are just put in possession of
-full details of the most extraordinary adventure ever accomplished by
-man. _The Atlantic Ocean has actually been traversed in a balloon,
-and in the incredibly brief period of three days!_ Eight persons have
-crossed in the machine, among others Sir Everard Bringhurst and Mr.
-Monck Mason. We have barely time now to announce this most novel and
-unexpected intelligence, but we hope by ten this morning to have ready
-an extra with a detailed account of the voyage.
-
-P. S.--The extra will be positively ready, and for sale at our counter,
-by ten o’clock this morning. It will embrace all the particulars yet
-known. We have also placed in the hands of an excellent artist a
-representation of the “Steering Balloon,” which will accompany the
-particulars of the voyage.
-
-The promised extra bore a head of stud-horse type, six banks in all,
-and as many inches deep.
-
-“Astounding News by Express, _via_ Norfolk!” it announced. “The
-Atlantic Crossed in Three Days!--Signal Triumph of Mr. Monck Mason’s
-Flying-Machine!!!--Arrival at Sullivan’s Island, Near Charleston, of
-Mr. Mason, Mr. Robert Holland, Mr. Henson, Mr. Harrison Ainsworth,
-and Four Others in the Steering Balloon Victoria, after a Passage of
-Seventy-Five Hours from Land to Land--Full Particulars of the Voyage!!!”
-
- The great problem is at length solved. The air, as well as
- the earth and the ocean, has been subdued by science, and
- will become a common and convenient highway for mankind. The
- Atlantic has been actually crossed in a balloon! And this, too,
- without difficulty--without any great apparent danger--with
- thorough control of the machine--and in the inconceivably brief
- period of seventy-five hours from shore to shore!
-
- By the energy of an agent at Charleston, South Carolina, we
- are enabled to be the first to furnish the public with a
- detailed account of this most extraordinary voyage, which
- was performed between Saturday, the 6th instant, at 11 A.M.
- and 2 P.M. on Tuesday, the 9th instant, by Sir Everard
- Bringhurst, Mr. Osborne, a nephew of Lord Bentinck; Mr. Monck
- Mason, and Mr. Robert Holland, the well-known aeronauts; Mr.
- Harrison Ainsworth, author of “Jack Sheppard,” _et cetera_,
- and Mr. Henson, the projector of the late unsuccessful
- flying-machine--with two seamen from Woolwich--in all, eight
- persons.
-
- The particulars furnished below may be relied on as authentic
- and accurate in every respect, as with a slight exception they
- are copied verbatim from the joint diaries of Mr. Monck Mason
- and Mr. Harrison Ainsworth, to whose politeness our agent is
- indebted for much verbal information respecting the balloon
- itself, its construction, and other matters of interest. The
- only alteration in the MS. received has been made for the
- purpose of throwing the hurried account of our agent, Mr.
- Forsyth, into a connected and intelligible form.
-
-The story that followed was about five thousand words in length. To
-summarize it, Monck Mason had applied the principle of the Archimedean
-screw to the propulsion of a dirigible balloon. The gas-bag was an
-ellipsoid thirteen feet long, with a car suspended from it. The screw
-propeller, which was attached to the car, was operated by a spring. A
-rudder shaped like a battledore kept the air-ship on its course.
-
-The voyagers, according to the story, started from Mr. Osborne’s
-home near Penstruthal, in North Wales, intending to sail across the
-English Channel. The mechanism of the propeller broke, and the balloon,
-caught in a strong northeast wind, was carried across the Atlantic at
-the speed of sixty or more miles an hour. Mr. Mason kept a journal,
-to which, at the end of each day, Mr. Ainsworth added a postscript.
-The balloon landed safely on the coast of South Carolina, near Fort
-Moultrie.
-
-The names of the supposed voyagers were well chosen by Poe to give
-verisimilitude to the hoax. Monck Mason and Robert Holland, or Hollond,
-were of the small party which actually sailed from Vauxhall Gardens,
-London, on the afternoon of November 7, 1836, in the balloon Nassau and
-landed at Weilburg, in Germany, five hundred miles away, eighteen hours
-later. Harrison Ainsworth, the novelist, was then one of the shining
-stars of English literary life. The others named by Poe were familiar
-figures of the period.
-
-Poe adopted the plan, used so successfully by Locke in the moon hoax,
-of having real people do the thing that they would like to do; but
-there the resemblance of the two hoaxes ends, except for the technical
-bits that Poe was able to inject into his narrative. The moon hoax
-lasted for weeks; the balloon hoax for a day. Even the _Sun_ did not
-attempt to bolster it, for it said the second day afterward:
-
- BALLOON--The mails from the South last Saturday night not
- having brought confirmation of the balloon from England, the
- particulars of which from our correspondent we detailed in our
- extra, we are inclined to believe that the intelligence is
- erroneous. The description of the balloon and the voyage was
- written with a minuteness and scientific ability calculated to
- obtain credit everywhere, and was read with great pleasure and
- satisfaction. We by no means think such a project impossible.
-
-About a week later, when the _Sun_ was still being pounded by its
-contemporaries, a few of which had been gulled into rewriting the
-story, another editorial article on the hoax appeared:
-
- BALLOON EXPRESS--We have been somewhat amused with the comments
- of the press upon the balloon express. The more intelligent
- editors saw its object at once. On the other hand, many of
- our esteemed contemporaries--those who are too ignorant to
- appreciate the pleasant satire--have ascribed to us the worst
- and basest motives. We expected as much.
-
-The “pleasant satire” of which the _Sun_ spoke was evidently meant to
-hold up to view the craze of the day for speed in the transmission of
-news and men. Yet the _Sun_ itself, as the leader of penny journalism,
-had been to a great extent the cause of this craze. It had taught the
-people to read the news and to hanker for more.
-
-There was another story which Poe and the _Sun_ shared--one that will
-outlive even the balloon hoax. Almost buried on the third page of the
-_Sun_ of July 28, 1841, was this advertisement in agate type:
-
- Left her home on Sunday morning, July 25, a young lady; had
- on a white dress, black shawl, blue scarf, Leghorn hat,
- light-colored shoes, and parasol light-colored; it is supposed
- some accident has befallen her. Whoever will give information
- respecting her at 126 Nassau shall be rewarded for their
- trouble.
-
-The next day the _Sun_ said in its news columns:
-
- ☞ The body of a young lady some eighteen or twenty years of age
- was found in the water at Hoboken. From the description of her
- dress, fears are entertained that it is the body of Miss Mary
- C. Rogers, who is advertised in yesterday’s paper as having
- disappeared from her home, 126 Nassau Street, on Sunday last.
-
-The fears were well grounded, for the dead girl was Mary Cecilia
-Rogers, the “beautiful cigar-girl” who had been the magnet at John
-Anderson’s tobacco-shop at Broadway and Duane Street; the tragic figure
-of Poe’s story, “The Mystery of Marie Roget,” a tale which served to
-keep alive the features of that unsolved riddle of the Elysian Fields
-of Hoboken. To the _Sun_, which had then no Poe, no _Sherlock Holmes_,
-the murder was the text for a moral lesson:
-
- There can be no question that she had fallen a victim to the
- most imprudent and reprehensible practise, which has recently
- obtained to a considerable extent in this city, of placing
- behind the counters and at the windows of stores for the sale
- of articles purchased exclusively by males--especially of
- cigar-stores and drinking-houses--young and beautiful females
- for the purpose of thus attracting the attention, exciting the
- interest (or worse still), and thus inducing the visits and
- consequent custom, of the other sex--especially of the young
- and thoughtless.
-
- It was by being placed in such a situation, in one of the
- most public spots in the city, that this unfortunate girl
- was led into a train of acquaintances and associations which
- has eventually proved not only her ruin, but an untimely and
- violent death in the prime of youth and beauty. From being
- used as an instrument of cupidity--as a sort of “man-trap”
- to lure by her charms the gay and giddy into the path of the
- spendthrift and of constant dissipation--she has become the
- victim of the very passions and vices which her exposure to
- the public gaze for mercenary gain was so well calculated to
- engender and encourage.
-
-The _Sun_ and the other papers might have pursued the Mary Rogers
-mystery further than they did had it not been that in a few weeks a
-more tangible tragedy presented itself, when John C. Colt, a teacher
-of bookkeeping, and the brother of Samuel Colt, the inventor, killed
-Samuel Adams, one of the leading printers of New York. Adams had gone
-to Colt’s lodgings at Broadway and Chambers Street to collect a bill,
-and Colt, who had a furious temper, murdered him with a hammer, packed
-the body in a box, and hired an innocent drayman to haul it down to
-the ship Kalamazoo, for shipment to New Orleans. This affair drove
-the Rogers murder out of the types, and left it for Poe to preserve in
-fiction with the names of the characters thinly veiled and the scene
-transferred to Paris.
-
-The great social event of the town in 1842 was the visit of Charles
-Dickens. He had been expected for several years. In fact, as far back
-as October 13, 1838, the _Sun_ remarked:
-
- Boz is coming to America. We hope he will not make a fool of
- himself here, like a majority of his distinguished countrymen
- who preceded him.
-
-The _Sun_ got out an extra on the day when Dickens landed, but it
-was not in honour of Boz, but rather because of the arrival of
-the Britannia with a budget of foreign news. Buried in a mass of
-Continental paragraphs was this one:
-
- Among the passengers are Mr. Charles Dickens, the celebrated
- author, and his lady.
-
-The ship-news man never even thought to ask Dickens how he liked
-America. But society was waiting for Boz, and he was tossed about on a
-lively sea of receptions and dinners. The _Sun_ presently thought that
-the young author was being exploited overmuch:
-
- Mr. Dickens, we have no doubt, is a very respectable gentleman,
- and we know that he is a very clever and agreeable author. He
- has written several books that have put the reading world in
- most excellent good humor. In this way he has done much to
- promote the general happiness of mankind, and honestly deserves
- their gratitude.
-
- Having crossed the water for the purpose of traveling in
- America, where his works have been extensively read and
- admired, he is, of course, received and treated with marked
- civility, attention, and respect. We should be ashamed of our
- countrymen if it were otherwise. During his stay at Boston the
- citizens gave him a public dinner. At New Haven he received
- a similar token of kind regard. In this city a ball has been
- given him. All these attentions were right and proper, and
- as far as we can learn they have been uniformly conducted in
- a gentlemanly and respectable manner, becoming alike to the
- characters of those who gave and him who received them.
-
- But a few penny-catchers of the press are determined to make
- money out of Boz. The shop-windows are stuffed with lithograph
- likenesses of him, which resemble the original just about as
- much as he resembles a horse. His own wife would not recognize
- them in any other way than by the word “Boz” written under them.
-
- Then a corps of sneaking reporters, most of them fresh from
- London, are pursuing him like a pack of hounds at his heels to
- catch every wink of his eye, every motion of his hands, and
- every word that he speaks, to be dished up with all conceivable
- embellishments by pen and pencil, and published in extras,
- pamphlets, and handbills. To make all this trash sell well in
- the market, the greatest possible hurrah must be made by the
- papers interested in the speculations, and therefore the whole
- American people are basely caricatured by them, and represented
- as one vast mob following Dickens from place to place, and
- striving even to touch the hem of his garment.
-
- That our readers at a distance may not be induced to suppose
- that the good people of New York are befooling themselves in
- this way, we beg leave to assure them that all these absurd
- reports are ridiculous caricatures, hatched from the prolific
- brains of a few reckless reporters for a few unprincipled
- papers. They do in truth make as great fools of themselves as
- they represent the public to be generally. But beyond their
- narrow and contemptible circle we are happy to know that Mr.
- Dickens is treated with that manly and sincere respect which
- is so justly his due, and which must convince him that he is
- amongst a warm-hearted people, who know both how to respect
- their guest and themselves.
-
-When Dickens sailed for home, in June, the _Sun_ bade him _bon voyage_
-with but a paragraph. It was more than a year afterward that it came to
-him again; and meanwhile he had trodden on the toes of America:
-
- The appearance of the current number of “The Life and
- Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit” will not add to the happiness
- of retrospections. Where is that Boston committee, where the
- renowned getters-up of the City Hotel dinner and the ball at
- the Park Theater, with its _tableaux vivants_, its splendid
- decorations, and tickets at ten dollars each?
-
- The scene is passing now before our memory--the crammed
- theater, full up to its third tier, the dense crowd opening
- a passage for Mr. Dickens and the proud and happy committee
- while he passes up the center of the stage amid huzzas and the
- waving of handkerchiefs, while the band is playing “God Save
- the Queen” and “See, the Conquering Hero Comes.” And _our_
- Irving, _our_ Halleck, _our_ Bryant passed around in the crowd,
- unnoticed and almost unknown. Shame! Let our cheeks crimson, as
- they ought.
-
-The _Sun_ itself was doing very nicely. On its tenth birthday,
-September 3, 1843, it announced that it employed eight editors and
-reporters, twenty compositors, sixteen pressmen, twelve folders and
-counters, and one hundred carriers. The circulation of the daily paper
-was thirty-eight thousand, of the _Weekly Sun_ twelve thousand.
-
-Mr. Beach owned the _Sun’s_ new home at Fulton and Nassau Streets and
-the building at 156 Nassau Street which he had recently vacated, and
-which was burned down in the fire of February 6, 1845. He had a London
-correspondent who ran a special horse express to carry the news from
-London to Bristol. A _Sun_ reporter went to report Webster’s speech on
-the great day when the Bunker Hill Monument was finished. He got down
-correctly at least the last sentence: “Thank God, I--I also--am an
-American!”
-
-With a circulation by far the largest in the world, the _Sun_ was
-obliged to buy a new dress of type every three months, for the day of
-the curved stereotype plate was still far off. Early in 1846 two new
-presses, each capable of six thousand _Suns_ an hour, were put in at a
-cost of twelve thousand dollars.
-
-The size of the paper grew constantly, although Beach stuck to a
-four-page sheet because of the limitations of the presses. Instead of
-adding pages, he added columns. From Day’s little three-column _Sun_
-the paper had grown, by April of 1840, to a width of seven columns. Of
-the total of twenty-eight columns in an issue twenty-one and a half
-were devoted to advertising, three to mixed news and editorials, two
-and a half to the court reports, and one column to reprint.
-
-With the page seven columns wide, Beach thought that the two
-words--“_The Sun_”--looked lonely, and to fill out the heading he
-changed it to read “_The New York Sun_.” This continued from April 13
-to September 29, 1840, when the proprietor saw how much more economical
-it would be to cut out “New York” and push the first and seventh
-columns of the first page up to the top of the paper. Then it was “_The
-Sun_” once more in head-line as well as body.
-
-The paper is never the _New York Sun_, Eugene Field’s poem to the
-contrary notwithstanding. It is the _Sun_, universal in its spirit, and
-published in New York by the accident of birth.
-
-Three years after that the _Sun_ became an eight-column paper, and
-there were no more sneers at the blanket sheets, for the _Sun_ itself
-was getting pretty wide.
-
-It was in the reign of Moses Y. Beach as owner of the _Sun_, that
-Horace Greeley came to stay in New York journalism. He had been fairly
-successful as editor of the _New Yorker_, and his management of the
-campaign paper called the _Log Cabin_, issued in 1840 in the interest
-of General Harrison, was masterly. With the prestige thus obtained, he
-was able, on April 10, 1841, to start the _Tribune_.
-
-In the first number he announced his intention of excluding the
-police reports which had been so valuable to “our leading penny
-papers”--meaning the _Sun_ and the _Herald_--and of making the
-_Tribune_ “worthy of the hearty approval of the virtuous and refined.”
-It was a week before the _Sun_ mentioned its former friend, and then it
-was only to say:
-
- A word to Horace Greeley--if he wishes us to write him or any
- of his sickly brood of newspapers into notice, he must first go
- to school and learn a little decency. He must further retract
- the dirty, malignant, and wholesale falsehood which he procured
- to be published in the Albany _Evening Journal_ a year ago last
- winter, with the hope of injuring the _Sun_. He must then deal
- in something besides misstatements of facts.... Until he does
- all this we shall feel very indifferent to any thrusts that he
- can make at us with his dagger of lath.
-
-Soon afterward the _Sun_ rubbed it in by quoting the Albany _Evening
-Journal_:
-
- Galvanize a large New England squash, and it would make as
- capable an editor as Horace.
-
-But Greeley was a lively young man, in spite of his eccentric ways and
-his habit of letting one leg of his trousers hang out of his unpolished
-boots. Only thirty when he started the _Tribune_, he had had a lot
-of experience, particularly with politicians and with fads. He still
-believed in some of the fads, including temperance--which was then
-considered a fad--vegetarianism, and Abolition. He had been, too, a
-poet; and his verses lived to haunt his mature years. He had to give
-away most of the five thousand copies that were printed of the first
-number of the _Tribune_, but in a month he had a circulation of six
-thousand, and in two months he doubled this.
-
-Greeley had the instinct for getting good men, but not always the knack
-of holding them. One of his early finds was Henry J. Raymond, who
-attracted his attention as a boy orator for the Whig cause. Raymond
-worked for Greeley’s _New Yorker_ and later for the _Tribune_. He was a
-good reporter, using a system of shorthand of his own devising.
-
-On one occasion, at least, he enabled the _Tribune_ to beat the other
-papers. He was sent to Boston to report a speech, and he took with
-him three printers and their cases of type. After the speech Raymond
-and his compositors boarded the boat for New York, and as fast as the
-reporter transcribed his notes the printers put the speech into type.
-On the arrival of the boat at New York the type was ready to be put
-into the forms, and the _Tribune_ was on the street hours ahead of its
-rivals.
-
-Greeley paid Raymond eight dollars a week until Raymond threatened to
-leave unless he received twenty dollars a week. He got it, but Greeley
-made such a fuss about the matter that Raymond realized that further
-increases would be out of the question. Presently he went to the
-_Courier and Enquirer_, and from 1843 to 1850 he tried to restore some
-of the glory that once had crowned Colonel Webb’s paper.
-
-In this period Raymond and his former employer, Greeley, fought their
-celebrated editorial duel--with pens, not mahogany-handled pistols--on
-the subject of Fourierism, that theory of social reorganization which
-Greeley seemed anxious to spread, and which was zealously preached
-by another of his young men, Albert Brisbane, now perhaps better
-remembered as the father of Arthur Brisbane. But Colonel Webb’s paper
-would not wake wide enough to suit the ambitious Raymond, who seized
-the opportunity of becoming the first editor of the New York _Times_.
-
-Other men who worked for Greeley’s _Tribune_ in its young days were
-Bayard Taylor, who wrote articles from Europe; George William Curtis,
-the essayist; Count Gurowski, an authority on foreign affairs; and
-Charles A. Dana.
-
-Beach soon recognized Greeley as a considerable rival in the morning
-field, and there was a long tussle between the _Sun_ and the
-_Tribune_. It did not content itself with words, and there were street
-battles between the boys who sold the two papers. Stung by one of
-Beach’s articles, Greeley called the _Sun_ “the slimy and venomous
-instrument of Locofocoism, Jesuitical and deadly in politics and
-grovelling in morals.” The term Locofoco had then lost its original
-application to the Equal Rights section of the Democratic party and was
-applied--particularly by the Whigs--to any sort of Democrat.
-
-Moses Y. Beach had no such young journalists about him as Dana or
-Raymond, but he had two sons who seemed well adapted to take up the
-ownership of the _Sun_. He took them in as partners on October 22,
-1845, under the title of “M. Y. Beach & Sons.” The elder son, Moses
-Sperry Beach, was then twenty-three years old, and had already been
-well acquainted with the newspaper business, particularly with the
-mechanical side of it. Before his father took him as a partner, young
-Moses had joined with George Roberts in the publication of the Boston
-_Daily Times_, but he was glad to drop this and devote himself to the
-valuable property at Fulton and Nassau Streets.
-
-If a genius for invention is inheritable, both the Beach boys were
-richly endowed by their father. Moses S. invented devices for the
-feeding of rolls of paper, instead of sheets, to flat presses; for
-wetting news-print paper prior to printing; for cutting the sheets
-after printing; and for adapting newspaper presses to print both sides
-of the sheet at the same time.
-
-Alfred Ely Beach was only nineteen when he became partner in the _Sun_.
-After leaving the academy at Monson, Massachusetts, where he had been
-schooled, he worked with his father in the _Sun_ office, and learned
-every detail of the business. The inventive vein was even deeper in
-him than in his brother. When he was twenty he formed a partnership
-with his old schoolmate, Orson D. Munn, of Monson, and they bought the
-_Scientific American_ from Rufus Porter and combined its publishing
-business with that of soliciting patents.
-
-Alfred Beach retained his interest in the _Sun_ for several years, but
-he is best remembered for his inventions and for his connection with
-scientific literature. In 1853 he devised the first typewriter which
-printed raised letters on a strip of paper for the blind. He invented
-a pneumatic mail-tube, and a larger tube on the same principle, by
-which he hoped passengers could be carried, the motive power being the
-exhaustion of air at the far end by means of a rotating fan.
-
-He was the first subway-constructor in New York. In 1869 he built a
-tunnel nine feet in diameter under Broadway from Warren Street to
-Murray Street, and the next year a car was sent to and fro in this
-by pneumatic power. A more helpful invention, however, was the Beach
-shield for tunnel-digging--a gigantic hogs-head with the ends removed,
-the front circular edge being sharp and the rear end having a thin iron
-hood. This cylinder was propelled slowly through the earth by hydraulic
-rams, the dislodged material being removed through the rear.
-
-Mr. Beach was connected with the _Scientific American_ until his death
-in 1896. His son, Frederick Converse Beach, was one of the editors of
-that periodical, and his grandson, Stanley Yale Beach, is still in the
-same field of endeavour.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-“THE SUN” IN THE MEXICAN WAR
-
- _Moses Y. Beach as an Emissary of President Polk.--The Associated
- Press Founded in the Office of “The Sun.”--Ben Day’s
- Brother-in-Law Retires with a Small Fortune._
-
-
-The Beaches, father and sons, owned the _Sun_ throughout the Mexican
-War, a period notable for the advance of newspaper enterprise; and
-Moses Yale Beach proved more than once that he was the peer of Bennett
-in the matter of getting news.
-
-Shortly before war was declared--April 24, 1846--the telegraph-line was
-built from Philadelphia to Fort Lee, New Jersey, opposite New York.
-June found a line opened from New York to Boston; September, a line
-from New York to Albany. The ports and the capitals of the nation were
-no longer dependent on horse expresses, or even upon the railroads, for
-brief news of importance. Morse had subdued space.
-
-For a little time after the Mexican War began there was a gap in the
-telegraph between Washington and New York, the line between Baltimore
-and Philadelphia not having been completed; but with the aid of special
-trains the _Sun_ was able to present the news a few hours after it left
-Washington. It was, of course, not exactly fresh news, for the actual
-hostilities in Mexico were not heard of at Washington until May 11,
-more than two weeks after their accomplishment.
-
-The good news from the battle-fields of Palo Alto and Resaca de la
-Palma was eighteen days in reaching New York. All Mexican news came by
-steamer to New Orleans or Mobile, and was forwarded from those ports,
-by the railroad or other means, to the nearest telegraph-station. Moses
-Y. Beach was instrumental in whipping up the service from the South,
-for he established a special railroad news service between Mobile and
-Montgomery, a district of Alabama where there had been much delay.
-
-On September 11, 1846, the _Sun_ uttered halleluiahs over the spread of
-the telegraph. The line to Buffalo had been opened on the previous day.
-The invention had been in every-day use only two years, but more than
-twelve hundred miles of line had been built, as follows:
-
- New York to Boston 265
- New York to Albany and Buffalo 507
- New York to Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Washington 240
- Philadelphia to Harrisburg 105
- Boston to Lowell 26
- Boston toward Portland 55
- Ithaca to Auburn 40
- Troy to Saratoga 31
- -----
- Total 1,269
-
-England had then only one hundred and seventy-five miles of telegraph.
-“This,” gloated the _Sun_, “is American enterprise!”
-
-The _Sun_ did not have a special correspondent in Mexico, and most of
-its big stories during the war, including the account of the storming
-of Monterey, were those sent to the New Orleans _Picayune_ by George W.
-Kendall, who is supposed to have put in the mouth of General Taylor the
-words--
-
-“A little more grape, Captain Bragg!”
-
-Moses Yale Beach himself started for Mexico as a special agent of
-President Polk, with power to talk peace, but the negotiations between
-Beach and the Mexican government were broken off by a false report of
-General Taylor’s defeat by Santa Anna, and Mr. Beach returned to his
-paper.
-
-The more facilities for news-getting the papers enjoyed, the more
-they printed--and the more it cost them. Each had been doing its bit
-on its own hook. The _Sun_ and the _Courier and Enquirer_ had spent
-extravagant sums on their horse expresses from Washington. The _Sun_
-and the _Herald_ may have profited by hiring express-trains to race
-from Boston to New York with the latest news brought by the steamships,
-but the outflow of money was immense. The news-boats--clipper-ships,
-steam-vessels, and rowboats--which went down to Sandy Hook to meet
-incoming steamers cost the _Sun_, the _Herald_, the _Courier and
-Enquirer_, and the _Journal of Commerce_ a pretty penny.
-
-With the coming of the Mexican War there were special trains to be run
-in the South. And now the telegraph, with its expensive tolls, was
-magnetizing money out of every newspaper’s till. Not only that, but
-there was only one wire, and the correspondent who got to it first
-usually hogged it, paying tolls to have a chapter from the Bible, or
-whatever was the reporter’s favourite book, put on the wire until his
-story should be ready to start.
-
-It was all wrong, and at last, through pain in the pocket, the
-newspapers came to realize it. At a conference held in the office of
-the _Sun_, toward the close of the Mexican War, steps were taken to
-lessen the waste of money, men, and time.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- MOSES SPERRY BEACH
- A Nephew of Benjamin H. Day and a Son of Moses Yale Beach. He
- Held “The Sun” Until Dana’s Time. This Picture is Reproduced
- from the First Edition of Mark Twain’s “Innocents Abroad.” Mr.
- Beach Was One of Clemens’s Fellow Voyagers.
-]
-
-At this meeting, presided over by Gerard Hallock, the veteran editor
-of the _Journal of Commerce_, there were represented the _Sun_, the
-_Herald_, the _Tribune_--the three most militant morning papers--the
-_Courier and Enquirer_, the _Express_, and Mr. Hallock’s own paper.
-The conference formed the Harbour Association, by which one fleet
-of news-boats would do the work for which half a dozen had been
-used, and the New York Associated Press, designed for cooperation in
-the gathering of news in centres like Washington, Albany, Boston,
-Philadelphia, and New Orleans. Alexander Jones, of the _Journal of
-Commerce_, became the first agent of the new organization. He had been
-a reporter on both sides of the Atlantic, and it was he who invented
-the first cipher code for use in the telegraph, saving time and tolls.
-
-Thus in the office where some of the bitterest invective against
-newspaper rivals had been penned, there began an era of good feeling.
-So busy had the world become, and so full of news, through the new
-means of communication afforded by Professor Morse, that the invention
-of opprobrious names for Mr. Bennett ceased to be a great journalistic
-industry.
-
-As an example of the change in the personal relations of the newspaper
-editors and proprietors, the guests present at a dinner given by Moses
-Y. Beach in December, 1848, when he retired from business and turned
-the _Sun_ over to his sons Moses and Alfred, were the venerable Major
-Noah, then retired from newspaper life; Gerard Hallock, Horace Greeley,
-Henry J. Raymond, of the _Courier and Enquirer_, and James Brooks, of
-the _Express_. All praised Beach and his fourteen years of labour on
-the _Sun_, but there was never a word about Benjamin H. Day. Evidently
-that gentleman’s re-entry into the newspaper field as the proprietor of
-the _True Sun_ had put him out of tune with his brother-in-law. Richard
-Adams Locke was there, however--the only relic of the first régime.
-
-What the _Sun_ thought of itself then is indicated in an editorial
-printed on December 4, when the Beach brothers relieved their father,
-who was in bad health:
-
- We ask those under whose eyes the _Sun_ does not shine from
- day to day--our _Sun_, we mean; this large and well-printed
- one-cent newspaper--to look it over and say whether it is not
- one of the wonders of the age. Does it not contain the elements
- of all that is valuable in a diurnal sheet? Where is more
- effort or enterprise expended for so small a return?
-
- Of this effort and enterprise we feel proud; and a circulation
- of over fifty thousand copies of our sheet every day among at
- least five times that number of readers, together with the
- largest cash advertising patronage on this continent, convinces
- us that our pride is widely shared.
-
-The _Sun_ that Ben Day had turned over to Moses Y. Beach was no longer
-recognizable. Fifteen years had wrought many changes from the time when
-the young Yankee printer launched his venture on the tide of chance.
-The steamship, the railroad, and the telegraph had made over American
-journalism. The police-court items, the little local scandals, the
-animal stories--all the trifles upon which Day had made his way to
-prosperity--were now being shoved aside to make room for the quick, hot
-news that came in from many quarters. The _Sun_ still strove for the
-patronage of the People, with a capital P, but it had educated them
-away from the elementary.
-
-The elder Beach was enterprising, but never rash. He made the _Sun_ a
-better business proposition than ever it was under Day. Ben Day carried
-a journalistic sword at his belt; Beach, a pen over his ear. Perhaps
-Day could not have brought the _Sun_ up to a circulation of fifty
-thousand and a money value of a quarter of a million dollars; but, on
-the other hand, it is unlikely that Beach could ever have started the
-_Sun_.
-
-Once it was started, and once he had seen how it was run, the task of
-keeping it going was fairly easy for him. He was a good publisher. Not
-content with getting out the _Sun_ proper, he established the _Weekly
-Sun_, issued on Saturdays, and intended for country circulation, at
-one dollar a year. In 1848 he got out the _American Sun_, at twelve
-shillings a year, which was shipped abroad for the use of Europeans who
-cared to read of our rude American doings. Another venture of Beach’s
-was the _Illustrated Sun and Monthly Literary Journal_, a sixteen-page
-magazine full of woodcuts.
-
-Mr. Beach had for sale at the _Sun_ office all the latest novels in
-cheap editions. He wrote a little book himself--“The Wealth of New
-York: A Table of the Wealth of the Wealthy Citizens of New York City
-Who Are Estimated to Be Worth One Hundred Thousand Dollars or Over,
-with Brief Biographical Notices.” It sold for twenty-five cents.
-
-Perhaps Beach was the father of the newspaper syndicate. In December,
-1841, when the _Sun_ received President Tyler’s message to Congress
-by special messenger, he had extra editions of one sheet printed for
-twenty other newspapers, using the same type for the body of the
-issue, and changing only the title-head. In this way such papers as
-the _Vermont Chronicle_, the Albany _Advertiser_, the Troy _Whig_, the
-Salem _Gazette_, and the Boston _Times_ were able to give the whole
-text of the message to their readers without the delay and expense of
-setting it in type.
-
-Here is Dana’s own estimate of the second proprietor of the _Sun_:
-
- Moses Y. Beach was a business man and a newspaper manager
- rather than what we now understand as a journalist--that is
- to say, one who is both a writer and a practical conductor
- and director of a newspaper. Mr. Beach was a man noted for
- enterprise in the collection of news. In the latter days when
- he owned and managed the _Sun_ in New York, the telegraph was
- only established between Washington and Boston, though toward
- the end of his career it was extended, if I am not mistaken, as
- far towards the South as Montgomery in Alabama. The news from
- Europe was then brought to Halifax by steamers, just as the
- news from Mexico was brought to New Orleans. Mr. Beach’s energy
- found a successful field in establishing expresses brought by
- messengers on horseback from Halifax to Boston and from New
- Orleans to Montgomery, thus bringing the news of Europe and
- the news of the Mexican War to New York much earlier than they
- could have arrived by the ordinary public conveyance. With him
- were associated, sooner or later, two or three of the other
- New York papers; but the energy with which he carried through
- the undertaking made him a conspicuous and distinguished
- figure in the journalism of the city. The final result was the
- organization of the New York Associated Press, which has now
- become a world-embracing establishment for the collection of
- news of every description, which it furnishes to its members in
- this city and to other newspapers in every part of the country.
- Under the stimulus of Mr. Beach’s energetic intellect, aided by
- the cheapness of its price, the _Sun_ became in his hands an
- important and profitable establishment. Yet he is scarcely to
- be classed among the prominent journalists of his day.
-
-Through conservatism, good business sense, and steady work, Moses Y.
-Beach amassed from the _Sun_ what was then a handsome fortune, and when
-he retired he was only forty-eight. His last years were spent at the
-town of his birth, Wallingford, where he died on July 19, 1868, six
-months after the _Sun_ had passed out of the hands of a Beach and into
-the hands of a Dana.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- (_From Photo in the Possession of Mrs. Jennie Beach Gasper_)
-
- ALFRED ELY BEACH
- A Son of Moses Y. Beach; He Left “The Sun” to Conduct the
- “Scientific American.”
-]
-
-Beach Brothers, as the new ownership of the _Sun_ was entitled, made
-but one important change in the appearance and character of the paper
-during the next few years.
-
-Up to the coming of the telegraph the _Sun_ had devoted its first page
-to advertising, with a spice of reading-matter that usually was in the
-form of reprint--miscellany, as some newspapermen call it, or bogus, as
-most printers term it. But when telegraphic news came to be common but
-costly, newspapers began to see the importance of attracting the casual
-reader by means of display on the front page. The Beaches presently
-used one or two columns of the latest telegraph-matter on the first
-page; sometimes the whole page would be so occupied.
-
-In 1850, from July to December, they issued an _Evening Sun_, which
-carried no advertising.
-
-On April 6, 1852, Alfred Ely Beach, more concerned with scientific
-matters than with the routine of daily publication, withdrew from the
-_Sun_, which passed into the sole possession of Moses S. Beach, then
-only thirty years old. It was reported that when the partnership was
-dissolved the division was based on a total valuation of two hundred
-and fifty thousand dollars for the paper which, less than nineteen
-years before, Ben Day had started with an old hand-press and a hatful
-of type. Horace Greeley, telling a committee of the British parliament
-about American newspapers, named that sum as the amount for which the
-_Sun_ was valued in the sale by brother to brother.
-
-“It was very cheap,” he added.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-“THE SUN” DURING THE CIVIL WAR
-
- _One of the Few Entirely Loyal Newspapers of New York.--Its Brief
- Ownership by a Religious Coterie.--It Returns to the Possession
- of M. S. Beach, Who Sells It to Dana._
-
-
-In 1852, when Moses Sperry Beach came into the sole ownership of the
-_Sun_, it was supposed that the slavery question had been settled
-forever, or at least with as much finality as was possible in
-determining such a problem. The Missouri Compromise, devised by Henry
-Clay, had acted as a legislative mandragora which lulled the United
-States and soothed the spasms of the extreme Abolitionists. Even
-Abraham Lincoln, now passing forty years, was losing that interest in
-politics which he had once exhibited, and was devoting himself almost
-entirely to his law practice in Springfield, Illinois.
-
-The _Sun_ had plenty of news to fill its four wide pages, and its daily
-circulation was above fifty thousand. The Erie Railroad had stretched
-itself from Piermont, on the Hudson River, to Dunkirk, on the shore of
-Lake Erie. The Hudson River Railroad was built from New York to Albany.
-The steamship Pacific, of the Collins Line, had broken the record by
-crossing the Atlantic in nine days and nineteen hours. The glorious
-yacht America had beaten the British Titania by eight miles in a race
-of eighty miles.
-
-Kossuth, come as the envoy plenipotentiary of a Hungary ambitious for
-freedom, was New York’s hero. Lola Montez, the champion heart-breaker
-of her century, danced hither and yon. The volunteer firemen of New
-York ran with their engines and broke one another’s heads. The Young
-Men’s Christian Association, designed to divert youth to gentler
-practices, was organized, and held its first international convention
-at Buffalo in 1854. Lieutenant Ulysses S. Grant, of the United States
-army, was in California, recently the scene of the struggle between
-outlawry and the Vigilantes, and was not very sure that he liked the
-life of a soldier.
-
-Messrs. Heenan, Morrissey, and Yankee Sullivan furnished, at frequent
-intervals, inspiration to American youth. The cholera attacked New York
-regularly, and as regularly did the _Sun_ print its prescription for
-cholera medicine, which George W. Busteed, a druggist, had given to
-Moses Yale Beach in 1849, and which is still in use for the subjugation
-of inward qualms. The elder Beach, enjoying himself in Europe with his
-son Joseph Beach, sent articles on French and German life to his son
-Moses Sperry Beach’s paper.
-
-Literature was still advancing in New England. Persons of refinement
-were reading Hawthorne’s “Scarlet Letter” and “The House of Seven
-Gables,” Ik Marvel’s “Reveries of a Bachelor,” Irving’s “Mahomet,” and
-Parkman’s “Conspiracy of Pontiac.” Marion Harland had written “Alone.”
-Down in Kentucky young Mary Jane Holmes was at work on her first novel,
-“Tempest and Sunshine.” But brows both high and low were bent over the
-instalments in the _National Era_ of the most fascinating story of the
-period, Harriet Beecher Stowe’s “Uncle Tom’s Cabin.”
-
-The writing of news had not gone far ahead in quality. Most of the
-reporters still wrote in a groove a century old. Every chicken-thief
-who was shot, “clapped his hand to his heart, cried out that he was a
-dead man, and presently expired.” But the editorial articles were well
-written. On the _Sun_ John Vance, a brilliant Irishman, was turning out
-most of the leaders and getting twenty dollars a week. In the _Tribune_
-office Greeley pounded rum and slavery, while his chief assistant,
-Charles A. Dana, did such valuable work on foreign and domestic
-political articles that his salary grew to the huge figure of fifty
-dollars a week.
-
-Bennett was working harder than any other newspaper-owner, and was
-doing big things for the _Herald_. Southern interests and scandal
-were his long suits. “We call the _Herald_ a very bad paper,” said
-Greeley to a Parliamentary committee which was inquiring about American
-newspapers. He meant that it was naughty; but naughtiness and all, its
-circulation was only half as big as the _Sun’s_.
-
-Henry J. Raymond was busy with his new venture, the _Times_, launched
-by him and George Jones, the banker. With Raymond were associated
-editorially Alexander C. Wilson and James W. Simonton. William Cullen
-Bryant, nearing sixty, still bent “the good grey head that all men
-knew” over his editor’s desk in the office of the _Evening Post_. With
-him, as partner and managing editor, was that other great American,
-John Bigelow.
-
-J. Watson Webb, fiery as ever in spirit, still ran the _Courier and
-Enquirer_, “the Austrian organ in Wall Street,” as Raymond called
-it because of Webb’s hostile attitude toward Kossuth. Webb had been
-minister to Austria, a post for which Raymond was afterward to be
-nominated but not confirmed. The newspapers and the people were all
-pretty well satisfied with themselves. And then Stephen A. Douglas put
-his foot in it, and Kansas began to bleed.
-
-Douglas had been one of the _Sun’s_ great men, for the _Sun_ listed
-heavily toward the Democratic party nationally; but it did not disguise
-its dislike of the Little Giant’s unhappily successful effort to
-organize the Territories of Kansas and Nebraska on the principle of
-squatter sovereignty. After the peace and quiet that had followed the
-Missouri Compromise, this attempt to bring slavery across the line of
-thirty-six degrees and thirty minutes by means of a local-option scheme
-looked to the _Sun_ very much like kicking a sleeping dragon in the
-face.
-
-After Douglas had been successful in putting his bill through
-Congress, the _Sun_ still rejected its principles. Commenting on the
-announcements of certain Missourians that they would take their slaves
-into the new Territory, the _Sun_ said:
-
- They may certainly take their slaves with them into the new
- Territory, but when they get them there they will have no law
- for holding the slaves. Slavery is a creation of local law,
- and until a Legislature of Kansas or Nebraska enacts a law
- recognizing slavery, all slaves taken into the Territory will
- be entitled to their freedom.
-
-It was at this time that the germs of Secession began to show
-themselves on the culture-plates of the continent. The _Sun_ was hot at
-the suggestion of a division of the Union:
-
- It can only excite contempt when any irate member of Congress
- or fanatical newspaper treats the dissolution of the Union as
- an event which may easily be brought about. There is moral
- treason in this habit of continually depreciating the value of
- the Union.
-
-The _Sun_ saw that Douglas’s repeal of the Missouri Compromise was a
-smashing blow delivered by a Northern Democrat to the Democracy of the
-North; but the sectional hatred was not revealed in all its intensity
-until 1856, when Representative Preston S. Brooks, of South Carolina,
-made his murderous attack on Senator Charles Sumner, of Massachusetts,
-in the Senate Chamber. This and its immediate consequences were well
-covered by the _Sun_, not only through its Associated Press despatches,
-but also in special correspondence from its Washington representative,
-“Hermit.” It had a report nearly a column long of Sumner’s speech,
-“The Crime Against Kansas,” which caused Brooks to assault the great
-opponent of slavery.
-
-That year was also the year of the first national convention of the
-Republican party, conceived by the Abolitionists, the Free Soilers, and
-the Know-nothings, and born in 1854. The _Sun_ had a special reporter
-at Philadelphia to tell of the nomination of John C. Frémont, but
-the paper supported Buchanan. Its readers were of a class naturally
-Democratic, and although the paper was not a party organ, and had no
-liking for slavery or Secession, the new party was too new, perhaps too
-much colored with Know-nothingism, to warrant a change of policy.
-
-On the subject of the Dred Scott decision, written by Chief Justice
-Taney and handed down two days after Buchanan’s inauguration, the _Sun_
-was blunt:
-
- We believe that the State of New York can confer citizenship on
- men of whatever race, and that its citizens are entitled, by
- the Constitution, to be treated in Missouri as citizens of New
- York State. To treat them otherwise is to discredit our State
- sovereignty.
-
-John Brown’s raid at Harper’s Ferry was found worthy of a column in the
-_Sun_, but space was cramped that morning, for four columns had to be
-given to a report of the New York firemen’s parade. The firemen read
-the _Sun_.
-
-But Mr. Beach sent a special man to report Brown’s trial at
-Charlestown, Virginia. The editorial columns echoed the sense of the
-correspondence--that the old man was not having a fair show. Besides,
-the _Sun_ believed that Brown was insane and belonged in a madhouse
-rather than on the gallows. It printed a five-thousand-word sermon
-by Henry Ward Beecher on Brown’s raid. Beecher and the Beaches were
-very friendly, and there is still in Beecher’s famous Plymouth Church,
-Brooklyn, a pulpit made of wood brought from the Mount of Olives by
-Moses S. Beach.
-
-When John Brown was hanged, December 2, 1859, the _Sun_ remarked:
-
- The chivalry of the Old Dominion will breathe easier now....
- But, while Brown cannot be regarded as a common murderer, it is
- only the wild extravagance of fanatical zeal that will attempt
- to elevate him to the rank of a martyr.
-
-In the Illinois campaign of 1858 the _Sun_ was slow to recognize
-Abraham Lincoln’s prowess as a speaker, although Lincoln was then
-recognized as the leading exponent of Whig doctrine in his State.
-Referring to the debates between Lincoln and Douglas in their struggle
-for the Senatorship, the _Sun_ said:
-
- An extraordinary interest is attached by the leading men of all
- parties to the campaign which Senator Douglas is conducting in
- the State of Illinois. His rival for the Senatorial nomination,
- Mr. Lincoln, being no match for the Little Giant in campaign
- oratory, Senator Trumbull has taken the stump on the Republican
- side.
-
-Two years later, when Lincoln was nominated for President, the _Sun_
-saw him in a somewhat different light:
-
- Mr. Lincoln is an active State politician and a good stump
- orator. As to the chances of his election, that is a matter
- upon which we need not at present speculate.
-
-But the time for the _Sun_ to speculate came only three days later (May
-22, 1860), when it frankly stated:
-
- It is now admitted that Mr. Lincoln’s nomination is a strong
- one.... He is, emphatically, a man of the people.... That he
- would, if elected, make a good President, we do not entertain a
- doubt. His chances of election are certainly good. The people
- are tired of being ruled by professional politicians.
-
-That was written before the Democratic national convention. The _Sun_
-wanted the Democrats to nominate Sam Houston. It saw that Douglas had
-estranged the anti-slavery Democrats of the North. When Douglas was
-nominated, the _Sun_ remarked:
-
- Of the six candidates in the field--Lincoln, Bell, Houston,
- Douglas, Breckinridge, and Gerrit Smith--Lincoln has
- unquestionably the best chance of an election by the people.
-
-The _Sun_ had no illusions as to the candidacy of John C. Breckinridge,
-the Vice-President under Buchanan, when he was nominated for President
-by the Democrats of the South, who refused to flock to the colours of
-Douglas:
-
- The secessionists do not expect that Breckinridge will be
- elected. Should Lincoln and Hamlin be elected by the votes of
- the free States, then the design of the conspirators is to come
- out openly for a disruption of the Union and the erection of a
- Southern confederacy.
-
-“The Union cannot be dissolved,” the _Sun_ declared on August 4,
-“whosoever shall be elected President!”
-
-And on the morning of Election Day the _Sun_, which had taken little
-part except to criticise the conduct of the Democratic campaign, said
-prophetically: “History turns a leaf to-day.” Its comment on the
-morning after the election was characteristic of its attitude during
-the canvass:
-
- Mr. Lincoln appears to have been elected, and yet the country
- is safe.
-
-In a paragraph of political gossip printed a week later the _Sun_ said
-that Horace Greeley could have the collectorship of the port of New
-York if he resigned his claims to a seat in the Cabinet, and that--
-
- For the postmastership Charles A. Dana of the _Tribune_,
- Daniel Ullman, Thomas B. Stillman, and Armor J. Williamson are
- named. Either Mr. Dana or Mr. Williamson would fill the office
- creditably.
-
-That was probably the first time that Charles A. Dana got his name into
-the _Sun_.
-
-Although unqualifiedly opposed to Secession, the _Sun_ did not believe
-that military coercion was the best way to prevent it. It saw the
-temper of South Carolina and other Southern States, but thought that it
-saw, too, a diplomatic way of curing the disorder. South Carolina, it
-said, had a greater capacity for indignation than any other political
-body in the world. Here was the way to stop its wrath:
-
- Open the door of the Union for a free and inglorious egress,
- and you dry up the machine in an instant.
-
-This was somewhat on a plane with Horace Greeley’s advice in the
-_Tribune_--“Let the erring sisters go in peace.” The _Sun_, however,
-was more Machiavellian:
-
- Our proposition is that the Constitution be so amended as
- to permit any State, within a limited period, and upon her
- surrender of her share in the Federal property, to retire
- from the confederacy [the Union] in peace. It is a plan to
- emasculate Secession by depriving it of its present stimulating
- illegality. Does any one suppose that even South Carolina would
- withdraw from the Union if her withdrawal were normal?
-
-This was printed on December 8, 1860, some weeks before the fate of the
-Crittenden Compromise, beaten by Southern votes, showed beyond doubt
-that the South actually preferred disunion.
-
-With mingled grief and indignation the _Sun_ watched the Southern
-States march out of the Union. It poured its wrath on the head of
-the mayor of New York, Fernando Wood, when that peculiar statesman
-suggested, on January 7, 1861, that New York City should also secede.
-“Why may not New York disrupt the bonds which bind her to a venal and
-corrupt master?” Wood had inquired.
-
-The _Sun_ had more faith in Lincoln than most of its Democratic
-contemporaries exhibited. Of his inaugural speech it said:
-
- There is a manly sincerity, geniality, and strength to be felt
- in the whole address.
-
-The day after the fall of Fort Sumter the _Sun_ found a moment to turn
-on the South-loving _Herald_:
-
- We state only what the proprietor of the _Herald_ undoubtedly
- believes when we say that if the national ensign had not been
- hung out yesterday from its windows, as a concession to the
- gathering crowd, the issue of that paper for another day would
- have been more than doubtful.
-
-Shortly afterward the _Sun_ charged that the _Herald_ had had in
-its office a full set of Confederate colours, “ready to fling to the
-breeze of treason which it and the mayor hoped to raise in this city.”
-Later in the same year the _Sun_ accused the _Daily News_ and the
-_Staats-Zeitung_ of disloyalty, and intimated that the _Journal of
-Commerce_ and the _Express_ were not what they should be. The owner
-of the _Daily News_ was Ben Wood, a brother of Fernando Wood. In its
-youth the _News_ had been a newspaper of considerable distinction. It
-was an offshoot of the _Evening Post_, and one of its first editors was
-Parke Godwin, son-in-law of William Cullen Bryant. Another of its early
-editors was Samuel J. Tilden.
-
-Wood, who was a Kentuckian by birth, made the _News_ a Tammany organ
-and used it to get himself elected to Congress, where he served as a
-Representative from 1861 to 1865, constantly opposing the continuation
-of the war. The _Sun’s_ accusation of disloyalty against the _News_
-was echoed in Washington, and for eighteen months, early in the war,
-the _News_ was suppressed. The _Staats-Zeitung_, also included in the
-_Sun’s_ suspicion, was then owned by Oswald Ottendorfer, who had come
-into possession of the great German daily in 1859, by his marriage to
-Mrs. Jacob Uhl, widow of the man who established it as a daily.
-
-Presence in the ranks of the copperhead journalists was disastrous to
-the owner of the _Journal of Commerce_, Gerard Hallock, who had been
-one of the great figures of American journalism for thirty years. In
-the decade before the war Hallock bought and liberated at least a
-hundred slaves, and paid for their transportation to Liberia; yet he
-was one of the most uncompromising supporters of a national proslavery
-policy. When the American Home Missionary Society withdrew its support
-from slave-holding churches in the South, Hallock was one of the
-founders of the Southern Aid Society, designed to take its place.
-
-In August, 1861, the _Journal of Commerce_ was one of several
-newspapers presented by the grand jury of the United States Circuit
-Court for “encouraging rebels now in arms against the Federal
-government, by expressing sympathy and agreement with them.” Hallock’s
-paper was forbidden the use of the mails. He sold his interest in the
-_Journal of Commerce_, retired from business, never wrote another line
-for publication, and died four years later.
-
-Another contemporary of the _Sun_ which suffered during the war was
-the _World_, then a very young paper. It had first appeared in June,
-1860, as a highly moral daily sheet. Its express purpose was to give
-all the news that it thought the public _ought_ to have. This meant
-that it intended to exclude from its staid columns all thrilling police
-reports, slander suits, divorce cases, and details of murders. It
-refused to print theatrical advertising.
-
-The _World_ had a fast printing-press and obtained an Associated Press
-franchise. It hired some good men, including Alexander Cummings, who
-had made his mark on the Philadelphia _North American_, James R.
-Spalding, who had been with Raymond on the _Courier and Enquirer_, and
-Manton Marble. But the _World_, stripped of lively human news, was a
-failure. After two hundred thousand dollars had been sunk in a footless
-enterprise, the religious coterie retired, and left the _World_ to the
-worldly.
-
-Its later owners were variously reported to be August Belmont, Fernando
-Wood, and Benjamin Wood; but it finally passed entirely into the hands
-of Manton Marble, who made it a free-trade Democratic organ. Marble had
-learned the newspaper business on the _Journal_ and the _Traveler_
-in Boston, and in 1858 and 1859 he was on the staff of the _Evening
-Post_. In July, 1861, the _World_ and the _Courier and Enquirer_ were
-consolidated, and Colonel J. Watson Webb, who had owned and edited the
-latter paper for thirty-four years, retired from newspaper life.
-
-During the Civil War the _World_ was strongly opposed to President
-Lincoln’s administration. Perhaps this fact accounts for the punishment
-which befell it through the misdeed of an outsider.
-
-In May, 1864, there was sent to most of the morning-newspaper offices
-what purported to be a proclamation by the President, appointing a
-day of fasting and prayer, and calling into military service, by
-volunteering and draft, four hundred thousand additional troops. This
-was a fake, engineered by Joseph Howard, Jr., a newspaperman who had
-been employed on the _Tribune_, and who put out the hoax for the
-purpose of influencing the stock-market. The _Sun_, the _Tribune_, and
-the _Times_ did not fall for the hoax, but the _Herald_, the _World_,
-and the _Journal of Commerce_ printed it, stopping their presses when
-they learned the truth.
-
-General John A. Dix seized the offices of the _Herald_, the _World_,
-and the _Journal of Commerce_, put soldiers to guard them, and
-suppressed the papers for several days--all this by order of the
-President. Howard, the forger, was arrested, and on his confession was
-sent to Fort Lafayette, where he was a prisoner for several weeks.
-Manton Marble wrote a bitter letter to Lincoln in protest against what
-he considered an outrage on the _World_. Marble remained at the head of
-the paper until 1876.
-
-The _Sun_ took the setback of Bull Run with better grace than most of
-the papers--far better than Horace Greeley, who yelled for a truce. It
-seemed to see that this was only the beginning of a long conflict,
-which must be fought to the end, regardless of disappointments. On
-August 15, 1861, it declared:
-
- Let there be but one war. Better it should cost millions
- of lives than that we should live in hourly dread of wars,
- contiguous to a people who could make foreign alliances and
- land armies upon our shores to destroy our liberties.
-
-On the subject of the war’s cost it said:
-
- No more talk of carrying on the war economically! The only
- economy is to make short and swift work of it, and the people
- are ready to bear the expense, if it were five hundred millions
- of dollars, to-day.
-
-This was printed when the war was very young; when no man dreamed that
-it would cost the Federal government six times five hundred millions.
-
-The _Sun’s_ editorial articles were not without criticism of the
-conduct of the war. It was one of the many papers that demanded the
-resignation of Seward at a time when the Secretary of State was
-generally blamed for what seemed to be the dilly-dallying of the
-government. Lincoln himself was still regarded as a politician as well
-as a statesman--a view which was reflected in the _Sun’s_ comment on
-the preliminary proclamation of emancipation, September 22, 1862:
-
- As the greatest and most momentous act of our nation, from its
- foundation to the present time, we would rather have seen this
- step disconnected from all lesser considerations and from party
- influences.
-
-The inference in this was that Lincoln had deliberately made his great
-stroke on the eve of the Republican State convention in New York.
-
-The _Tribune_ declared that the proclamation was “the beginning of the
-end of the rebellion.” “The wisdom of the step is unquestionable,” said
-the _Times_; “its necessity indisputable.” The businesslike _Herald_
-remarked that it inaugurated “an overwhelming revolution in the system
-of labour.” The _World_ said that it regretted the proclamation and
-doubted the President’s power to free the slaves. “We regard it with
-profound regret,” said the _Journal of Commerce_. “It is usurpation of
-power!” shouted the _Staats-Zeitung_.
-
-Such was the general tone of the New York morning newspapers during
-the war. Only three--the _Sun_, the _Tribune_, and the _Times_--could
-be described as out-and-out loyalists. The _Sun_ was for backing up
-Lincoln whenever it believed him right, and that was most of the time;
-yet it was free in its criticism of various phases of the conduct of
-the war.
-
-Like most of the Democrats of New York, the _Sun_ was an admirer of
-General McClellan, and it believed that his removal from the command
-of the army was due to politics. But when the election of 1864 came
-around, the _Sun_ refused to join its party contemporaries in wild
-abuse of Lincoln and Johnson. On the morning after the Republican
-nominations it said:
-
- It is no time to quarrel with those men who honestly wish to
- crush the rebellion on the ground that they have nominated a
- rail-splitter and a tailor. It would be more consistent with
- true democracy if these men were honored for rising from an
- humble sphere.
-
-The _Sun_ supported McClellan, praising him for his repudiation of the
-plank in the Democratic platform which declared the war a failure; but
-in the last days of the campaign it was frank in its predictions that
-Lincoln would be elected. On the morning after election it had this to
-say:
-
- The reelection of Abraham Lincoln announces to the world how
- firmly we have resolved to be a free and united people.
-
-After the assassination of President Lincoln the _Sun_ said:
-
- In the death of Mr. Lincoln the Southern people have lost
- one of the best friends they had at the North. He would have
- treated them with more gentleness than any other statesman.
- From him they would have obtained concessions it is now almost
- impossible for our rulers and people to grant.
-
-The _Sun’s_ attitude toward the copperheads and deluded pacifists of
-the North is reflected in an editorial article published on June 5,
-1863. The North was then in its worst panic. Only a month previously
-Lee had defeated Hooker at Chancellorsville, and the victorious
-Confederates were marching through Maryland into Pennsylvania. At
-a mass-meeting in Cooper Union, George Francis Train and other
-copperheads denounced the war, praised Vallandigham, of Ohio, who had
-been banished into the South for his unpatriotic conduct, and declared
-for “peace and reunion.” It was largely a Democratic meeting, but the
-_Sun_ would not stomach the disloyal outburst:
-
- The fact that over ten thousand people assembled in and about
- Cooper Union on Thursday evening to listen to speeches and
- adopt an address and resolutions prepared under that “eye
- single to the public welfare,” discloses the ease with which
- a few political tricksters may present false issues to the
- unthinking and, in the excitement of the moment, induce their
- hearers to applaud sentiments that, when calmly considered,
- are unworthy of a great and free people. Taking advantage of
- the blunders of the present administration, these self-styled
- Democrats raise their banners and, under the guise of
- proclaiming peace, in reality proclaim a war upon those very
- principles it is the highest boast of every true Democrat to
- acknowledge.
-
- The Democratic party is essentially the peace party of the
- present rebellion; but it will sanction no peace that is
- obtained by compromising the vital principles that give force
- to our form of government. They will not ask for peace at the
- expense of the Union, and desire no Democratic victories that
- do not legitimately belong to them as an expression of the
- confidence of the people in their fidelity to the Union and the
- Constitution.
-
- The late meeting, then, should not be sanctioned by any true
- Democrat. It was in no sense Democratic; it was in reality an
- opposition meeting, and only as such will it be looked upon as
- having any important bearing upon the great questions of the
- hour, and if rightly interpreted by the administration will
- exert no evil influence upon the future destinies of this great
- nation.
-
-The methods of gathering war news, early in the conflict, were
-haphazard. The first reports to reach New York from Southern fields
-were usually the government bulletins, but they were not as trustworthy
-as the official bulletins of the European war.
-
-On the morning after the first battle of Bull Run, the _Sun’s_ readers
-were treated to joyous head-lines:
-
- A GREAT BATTLE--SEVENTY THOUSAND REBELS IN IT--OUR ARMY
- VICTORIOUS--GREAT LOSS OF LIFE--TWELVE HOURS’ FIGHTING--RETREAT
- OF THE REBELS--UNITED STATES FORCES PRESSING FORWARD.
-
-But on the following morning the tune changed:
-
- RETREAT OF OUR TROOPS--OUR ARMY SCATTERED--ONLY TWENTY-TWO
- THOUSAND UNION TROOPS ENGAGED--ENEMY NINETY THOUSAND
- STRONG--OUR CANNON LEFT BEHIND.
-
-As a matter of fact, only about eighteen thousand troops were engaged
-on each side.
-
-The _Sun_ had no famous correspondents at the front. It sent three
-reporters to Virginia in 1861, and these sent mail stories and some
-telegraph matter, which was of value in supplementing the official
-bulletins, the Associated Press service, the specials from “Nemo”
-and “Hermit,” the _Sun_ correspondents in Washington, and the matter
-rewritten from the Philadelphia and Western newspapers.
-
-The _Sun_ was still a local paper, with a constituency hungry for news
-of the men of the New York regiments. To the _Sun_ readers the doings
-of General Meagher, of the Irish Brigade, or Colonel Michael Corcoran,
-of the Sixty-Ninth Regiment, were more important than the strategic
-details of a large campaign.
-
-The _Sun_, like all the Northern papers, was frequently deceived
-by false reports of Union victories. Federal troops were in
-Fredericksburg--on the front page--weeks before they were in it in
-reality; in Richmond, years too soon. But there was no doubt about
-Gettysburg, although the North did not get the news until the 5th of
-July. The _Sun_ came out on Monday, the 6th, with these head-lines:
-
- VICTORY!--INVASION COMES TO GRIEF--LEE UTTERLY ROUTED--HIS
- DISASTROUS RETREAT--ALL FEDERAL PRISONERS RECAPTURED--EIGHTEEN
- THOUSAND PRISONERS CAPTURED--MEANS OF ESCAPE DESTROYED.
-
-On April 10, 1865, the head-lines were sprinkled with American flags
-and cuts of Columbia, and the types carried the welcome news for which
-the North had waited for four long years:
-
- OUR NATION REDEEMED--SURRENDER OF LEE AND HIS WHOLE ARMY--THE
- TERMS--OFFICERS AND MEN PAROLED AND TOLD TO GO HOME--THE
- COUNTRY WILD WITH JOY, ETC., ETC., ETC.
-
-The “etc., etc., etc.,” suggests that the head-writer was too wild with
-joy to go into more details.
-
-It was not until May, 1862, that the _Sun_ abandoned the ancient custom
-of giving a large part of the first page to advertising. This reform
-came late, perhaps because Moses S. Beach was out of the _Sun_ in the
-early months of the war.
-
-On August 6, 1860, the control of the paper had passed from Mr. Beach
-to Archibald M. Morrison, a rich young man of religious fervour, who
-was prompted by other religious enthusiasts to get the _Sun_ and use
-it for evangelical purposes. Mr. Morrison gave Mr. Beach one hundred
-thousand dollars for the good-will of the paper, and agreed to pay
-a rental for the material. Mr. Beach retained the ownership of the
-building, of the presses, and, indeed, of every piece of type.
-
-The new proprietors of the _Sun_ held a prayer-meeting at noon every
-day in the editorial rooms. They also injected a bit of religion into
-the columns by printing on the first page reports of prayer-meetings
-in the Sailors’ Home and of the doings of missionaries in Syria and
-elsewhere. In spite of the new spirit that pervaded the office,
-however, it was still possible for the unregenerate old subscriber to
-find some little space devoted to the fistic clashes of Heenan and
-Morrissey. Flies are not caught with vinegar.
-
-The new management made a sort of department paper of the _Sun_, the
-front page being divided with the headings “Financial,” “Religious,”
-“Criminal,” “Calamities,” “Foreign Items,” “Business Items,” and
-“Miscellaneous.” It was not a bad newspaper, and it was quite possible
-that some business men would prefer it to the Beach kind of sheet; but
-it is certain that the advertisers were not attracted and that some
-readers were repelled. One of the latter climbed the stairs of the
-building at Fulton and Nassau Streets early one morning and nailed
-to the door of the editorial rooms a placard which read: “Be ye not
-righteous overmuch!”
-
-During the Morrison régime the _Sun_ refused to accept advertisements
-on Sunday. Of course, the printers worked on Sunday night, getting out
-Monday’s paper, but that was something else. The _Sun_ went so far
-(July 23, 1861) as to urge that the Union generals should be forbidden
-to attack the enemy on Sundays. “Our troops must have rest, and need
-the Sabbath,” it said.
-
-William C. Church, one of the rising young newspapermen of New York,
-was induced to become the publisher under the _Sun’s_ new management.
-He was only twenty-four years old, but he had had a good deal of
-newspaper experience in assisting his father, the Rev. Pharcellus
-Church, to edit and publish the New York _Chronicle_. After a few weeks
-in the _Sun_ office, however, Mr. Church saw that the paper, though
-daily treated with evangelical serum, was not likely to be a howling
-success; and on December 10, 1860, four months after he took hold as
-publisher, it was announced that Mr. Church had “withdrawn from the
-publication of the _Sun_ for the purpose of spending some months in
-European travel and correspondence for the paper.”
-
-Mr. Church wrote a few letters from Europe, but when the Civil War
-started he hurried home and went with the joint military and naval
-expedition headed by General T. W. Sherman and Admiral S. F. Dupont.
-He was present at the capture of Port Royal, and wrote for the
-_Evening Post_ the first account of it that appeared in the North.
-Later he acted as a war-correspondent of the _Times_, writing under the
-pseudonym “Pierrepont.” In October, 1862, he was appointed a captain of
-volunteers, and toward the close of the war he received the brevets of
-major and lieutenant-colonel.
-
-During the war Mr. Church and his brother, Francis Pharcellus Church,
-established the _Army and Navy Journal_, and in 1866 they founded that
-brilliant magazine, the _Galaxy_--later merged with the _Atlantic
-Monthly_--which printed the early works of Henry James. Colonel Church
-owned the _Army and Navy Journal_, and was its active editor, until his
-death, May 23, 1917, at the age of eighty-one. He was the biographer
-and literary executor of John Ericsson, the inventor, and he wrote also
-a biography of General Grant. He and his brother Francis were the most
-distinguished members of a family which, in its various branches, gave
-no less than seventeen persons to literature.
-
-Francis P. Church’s connection with the _Sun_ was longer and more
-pleasant than William’s. His writings for it ranged over a period of
-forty years. He was one of the _Sun’s_ greatest editorial writers, and
-was the author of the most popular editorial article ever written--“Is
-There a Santa Claus?” But that comes in a later and far more brilliant
-period than the one in which William C. Church served the _Sun_ all too
-briefly.
-
-At the end of 1861, what with the expense of getting war news, and
-perhaps with the reluctance of the readers to absorb piety, the _Sun’s_
-cash-drawer began to warp from lack of weight, and Mr. Beach, who had
-never relinquished his rights to all the physical part of the paper,
-took it back. This is the way he announced his resumption of control on
-New Year’s morning, 1862:
-
- Once more I write myself editor and sole proprietor of the
- New York _Sun_. My day-dream of rural enjoyment is broken,
- and I am again prisoner to pen and types. For months I sought
- to avoid the surrender, but only to find resistance without
- avail.... But I congratulate myself on my surroundings. Never
- was prisoner more royally treated.
-
- What, then, to the readers of the _Sun_? Nothing save the
- announcement that I am henceforth its publisher and manager.
- They require no other prospectus, program, or platform.
-
- MOSES S. BEACH.
-
-
-John Vance, who is said to have worked twelve years without a vacation,
-left the _Sun_ about that time because Mr. Beach refused to name him as
-editor-in-chief. Vance was a good writer, but he and Beach were often
-at odds over the _Sun’s_ policies. It probably was Vance’s influence
-that kept the paper in line for Douglas in the Presidential campaign of
-1860--a campaign in which the _Sun_ was run for two months by Beach and
-for three months by the Morrisonites. Vance, in spite of his leaning
-toward Douglas, was an intimate friend of Elihu Burritt, the Learned
-Blacksmith, who was an Abolitionist and an advocate of universal
-brotherhood.
-
-On Beach’s return to the _Sun_ he set out to recover its lost
-advertising and to restore some of the livelier news features that had
-been suppressed by the Morrison group. Early in the summer of 1862 he
-began to shift advertising from the front page, to make room for the
-big war head-lines that had been run on the second page. He also used
-maps and woodcuts of cities, ships, and generals. The _Sun’s_ pictures
-of the Monitor and the Merrimac were printed in one column by deftly
-standing the gallant iron-clads on their sterns.
-
-It was in this summer that Beach reduced expenses and speeded up the
-issue of the paper by adopting the stereotyping process, one of the
-greatest advances in newspaper history:
-
- About a week ago we commenced printing the _Sun_ by a new
- process--that of stereotyping and printing with two presses. We
- are much gratified to-day in being able to say that the process
- has proved eminently successful. From this time forth we may
- expect to present a clean face to our many readers every day.
- We have completed one stereotype within seventeen minutes and a
- quarter, and two within nineteen minutes and a half.
-
-That was rapid work for 1862, but the stereotypers of the present
-day will take a form from the composing-room, make the papier-mâché
-impression, pour in the molten metal, and have the curved plate ready
-for the press in twelve minutes.
-
-The new process saved Beach a lot of money as well as much precious
-time. Before its coming, when the paper was printed directly from the
-face of the type, the _Sun_ had to buy a full new set of type six or
-eight times a year, at an annual cost of six thousand dollars.
-
-The war played havoc with newspaper finances. The price of news-print
-paper rose to twenty-four cents a pound. All the morning papers except
-the _Sun_ raised their prices to three or four cents in 1862. The _Sun_
-stayed at its old penny.
-
-On January 1, 1863, in order to meet advancing costs and still sell
-the _Sun_ for one cent, Beach found it necessary to “remove one column
-from each side of the page”--a more or less ingenuous way of saying
-that the _Sun_ was reduced from seven columns to five. The columns were
-shortened, too, and the whole paper was set in agate type. The _Sun_
-then looked much as it had appeared twenty years before.
-
-With these economies Beach was able to keep the price at one cent until
-August 1, 1864, when the _Sun_ slyly said:
-
- We shall require the one cent for the _Sun_ to be paid in gold,
- or we will receive as an equivalent two cents in currency.
-
- Apologies or explanations are needless. An inflated currency
- has raised the price of white paper nearly threefold.
-
-Of course nobody had one cent in gold, so the _Sun_ readers grinned and
-paid two cents in copper.
-
-From that day on the price of the _Sun_ was two cents until July 1,
-1916, when Frank A. Munsey bought the _Sun_, combined his one-cent
-newspaper, the New York _Press_, with it, and reduced the price to
-one cent. On January 26, 1918, by reason of heavy expenses incidental
-to the war, the _Sun_, with all the other large papers of New York,
-increased its price to two cents a copy. In its eighty-five years
-the _Sun_ has been a penny paper thirty-two years, a two-cent paper
-fifty-three years.
-
-The _Sun_ was constantly profitable in the decade before the Civil
-War. The average annual profits from 1850 to 1860 were $22,770.
-The high-water mark in that period was reached in 1853, when the
-advertising receipts were $89,964 and the net profits $42,906. Its
-circulation in September, 1860, was fifty-nine thousand copies daily,
-of which forty-five thousand were sold on the island of Manhattan.
-
-One of the secrets of the _Sun’s_ popularity in the years when it had
-no such news guidance as Bennett gave to the _Herald_, no such spirited
-editorials as Greeley put into the _Tribune_, no such political
-prestige as Raymond brought to the _Times_, was Moses S. Beach’s belief
-that his public wanted light fiction. The appetite created by Scott
-and increased by Dickens was keen in America. True, the penny _Sun’s_
-literary standards were not of Himalayan height. Hawthorne was too
-spiritual for its readers, Poe too brief. They wanted wads of adventure
-and dialogue, dour squires, swooning ladies, hellish villains, handsome
-heroes, and comic character folk. The young mechanic had to have
-something he could understand without knitting his brows. For him,
-“The Grocer’s Apprentice; a Tale of the Great Plague,” and “Dick Egan;
-or, the San Francisco Bandits,” written for the _Sun_ by H. Warren
-Trowbridge.
-
-In the days before the Civil War, wives snatched the _Sun_ from
-husbands to read “Maggie Miller; or, Old Hagar’s Secret,” “written
-expressly for the _Sun_” by Mary J. Holmes, already famous through
-“Lena Rivers” and “Dora Deane.” Ephemeral? They are still reading “Lena
-Rivers” in North Crossing, Nebraska.
-
-Horatio Alger, Jr., wrote several of his best tales for Mr. Beach, who
-printed them serially in the _Sun_ and the _Weekly Sun_. To the New
-York youth of 1859, who dreamed not that in three years he would be
-clay on the slope at Fredericksburg, it was the middle of a perfect day
-to pick up the _Sun_, read a thrilling news story about Blondin cooking
-an omelet while crossing the Niagara gorge on a tight rope, and then,
-turning to the last page, to plunge into “The Discarded Son; or, the
-Cousin’s Plot,” by the author of “The Secret Drawer,” “The Cooper’s
-Ward,” “The Gipsy Nurse,” and “Madeline the Temptress”--for all these
-were written expressly for the _Sun_ by young Mr. Alger. He was only
-twenty-five then, with the years ahead when, a Unitarian minister, he
-should see fiction material in the New York street-boy and write the
-epics of _Ragged Dick_ and _Tattered Tom_.
-
-What did the women readers of the _Sun_ care about the discovery of oil
-in Pennsylvania or the wonderful trotting campaign of Flora Temple,
-when they could devour daily two columns of “Jessie Graham; or, Love
-and Pride”? The _Sun_ might condense A. T. Stewart’s purchase of two
-city blocks into a paragraph, but there must be no short measure of
-“Gerald Vane’s Lost One,” by Walter Savage North.
-
-When the religious folk held the reins of the _Sun_ they tried to
-compromise by printing “Great Expectations” as a serial, but the wise
-Mr. Beach, on getting the paper back, quickly flung to his hungry
-readers “Hunted Down,” by Ann S. Stephens. Later in the war he catered
-to the martial spirit with “Running the Blockade,” by Captain Wheeler,
-United States army.
-
-One column of foreign news, one of city paragraphs, one of editorial
-articles, one of jokes and miscellany, one of fiction, and nineteen
-of advertising--that was about the make-up of Beach’s _Sun_ before
-the Civil War; that was the prescription which enabled the _Sun_ to
-sell nearly sixty thousand copies in a city of eight hundred thousand
-people. It was a fairly well condensed paper. In February, 1857, when
-it printed one day two and a half columns about the mysterious murder
-of Dr. Harvey Burdell, the rich dentist of Bond Street, it broke its
-record for length in a police story.
-
-It was in Moses S. Beach’s time that the Atlantic cable, second only
-to the telegraph proper as an aid to newspapers, was laid. On August
-6, 1858, when Cyrus W. Field telegraphed to the Associated Press from
-Newfoundland that the ends of the cables had reached both shores of the
-sea, the _Sun_ said that it was “the greatest triumph of the age.”
-Eleven days later the _Sun_ contained this article:
-
- We received last night and publish to-day what purports to be
- the message of Queen Victoria, congratulating the President of
- the United States on the successful completion of the Atlantic
- telegraph. We are assured that the message is genuine, and
- that it came through the Atlantic cable. It is not surprising,
- however, that the President, on receiving it, doubted its
- genuineness, as among the hundreds who crowded our office last
- evening the doubters largely preponderated.
-
- The message, accepting it as the queen’s, is, in style and
- tone, utterly unworthy of the great event which it was designed
- to celebrate.
-
- The message is so shabbily like royalty that we cannot believe
- it to be a fabrication.
-
-Perhaps that was written by John Vance, the Irish exile. And perhaps
-the editorial article which appeared the following day was written by
-Beach himself:
-
- Victoria’s message ... in its complete form, as it appears in
- our columns to-day, is friendly and courteous, though rather
- commonplace in expression and style.
-
-New York had a great celebration over the laying of the cable that
-week. The _Sun’s_ building bore a sign illuminated by gaslight:
-
- S. F. B. MORSE AND CYRUS W. FIELD,
- WIRE-PULLERS OF THE NINETEENTH
- CENTURY.
-
-The first piece of news to come by cable was printed in the _Sun_ of
-August 27, 1858, and ran:
-
- A treaty of peace has been concluded with China, by which
- England and France obtain all their demands, including the
- establishment of embassies at Peking and indemnification for
- the expenses of the war.
-
-It will be remembered that this first cable was not a success, and
-that permanent undersea telegraph service did not come until 1866; but
-the results produced in 1858 convinced the world that Field and his
-associates were right, and that perseverance and money would bring
-perfect results.
-
-After the war, when paper became cheaper, Beach preferred to enlarge
-the _Sun_ rather than reduce its price to one cent. He never printed
-more than four pages, but the lost columns were restored, with
-interest, so that there were eight to a page. Even at two cents a copy
-it was still the cheapest of the morning papers; still the beloved of
-the working classes and the desired of the politicians. Just after the
-war ended the _Sun_ declared that it was read by half a million people.
-
-On January 25, 1868, when the _Sun_ had been in the possession of
-the Beaches for about thirty of its thirty-five years, a new editor
-and manager, speaking for a new ownership of the _Sun_, made this
-announcement at the head of the editorial column:
-
-
- THE SUN
-
- THE OLDEST CHEAP PAPER IN NEW YORK.
-
- Notice is hereby given that the _Sun_ newspaper, with its
- presses, types, and fixtures, has become the property of an
- association represented by the undersigned, and including
- among its prominent stockholders Mr. M. S. Beach, recently the
- exclusive owner of the whole property. It will henceforth be
- published in the building known for the last half-century as
- Tammany Hall, on the corner of Nassau and Frankfort Streets.
- Its price will remain as heretofore at two cents a copy, or
- six dollars per annum to mail subscribers. It will be printed
- in handsome style on a folio sheet, as at present; but it will
- contain more news and other reading matter than it has hitherto
- given.
-
- In changing its proprietorship, the _Sun_ will not in any
- respect change its principles or general line of conduct. It
- will continue to be an independent newspaper, wearing the
- livery of no party, and discussing public questions and the
- acts of public men on their merits alone. It will be guided, as
- it has been hitherto, by uncompromising loyalty to the Union,
- and will resist every attempt to weaken the bonds that unite
- the American people into one nation.
-
- The _Sun_ will support General Grant as its candidate for the
- Presidency. It will advocate retrenchment and economy in the
- public expenditures, and the reduction of the present crushing
- burdens of taxation. It will advocate the speedy restoration of
- the South, as needful to revive business and secure fair wages
- for labor.
-
- The _Sun_ will always have all the news, foreign, domestic,
- political, social, literary, scientific, and commercial. It
- will use enterprise and money freely to make the best possible
- newspaper, as well as the cheapest.
-
- It will study condensation, clearness, point, and will endeavor
- to present its daily photograph of the whole world’s doings in
- the most luminous and lively manner.
-
- It will not take as long to read the _Sun_ as to read the
- London _Times_ or Webster’s Dictionary, but when you have
- read it you will know about all that has happened in both
- hemispheres. The _Sun_ will also publish a semiweekly edition
- at two dollars a year, containing the most interesting articles
- from the daily, and also a condensed summary of the news
- prepared expressly for this edition.
-
- The _Weekly Sun_ will continue to be issued at one dollar
- a year. It will be prepared with great care, and will also
- contain all the news in a condensed and readable form. Both
- the weekly and semiweekly will have accurate reports of the
- general, household, and cattle markets. They will also have an
- agricultural department, and will report the proceedings of
- the Farmers’ Club. This department will be edited by Andrew
- S. Fuller, Esq., whose name will guarantee the quality of his
- contributions.
-
- We shall endeavor to make the _Sun_ worthy the confidence of
- the people in every part of the country. Its circulation is
- now more than fifty thousand copies daily. We mean that it
- shall soon be doubled; and in this, the aid of all persons who
- want such a newspaper as we propose to make will be cordially
- welcomed.
-
- CHARLES A. DANA,
- Editor and Manager.
-
- New York, January 25, 1868.
-
-
-Beneath this announcement was a farewell message from Moses Sperry
-Beach to the readers whom he had served for twenty years:
-
- With unreserved confidence in the ability of those who are to
- continue this work of my life, I lay aside an armor which in
- these latter years has been too loosely borne.
-
-So Moses S. Beach retired from journalism at forty-five. With the
-$175,000 paid to him for the _Sun_, and the profits he had made in his
-many years of ownership, he was easily rich enough to realize his dream
-of quiet rural life--a realization that lasted until his death in 1892.
-
-But who was this Dana who was taking up at forty-eight the burden that
-a younger man was almost wearily laying down?
-
-It is very likely that he was not well known to the readers of the
-_Sun_. The newspaper world knew him as one who had been the backbone of
-Greeley’s _Tribune_ in the turbulent period before the Civil War and
-for a year after the war was on. The army world knew him as the man who
-had been chosen by Lincoln and Stanton for important and confidential
-missions. Students knew him as one of the editors of the “New American
-Encyclopedia.” By many a fireside his name was familiar as the compiler
-of the “Household Book of Poetry.” Highbrows remembered him as one of
-the group of geniuses in the Brook Farm colony.
-
-In none of these categories were many of the men who ran with the
-fire-engines, voted for John Kelly, and bought the _Sun_. But the _Sun_
-was the _Sun_; it was their paper, and they would have none other; and
-they would see what this Dana would do with it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-THE EARLIER CAREER OF DANA
-
- _His Life at Brook Farm and His Tribune Experience.--His
- Break with Greeley, His Civil War Services and His Chicago
- Disappointment.--His Purchase of “The Sun.”_
-
-
-Day and Dana each did a great thing for the _Sun_ and incidentally
-for journalism and for America. Day made humanity more intelligent by
-making newspapers popular. Dana made newspapers more intelligent by
-making them human.
-
-Day started the _Sun_ at twenty-three and left it at twenty-eight. Dana
-took the _Sun_ at forty-eight and kept it for thirty years. Each, in
-his time, was absolute master of the paper.
-
-“The great idea of Day’s time,” wrote E. P. Mitchell on the _Sun’s_
-fiftieth birthday, fifteen years after Dana took hold, “was cheapness
-to the buyer. The great idea of the _Sun_ as it is, was and is interest
-to the reader.”
-
-Of the nine men who have been owners of the _Sun_, seven were of
-down-east Yankee stock, and six of the seven were born in New England.
-Of the editors-in-chief of the _Sun_--except in that brief period of
-the lease by the religious coterie--all have been New Englanders but
-one, and he was the son of a New Englander.
-
-Dana was born in Hinsdale, New Hampshire, on August 8, 1819. His father
-was Anderson Dana, sixth in descent from Richard Dana, the colonial
-settler; and his mother, Ann Denison, came of straight Yankee stock.
-The father failed in business at Hinsdale when Charles was a child,
-and the family moved to Gaines, a village in western New York, where
-Anderson Dana became a farmer. Here the mother died, leaving four
-children--Charles Anderson, aged nine; Junius, seven; Maria, three, and
-David, an infant. The widower went to the home of Mrs. Dana’s parents
-near Guildhall, Vermont, and there the children were divided among
-relatives. Charles was sent to live with his uncle, David Denison, on a
-farm in the Connecticut River Valley.
-
-There was a good teacher at the school near by, and at the age of ten
-Charles was considered as proficient in his English studies as many
-boys of fifteen. When he was twelve he had added some Latin to the
-three R’s. In the judgment of that day he was fit to go to work. His
-uncle, William Dana, was part owner of the general store of Staats &
-Dana, in Buffalo, New York, whither the boy was sent by stage-coach. He
-made himself handy in the store and lived at his uncle’s house.
-
-Buffalo, a distributing place for freight sent West on the Erie Canal,
-had a population of only fifteen thousand in 1831. Many of Staats &
-Dana’s customers were Indians, and young Charles added to the store’s
-efficiency by learning the Seneca language. At night he continued his
-pursuit of Latin, tackled Greek, read what volumes of Tom Paine he
-could buy at a book-shop next door, and followed the career, military
-and political, of the strenuous Andrew Jackson. When he had a day off
-he went fishing in the Niagara River or visited the Indian reservation.
-
-He was a normal, healthy lad, even if he knew more Latin than he
-should. When war threatened with Great Britain over the Caroline
-affair, Dana joined the City Guard and had a brief ambition to be a
-soldier. He was of slender build, but strong. He belonged to the
-Coffee Club, a literary organization, and he made a talk to it on early
-English poetry.
-
-“The best days of my life,” he called this period.
-
-Staats & Dana failed in the panic of 1837, and Charles, then eighteen,
-and the possessor of two hundred dollars saved from his wages, decided
-to go to Harvard. He left Buffalo in June, 1839, although his father
-did not like the idea of letting him go to Harvard.
-
-“I know it ranks high as a literary institution, but the influence
-it exerts in a religious way is most horrible--even worse than
-Universalism.”
-
-Anderson Dana had a horror of Unitarianism, and had heard that Charles
-was attending Unitarian meetings.
-
-“Ponder well the paths of thy feet,” he wrote in solemn warning to his
-perilously venturesome son, “lest they lead down to the very gates of
-hell.”
-
-Dana entered college without difficulty, and devoted much of his time
-to philosophy and general literature. He wrote to his friend, Dr.
-Austin Flint, whom he had met in Buffalo, and who had advised him to go
-to Harvard.
-
- I am in the focus of what Professor Felton calls
- “supersublimated transcendentalism,” and to tell the truth,
- I take to it rather kindly, though I stumble sadly at some
- notions.
-
-This was not strange, for besides hearing Unitarian discourse, young
-Dana was attending Emerson’s lectures at Harvard and reading Carlyle.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- CHARLES A. DANA AT THIRTY-EIGHT
- A Photograph Taken in 1857 When He Was Managing Editor of the
- New York “Tribune.”
-]
-
-In his first term Dana stood seventh in a class of seventy-four. In the
-spring of 1840 he left Cambridge, but pursued the university studies at
-the home of his uncle in Guildhall, Vermont. Here, at an expense of
-about a dollar a week, he put in eight hours a day at his books, and
-for diversion went shooting or tinkered in the farm shop. His sister,
-then fifteen years old, was there, and he helped her with her studies.
-
-Dana returned to Harvard in the autumn, but not for long. His purse was
-about empty, and he found no means of replenishing it at Cambridge.
-In November the faculty gave him permission to be absent during the
-winter to “keep school.” Dana went to teach at Scituate, Massachusetts,
-getting twenty-five dollars a month and his board.
-
-His regret at leaving college was keen, for it meant that he would miss
-Richard Henry Dana’s lectures on poetry, and George Ripley’s on foreign
-literature.
-
-Young Dana’s mind was full in those days. There was the eager desire
-for education, with poverty in the path. He thought he saw a way around
-by going to Germany, where he could live cheaply at a university and be
-paid for teaching English. There was also a religious struggle.
-
- I feel now an inclination to orthodoxy, and am trying to
- believe the real doctrine of the Trinity. Whether I shall
- settle down in Episcopacy, Swedenborgianism, or Goethean
- indifference to all religion, I know not. My only prayer is,
- “God help me!”
-
-But the immediate reality was teaching school in a little town where
-most of the pupils were unruly sailors, and Dana faced it with
-good-natured philosophy. At the end of a day’s struggle to train some
-sixty or seventy Scituate youths, he went back to the home of Captain
-Webb, with whose family he boarded, and read Coleridge for literary
-quality, Swedenborg for religion, and “Oliver Twist” for diversion.
-Candles and whale-oil lamps were the only illuminants, and Dana’s
-eyes, never too strong, began to weaken.
-
-He returned to college in the spring of 1841, but his eyes would stand
-no more. He was about to find work as an agricultural labourer when
-Brook Farm attracted him. Through George Ripley he was admitted to
-that association, which sought to combine labour and intellect in a
-beautiful communistic scheme. He agreed to teach Greek and German and
-to help with the farm work.
-
-Dana subscribed for three of the thirty shares--at five hundred dollars
-a share--of the stock of the Brook Farm Institute of Agriculture and
-Education, as the company was legally titled. Brook Farm was a fine
-place of a hundred and ninety-two acres, in the town of Roxbury,
-about nine miles from Boston. It cost $10,500 and, as most of the
-shareholders had no money to pay on their stock, mortgages amounting
-to eleven thousand dollars were immediately clapped on the place--a
-feat rare in the business world, at once to mortgage a place for more
-than its cost. Dana, now twenty-three years old, was elected recording
-secretary, one of the three trustees, and a member of the committees on
-finance and education.
-
-He remained as a Brook Farmer to the end of the five years that the
-experiment lasted. There he met Hawthorne, who lingered long enough to
-get much of the material for his “Blithedale Romance”; Thoreau, who
-had not yet gone to Walden Pond; William Ellery Channing, second, the
-author and journalist; Albert Brisbane, the most radical of the group
-of socialists of his day; and Margaret Fuller, who believed in Brook
-Farm, but did not live there.
-
-Brook Farm was the perfect democracy. The members did all the work,
-menial and otherwise, and if there was honour it fell to him whose
-task was humblest. The community paid each worker a dollar a day, and
-charged him or her about two dollars and fifty cents a week for board.
-It sold its surplus produce, and it educated children at low rates.
-George Ripley, the Unitarian minister, was chief of the cow-milking
-group, and Dana helped him. Dana, as head waiter, served food to John
-Cheever, valet to an English baronet then staying in Boston.
-
-“And it was great fun,” Dana said, in a lecture delivered at the
-University of Michigan forty years afterward. “There were seventy
-people or more, and at dinner they all came in and we served them.
-There was more entertainment in doing the duty than in getting away
-from it.”
-
-It was at Brook Farm that Dana first made the acquaintance of Horace
-Greeley, who, himself a student of Fourier, was interested in the
-Roxbury experiment, so much more idealistic than Fourierism itself.
-
-Dana took Brook Farm seriously, but he was not one of the poseurs
-of the colony. No smocks for him, no long hair! He wore a full,
-auburn beard, but he wore a beard all the rest of his life. He was a
-handsome, slender youth, and he got mental and physical health out of
-every minute at the farm. By day he was busy teaching, keeping the
-association’s books, milking, waiting on table, or caring for the
-fruit-trees. He was the most useful man on the farm. At night, when the
-others danced, he was at his books or his writings.
-
-He wrote articles for the _Harbinger_, and for the _Dial_,
-which succeeded the _Harbinger_ as the official organ of the
-Transcendentalists. Dr. Ripley was the editor of the _Harbinger_, and
-he had such brilliant contributors as James Russell Lowell and George
-William Curtis; but Dana was his mainstay. He wrote book-reviews,
-editorial articles and notes, and not a little verse. His “Via Sacra”
-is typical of the thoughtful youth:
-
- Slowly along the crowded street I go,
- Marking with reverent look each passer’s face,
- Seeking, and not in vain, in each to trace
- That primal soul whereof he is the show.
- For here still move, by many eyes unseen,
- The blessed gods that erst Olympus kept;
- Through every guise these lofty forms serene
- Declare the all-holding life hath never slept;
- But known each thrill that in man’s heart hath been,
- And every tear that his sad eyes have wept.
- Alas for us! The heavenly visitants--
- We greet them still as most unwelcome guests,
- Answering their smile with hateful looks askance,
- Their sacred speech with foolish, bitter jests;
- But oh, what is it to imperial Jove
- That this poor world refuses all his love?
-
-A Mrs. Macdaniel, a widow, came to Brook Farm from Maryland with
-her son and two daughters. One of the daughters brought with her
-an ambition for the stage, but her destiny was to be Mrs. Dana. On
-March 2, 1846, in New York, Charles A. Dana and Eunice Macdaniel were
-married. That day, coincidentally, the fire insurance on the main
-building at Brook Farm lapsed, perhaps through the preoccupation of
-the recording secretary; and the next day this building, called the
-Phalanstery, was burned.
-
-That was the beginning of the end of Brook Farm and of Dana’s secluded
-life. He went to work on the Boston _Daily Chronotype_ for five dollars
-a week. It was a Congregational paper, owned and edited by Elizur
-Wright. When Wright was absent, Dana acted as editor, and on one of
-these occasions he caused the _Chronotype_ to come out so “mighty
-strong against hell,” that Mr. Wright declared, years afterward, that
-he had to write a personal letter to every Congregational minister
-in Massachusetts, explaining that the apparent heresy was due to
-his having left the paper in the charge of “a young man without
-journalistic experience.”
-
-In February, 1847, Dana went to New York, and Horace Greeley made him
-city editor of the _Tribune_ at ten dollars a week. Later in that year
-Dana insisted on an increase of salary, and Greeley agreed to pay him
-fourteen dollars a week--a dollar less than his own stipend; but in
-consideration of this huge advance Dana was obliged to give all his
-talents to the _Tribune_.
-
-Dana still nursed his desire to see Europe, but he had given up the
-idea of teaching in a German university. Newspaper work had captured
-him. Germany was still attractive, but now as a place of news, for the
-rumblings against the rule of Metternich were being heard in central
-Europe. And in France there was a sweep of socialism, a subject which
-still held the idealistic Dana, and the beginning of the revolution in
-Paris (February 24, 1848).
-
-Dana told Greeley of his European ambition, but Greeley threw cold
-water on it, saying that Dana--not yet thirty--knew nothing about
-foreign politics. Dana asked how much the _Tribune_ would pay for a
-letter a week if he went abroad “on his own,” and Greeley offered ten
-dollars, which Dana accepted. He made a similar agreement with the New
-York _Commercial Advertiser_ and the Philadelphia _North American_, and
-contracted to send letters to the _Harbinger_ and the _Chronotype_ for
-five dollars a week.
-
-“That gave me forty dollars a week for five letters,” said Dana
-afterward; “and when the _Chronotype_ went up, I still had thirty-five
-dollars. On this I lived in Europe nearly eight months, saw plenty of
-revolutions, supported myself there and my family in New York, and
-came home only sixty-three dollars out for the whole trip.” Not a bad
-outcome for what was probably the first correspondence syndicate ever
-attempted.
-
-The trip did wonders for Dana. He saw the foreign “improvers of
-mankind” in action, more violent than visionary; saw theory dashed
-against the rocks of reality. He came back a wiser and better
-newspaperman, with a knowledge of European conditions and men that
-served him well all his life. There is seen in some of his descriptions
-the fine simplicity of style that was later to make the _Sun_ the most
-human newspaper.
-
-Social experiments still interested Dana after his return to New York
-in the spring of 1849, but he was able to take a clearer view of their
-practicability than he had been in the Brook Farm days. He still
-favoured association and cooperation, and every sane effort toward the
-amelioration of human misery, but he now knew that there was no direct
-road to the millennium.
-
-Once home, however, and settled, not only as managing editor, but as
-a holder of five shares of stock in the _Tribune_, Dana was kept busy
-with things other than socialistic theories. Slavery and the tariff
-were the overshadowing issues of the day.
-
-Greeley was the great man of the _Tribune_ office, but Dana, in the
-present-day language of Park Row, was the live wire almost from the day
-of his return from Europe. When Greeley went abroad, Dana took charge.
-Greeley now drew fifty dollars a week; Dana got twenty-five, Bayard
-Taylor twenty, George Ripley fifteen. Dana’s five shares of stock
-netted him about two thousand dollars a year in addition to his salary.
-
-Here is a part of a letter which Dana wrote in 1852 to James S. Pike,
-the Washington correspondent of the _Tribune_:
-
- KEENEST OF PIKES:
-
- What a desert void of news you keep at Washington! For
- goodness’ sake, kick up a row of some sort. Fight a duel,
- defraud the Treasury, set fire to the fueling-mill, get Black
- Dan [Webster] drunk, or commit some other excess that will make
- a stir.
-
-The solemn phrases of transcendentalism had vanished from the tip of
-Dana’s pen.
-
-In the fight over slavery in the fifties, the effort of Greeley
-and Dana was against the further spread of the institution over
-new American territory, rather than for its complete overthrow.
-When Greeley was at the helm, the _Tribune_ appeared to admit the
-possibility of secession, a forerunner of “Let the erring sisters
-depart in peace.” But when Dana was left in charge, the editorials
-pleaded for the integrity of the Union at any cost. Greeley was heart
-and soul for liberty, but his fist was not in the fight. Of the
-political situation in 1854, Henry Wilson wrote, in his “Rise and Fall
-of the Slave Power”:
-
- At the outset Mr. Greeley was hopeless, and seemed disinclined
- to enter the contest. He told his associates that he would
- not restrain them; but, as for himself, he had no heart for
- the strife. They were more hopeful; and Richard Hildreth, the
- historian; Charles A. Dana, the veteran journalist; James S.
- Pike, and other able writers, opened and continued a powerful
- opposition in its columns, and did very much to rally and
- assure the friends of freedom and nerve them for the fight.
-
-Dana went farther than Greeley cared to go, particularly in his attacks
-on the Democrats; so far, in fact, that Greeley often pleaded with him
-to stop. Greeley wrote to James S. Pike:
-
- Charge Dana not to slaughter anybody, but be mild and
- meek-souled like me.
-
-Greeley wrote to Dana from Washington, where Dana’s radicalism was
-making his colleague uncomfortable:
-
- Now I write once more to entreat that I may be allowed to
- conduct the _Tribune_ with reference to the mile wide that
- stretches either way from Pennsylvania Avenue. It is but a
- small space, and you have all the world besides. I cannot stay
- here unless this request is complied with. I would rather cease
- to live at all.
-
- If you are not willing to leave me entire control with
- reference to this city, I ask you to call the proprietors
- together and have me discharged. I have to go to this and that
- false creature--Lew Campbell, for instance--yet in constant
- terror of seeing him guillotined in the next _Tribune_ that
- arrives, and I can’t make him believe that I didn’t instigate
- it. So with everything here. If you want to throw stones at
- anybody’s crockery, aim at my head first, and in mercy be sure
- to aim well.
-
-Again Greeley wrote to Dana:
-
- You are getting everybody to curse me. I am too sick to be out
- of bed, too crazy to sleep, and am surrounded by horrors.... I
- can bear the responsibilities that belong to me, but you heap a
- load on me that will kill me.
-
-With all Dana’s editorial work--and he and Greeley made the _Tribune_
-the most powerful paper of the fifties, with a million readers--he
-found time for the purely literary. He translated and published a
-volume of German stories and legends under the title “The Black Ant.”
-He edited a book of views of remarkable places and objects in all
-countries. In 1857 was published his “Household Book of Poetry,” still
-a standard work of reference. He was criticised for omitting Poe from
-the first edition, and at the next printing he added “The Raven,” “The
-Bells,” and “Annabel Lee.” Poe and Cooper were among the literary gods
-whom Dana refused to worship in his youth, but in later life he changed
-his opinion of the poet.
-
-With George Ripley, his friend in Harvard, at Brook Farm, and in the
-_Tribune_ office, Dana prepared the “New American Encyclopedia,” which
-was published between 1858 and 1863. It was a huge undertaking and a
-success. Dana and Ripley carefully revised it ten years afterward. In
-1882, with Rossiter Johnson, Dana edited and published a collection of
-verse under the title “Fifty Perfect Poems.”
-
-Although Dana persisted that the Union must not fall, Greeley still
-believed, as late as December, 1860, that it would “not be found
-practical to coerce” the threatening States into subjection. When war
-actually came, however, Greeley at last adopted the policy of “No
-compromise, no concessions to traitors.”
-
-The _Tribune’s_ cry, “Forward to Richmond!” sounded from May, 1861,
-until Bull Run, was generally attributed to Dana. Greeley himself made
-it plain that it was not his:
-
- I wish to be distinctly understood as not seeking to be
- relieved from any responsibility for urging the advance of the
- Union army in Virginia, though the precise phrase, “Forward
- to Richmond!” was not mine, and I would have preferred not to
- reiterate it. Henceforth I bar all criticism in these columns
- on army movements. Now let the wolves howl on! I do not believe
- they can goad me into another personal letter.
-
-As a matter of fact, “Forward to Richmond!” was phrased by Fitz-Henry
-Warren, then head of the _Tribune’s_ correspondence staff in
-Washington. He came from Iowa, where in his youth he was editor of the
-Burlington _Hawkeye_. He resigned from the _Tribune_ late in 1861 to
-take command of the First Iowa Cavalry, which he organized. In 1862 he
-became a brigadier-general, and he was later brevetted a major-general.
-In 1869 he was the American minister to Guatemala. From being one of
-the men around Greeley he became one of the men with Dana, and in
-1875–1876 he did Washington correspondence for the _Sun_, and wrote
-many editorial articles for it.
-
-In 1861 Dana was an active advocate of Greeley’s candidacy for the
-United States Senate, and almost got him nominated. If Greeley had
-gone to the Senate, Dana might have continued on the _Tribune_; but
-it became evident, before the war was a year old, that one newspaper
-was no longer large enough for both men. The sprightly, aggressive,
-unhesitating, and practical Dana, and the ambitious, but eccentric
-and somewhat visionary Greeley found their paths diverging. The
-circumstances under which they parted were thus described by Dana in a
-letter to a friend:
-
- On Thursday, March 27, I was notified that Mr. Greeley had
- given the stockholders notice that I must leave, or he would,
- and that they wanted me to leave accordingly. No cause of
- dissatisfaction being alleged, and H. G. having been of late
- more confidential and friendly than ever, not once having said
- anything betokening disaffection to me, I sent a friend to him
- to ascertain if it was true, or if some misunderstanding was at
- the bottom of it. My friend came and reported that it was true,
- and that H. G. was immovable.
-
- On Friday, March 28, I resigned, and the trustees at once
- accepted it, passing highly complimentary resolutions and
- voting me six months’ salary after the date of my resignation.
- Mr. Ripley opposed the proceedings in the trustees, and,
- above all, insisted on delay in order that the facts might be
- ascertained; but all in vain.
-
- On Saturday, March 29, Mr. Greeley came down, called another
- meeting of the trustees, said he had never desired me to
- leave, that it was a damned lie that he had presented such an
- alternative as that he or I must go, and finally sent me a
- verbal message desiring me to remain as a writer of editorials;
- but has never been near me since to meet the “damned lie”
- in person, nor written one word on the subject. I conclude,
- accordingly, that he is glad to have me out, and that he really
- set on foot the secret cabal by which it was accomplished. As
- soon as I get my pay for my shares--ten thousand dollars less
- than I could have got for them a year ago--I shall be content.
-
-That was the undramatic and somewhat disappointing end of Dana’s
-fourteen years on the _Tribune_. He was forty-three years old and not
-rich. All he had was what he got from the sale of his _Tribune_ stock
-and what he had saved from the royalties on his books.
-
-From the literary view-point he was doubtless the best-equipped
-newspaperman in America, but there was no great place open for him then.
-
-Dana’s work on the _Tribune_ had attracted the attention of most of
-the big men of the North, including Edwin M. Stanton, who in January,
-1862, was appointed Secretary of War in place of Simon Cameron. Stanton
-asked Dana to come into the War Department, and assigned him to service
-upon a commission to audit unsettled claims against the quartermaster’s
-department. While in Memphis on this work he first met General Grant,
-then prosecuting the war in the West.
-
-In the autumn of 1862, Stanton offered to Dana a post as second
-Assistant Secretary of War, and Dana, having accepted, told a
-newspaperman of his appointment. When the news was printed, the
-irascible Stanton was so much annoyed--although without any apparent
-reason--that he withdrew the appointment. Dana then became a partner
-with George W. Chadwick, of New York, and Roscoe Conkling, of Utica, in
-an enterprise for buying cotton in that part of the Mississippi Valley
-which the Union army occupied.
-
-Dana and Chadwick went to Memphis in January, 1863, armed with letters
-from Secretary Stanton to General Grant and other field commanders.
-But no sooner had their cotton operations begun than Dana saw the
-evil effect that this traffic was having. It had aroused a fever of
-speculation. Army officers were forming partnerships with cotton
-operators, and even privates wanted to buy cotton with their pay. The
-Confederacy was being helped rather than hindered.
-
-Disregarding his own fortunes, Dana called upon General Grant and
-advised him to “put an end to an evil so enormous, so insidious and so
-full of peril to the country.” Grant at once issued an order designed
-to end the traffic, but the cotton-traders succeeded in having it
-nullified by the government.
-
-Then Dana went to Washington, saw President Lincoln and Secretary
-Stanton, and convinced them that the cotton trade should be handled by
-the Treasury Department. As a result of Dana’s visit, Lincoln issued
-his proclamation declaring all commercial intercourse with seceded
-States to be unlawful. Thus Dana patriotically worked himself out of a
-paying business.
-
-Yet his unselfishness was not without a reward. It reestablished his
-friendly relations with Stanton, and won for him the President’s
-confidence.
-
-Just then there was an important errand to be done. Many complaints
-had been made against General Grant. Certain temperance people had
-told Lincoln that Grant was drinking heavily, and although Lincoln
-jested--“Can you tell me where Grant buys his liquor? I would
-like to distribute a few barrels of the same brand among my other
-major-generals”--he really wished to have all doubts settled.
-
-The President and Mr. Stanton chose Dana for the mission. It was an
-open secret. If Grant did not know that Dana was coming to make a
-report on his conduct, all the general’s staff knew it. General James
-Harrison Wilson, biographer of Dana--and, with Dana, biographer of
-Grant--wrote of this situation:
-
- It was believed by many that if he [Dana] did not bring plenary
- authority to actually displace Grant, the fate of that general
- would certainly depend upon the character of the reports which
- the special commissioner might send to Washington in regard to
- him.
-
-Wilson was at this time the inspector-general of Grant’s army. He
-consulted with John A. Rawlins, Grant’s austere young adjutant-general
-and actual chief of staff, and the two officers agreed that Dana must
-be taken into complete confidence. Wilson wrote:
-
- We sincerely believed that Grant, whatever might be his faults
- and weaknesses, was a far safer man to command the army than
- any other general in it, or than any that might be sent to it
- from another field.
-
-Dana and Wilson and Rawlins made the best of a delicate, difficult
-situation. Dana was taken into headquarters “on the footing of an
-officer of the highest rank.” His commission was that of a major of
-volunteers, but his functions were so important that he was called “Mr.
-Dana” rather than “Major Dana.” Dana himself never used the military
-title.
-
-Dana sent his first official despatches to Stanton in March, 1863,
-from before Vicksburg. Grant’s staff made clear to him the plan of the
-turning movement by which the gunboats and transports were to be run
-past the Vicksburg batteries while the army marched across the country,
-and Dana made most favourable reports to Washington on the general’s
-strategy.
-
-Dana saw not only real warfare, but a country that was new to him.
-After a trip into Louisiana he wrote to his friend, William Henry
-Huntington:
-
- During the eight days that I have been here, I have got new
- insight into slavery, which has made me no more a friend of
- that institution than I was before.... It was not till I saw
- these plantations, with their apparatus for living and working,
- that I really felt the aristocratic nature of it.
-
-Under a flag of truce Dana went close to Vicksburg, where he was met by
-a Confederate major of artillery:
-
- Our people entertained him with a cigar and a drink of whisky,
- of course, or, rather, with two drinks. This is an awful
- country for drinking whisky. I calculate that on an average a
- friendly man will drink a gallon in twenty-four hours. I wish
- you were here to do my drinking for me, for I suffer in public
- estimation for not doing as the Romans do.
-
-Dana was with Grant on the memorable night of April 16, 1863, when the
-squadron of gunboats, barges, and transports ran the Vicksburg forts.
-From that time on until July he accompanied the great soldier. It was
-Dana who received and communicated Stanton’s despatch giving to Grant
-“full and absolute authority to enforce his own commands, and to remove
-any person who, by ignorance, inaction, or any cause, interferes with
-or delays his operations.”
-
-Dana was in many marches and battles. Like the officers of Grant’s
-staff, he slept in farmhouses, and ate pork and hardtack or what the
-land provided. The move on Vicksburg was a brilliant campaign, and
-in ten days Dana saw as much of war as most men of the Civil War saw
-in three years. Dana sent despatches to Washington describing the
-battles at Champion’s Hill and the Big Black Bridge, the investment of
-Vicksburg, and the establishment of a line of supply from the North.
-Through Dana’s eyes the government began to see Grant as he really was.
-
-Dana, with either Grant or Wilson, rode over all the country of the
-Vicksburg campaign, often under fire. He was present at Grant’s
-councils, and rode into Vicksburg with him after its surrender. Dana’s
-view of the great soldier’s personality is given in something he wrote
-many years later, long after their friendship was ended:
-
- Grant was an uncommon fellow--the most modest, the most
- disinterested, and the most honest man I ever knew, with a
- temper that nothing could disturb, and a judgment that was
- judicial in its comprehensiveness and wisdom. Not a great
- man, except morally; nor an original or brilliant man, but
- sincere, thoughtful, deep, and gifted with courage that never
- faltered. When the time came to risk all, he went in like a
- simple-hearted, unaffecting, unpretending hero, whom no ill
- omens could deject and no triumph unduly exalt. A social,
- friendly man, too; fond of a pleasant joke and also ready
- with one; but liking above all a long chat of an evening,
- and ready to sit up with you all night talking in the cool
- breeze in front of his tent. Not a man of sentimentality, not
- demonstrative in friendship; but always holding to his friends
- and just even to the enemies he hated.
-
-Here is Dana’s picture of Rawlins, sent to Stanton on July 12,
-1863--eight days after the fall of Vicksburg:
-
- He is a lawyer by profession, a townsman of Grant, and has
- great influence over him, especially because he watches him
- day and night, and whenever he commits the folly of tasting
- liquor, hastens to remind him that at the beginning of the war
- he gave him [Rawlins] his word of honor not to touch a drop as
- long as it lasted. Grant thinks Rawlins a first-rate adjutant,
- but I think this is a mistake. He is too slow, and can’t write
- the English language correctly without a great deal of careful
- consideration.
-
-In spite of this criticism, Dana admired Rawlins. Without him, he said,
-Grant would not have been the same man.
-
-After Vicksburg and Gettysburg, Dana returned to Washington. He was now
-an Assistant Secretary of War, and his success as an official reporter
-on the conduct of the Army of the Tennessee had been so great that
-Stanton sent him to cover, in the same way, the operations of the Army
-of the Cumberland, going first to General Rosecrans at Chattanooga.
-Dana saw the hottest of the great fight at Chickamauga, and galloped
-twelve miles to send his despatches about it to Stanton. He made blunt
-reports to the government on the unfitness of Rosecrans:
-
- I consider this army to be very unsafe in his hands, but I know
- of no one except Thomas who could now be safely put in his
- place.
-
-After a conference at Louisville between Stanton and Grant, Rosecrans
-was relieved and Thomas became commander of the Army of the Cumberland.
-A fine soldier and a modest man, Thomas was disinclined to supplant a
-superior.
-
-“You have got me this time,” he said to Dana, “but there is nothing
-for a man to do in such a case but obey orders.”
-
-Dana’s despatches had made Stanton realize the importance of holding
-Chattanooga, and the Secretary of War ordered Thomas to defend it at
-all hazards.
-
-“I will hold the town till we starve!” replied Thomas.
-
-Dana was not only a useful eye for the government, but he was a valued
-companion for General Wilson and other officers who went with him on
-his missions. He knew more poetry than any other man in the army except
-General Michael Lawler, an Illinois farmer, whose boast it was that on
-hearing any line of standard English verse he could repeat the next
-line. Dana, the compiler of the “Household Book of Poetry,” would try
-to catch Lawler, but in vain. Dana was not so literal as the Illinois
-general, but General Wilson says that he “seemed never to forget
-anything he had ever read.”
-
-The great advantage of Dana’s despatches to Stanton was that they gave
-a picture of the doings in his field of work that was not biased by
-military pride or ambition. He wrote what he saw and knew, without
-counting the effect on the generals concerned. For one illuminating
-example, there was his story of the final attack in the battle of
-Missionary Ridge. To read Grant or Sherman, one would suppose that the
-triumphant assault was planned precisely as it was executed; but Dana’s
-account of that fierce day is the one that must be relied upon:
-
- The storming of the ridge by our troops was one of the greatest
- miracles in military history. No man that climbs the ascent by
- any of the roads that wind along its front could believe that
- eighteen thousand men were moved up its broken and crumbling
- face, unless it was his fortune to witness the deed. It seems
- as awful as the visible interposition of God. Neither Grant nor
- Thomas intended it. Their orders were to carry the rifle-pits
- along the base of the ridge and capture their occupants; but
- when this was accomplished, the unaccountable spirit of the
- troops bore them bodily up those impracticable steeps, over
- bristling rifle-pits on the crest, and thirty cannon enfilading
- every gully. The order to storm appears to have been given
- simultaneously by Generals Sheridan and Wood, because the men
- were not to be held back, dangerous as the attempt appeared
- to military prudence. Besides, the generals had caught the
- inspiration of the men, and were ready themselves to undertake
- impossibilities.
-
-No wonder that even when Lincoln was confined to his chamber by
-illness, Dana’s despatches were brought to him; “not merely because
-they are reliable,” as Assistant Secretary of War Watson wrote to Dana,
-“but for their clearness of narrative and their graphic pictures of
-the stirring events they describe.” A conservative tribute to the best
-reporter of the Civil War.
-
-Dana returned to Washington about the beginning of 1864 to take up
-office tasks, and particularly the reorganization of the Cavalry
-Bureau. Dishonest horse-dealers were plundering the government, and
-Dana never rested until he had sent enough of these rogues to prison to
-frighten the rest of the band. Dana was a good office man; he worked,
-says James Harrison Wilson, “like a skilful bricklayer.” And as he
-relieved Stanton of much of the routine of the War Department, the
-Secretary supported him in his assaults on dishonest contractors, even
-when the political pressure brought to bear for their protection was at
-its highest.
-
-Lincoln sent Dana to report Grant’s progress in the Virginia campaign
-that opened in May, 1864. On the 26th, three weeks after the march
-began, he was able to notify Washington of an entire change in the
-morale of the contending armies:
-
- The rebels have lost all confidence, and are already morally
- defeated. This army has learned to believe that it is sure of
- victory. Even our officers have ceased to regard Lee as an
- invincible military genius.... Rely upon it, the end is near as
- well as sure.
-
-In the eventful weeks of that early summer Dana became an observer for
-Grant as well as for the government. It was evident to Dana that the
-great soldier, and not Washington, must decide what was to be done. In
-a despatch from Washington, whither he had returned at Grant’s request,
-Dana said to the general:
-
- Until you direct positively and explicitly what is to be done,
- everything will go on in the fatal way in which it has gone on
- for the past week.
-
-Longstreet’s Confederates were coming down the Shenandoah Valley,
-and Grant, taking heed of Dana’s significant message, sent Sheridan
-to dispose of them. Then, as Grant himself was stationed in front of
-Petersburg, Dana resumed his activities in the office at Washington.
-
-“It has fallen to the lot of no other American,” says General Wilson,
-“to serve as the confidential medium of communication between the army
-and the government and between the government and the general-in-chief,
-as it did to Dana during the War of the Rebellion.”
-
-One pleasant errand which fell to Dana was the delivery to Sheridan,
-after his victory over Early at Cedar Creek, of his promotion to
-major-general. This entailed a journey on horseback through the Valley
-of Virginia, and the constant danger of capture by Mosby’s guerrillas;
-but Dana, who greatly admired Sheridan, was glad to take the chance.
-
-When the news came to Washington of the fall of Richmond, in April,
-1865, Secretary Stanton sent Dana to the Confederate capital to gather
-up its archives. Many of these historically valuable papers had been
-removed and scattered, but Dana collected what he could and sent them
-to Washington. He wanted to be present with Grant at Lee’s surrender,
-but fate kept him in Richmond, for Lincoln was there, and needed him.
-When at last he got away, Grant had left Appomattox. Dana joined him
-_en route_, and together they reached Washington on the day before the
-President’s assassination.
-
-It was on the day of his arrival that Dana went to the President to ask
-him whether it would be well to order the arrest of Jacob Thompson, a
-Confederate commissioner who was trying to go from Canada to Europe
-through Maine. Lincoln returned the historic reply:
-
- “No, I rather think not. When you have got an elephant by the
- hind leg, and he is trying to run away, it’s best to let him
- run!”
-
-A few hours after the President’s death, however, Stanton ordered Dana
-to obtain Thompson’s arrest.
-
-Dana was active in unearthing the conspiracy that led to the
-assassination. A month later, acting under Stanton’s injunctions,
-he wrote the order to General Miles authorizing him to manacle and
-fetter Jefferson Davis and Clement C. Clay, Jr., whenever he thought
-it advisable, the Secretary of War being in fear that some of the
-prisoners of state might escape or kill themselves.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- MR. DANA AT FIFTY
- From a Photograph Taken in 1869, a Year After He Obtained
- Control of “The Sun.”
-]
-
-Dana then and afterward resented the suggestion that the president
-of the fallen Confederacy had met with cruelty or injustice while he
-was confined in Fortress Monroe. In his “Recollections of the Civil
-War,” he said:
-
- Medical officers were directed to superintend his meals and
- give him everything that would excite his appetite. As it was
- complained that his quarters in the casemate were unhealthy and
- disagreeable, he was, after a few weeks, transferred to Carroll
- Hall, a building still occupied by officers and soldiers. That
- Davis’s health was not ruined by his imprisonment at Fort
- Monroe is proved by the fact that he came out of prison in
- better condition than when he went in, and that he lived for
- twenty years afterward, and died of old age.
-
-A new newspaper, the _Daily Republican_, was started in Chicago, a few
-weeks after the close of the Civil War, by Senator Trumbull and other
-prominent Illinoisans. They asked Dana to become its editor. His work
-in the War Department was done, and he had hoped to go into business,
-for his own estimate of his power as a journalist was not as flattering
-as the opinions of those who knew him. Yet the Chicago proposition was
-attractive on paper, for its capital was fixed at the large sum of five
-hundred thousand dollars--an amount sufficient, in those days, to carry
-on any intelligently managed journal.
-
-Dana resigned as Assistant Secretary of War on July 1, 1865, went
-to Chicago, and became editor of the _Republican_. No man was more
-intellectually fit for the editorship of a newspaper in that hour of
-reconstruction. He had been a real Republican from the founding of the
-party. He cared little for the new President, Andrew Johnson, and the
-_Republican_ was more inclined toward the side of Stanton, who differed
-with Johnson as to the methods which should be used in the remaking of
-the South. Of Johnson, Dana wrote to General Wilson:
-
- The President is an obstinate, stupid man, governed by
- preconceived ideas, by whisky, and by women. He means one thing
- to-day and another to-morrow, but the glorification of Andrew
- Johnson all the time.
-
-The statement that the capital stock of the _Republican_ was fixed at
-half a million dollars must now be qualified. It was fixed on paper,
-but not in the banks. Little of the money was actually paid in, and
-some of the subscribers were not solvent. Dana worked hard with his
-pen, but the _Republican_ had not enough backing to hold it up. After
-one year of it Dana resigned and came East, determined to start a paper
-in New York.
-
-He had friends of influence and wealth who were glad to be associated
-with him. These included:
-
- Thomas Hitchcock
- Isaac W. England
- Charles S. Weyman
- John H. Sherwood
- M. O. Roberts
- George Opdyke
- E. D. Smith
- F. A. Palmer
- William H. Webb
- Roscoe Conkling
- A. B. Cornell
- E. D. Morgan
- David Dows
- John C. Hamilton
- Amos R. Eno
- S. B. Chittenden
- Freeman Clarke
- Thomas Murphy
- William M. Evarts
- Cyrus W. Field
- E. C. Cowdin
- Salem H. Wales
- Theron R. Butler
- Marshall B. Blake
- F. A. Conkling
- A. A. Low
- Charles E. Butler
- Dorman B. Eaton
-
-The most eminent of this distinguished group was, of course, William
-M. Evarts, then the leader of the American bar. He had been counsel
-for the State of New York in the Lemmon slave case, pitted against
-Charles O’Connor, counsel for the State of Virginia. He became chief
-counsel for President Johnson in the impeachment proceedings of 1868,
-and later was Johnson’s Attorney-General. He was chief counsel for the
-United States in the Alabama arbitration, senior counsel for Henry
-Ward Beecher in the Tilton case, Secretary of State under Hayes, and a
-United States Senator from 1885 to 1891.
-
-Roscoe Conkling was a United States Senator from New York at the time
-when Dana bought the _Sun_. He was one of Grant’s strongest supporters,
-and led the third-term movement in 1880. His brother, Frederick
-Augustus Conkling, was the Republican candidate for mayor of New York
-in the first year that Dana controlled the _Sun_, although later he
-changed his politics, supporting Tilden in 1876, and Hancock in 1880.
-
-Edwin D. Morgan was Conkling’s colleague in the Senate, where he served
-from 1863 to 1869. He was Governor of New York from 1858 to 1862. He,
-like most of Dana’s associates, was a Grant man, and it was Morgan who
-managed Grant’s second Presidential campaign.
-
-Alonzo B. Cornell, then only thirty-six years old, had risen from
-being a boy telegrapher to a directorship in the Western Union. He was
-already prominent in the Republican politics of New York State, and was
-afterward Governor for three years (1880–1882).
-
-George Opdyke, a loyal Lincoln man, had been mayor of New York in the
-trying years of 1862 and 1863.
-
-Cyrus W. Field had won world-wide distinction as the Columbus of modern
-times, as John Bright called him. Two years before Dana bought the
-_Sun_ Field had succeeded, after many reverses, in making the Atlantic
-cable a permanent success.
-
-Amos R. Eno, merchant and banker, was the man who had made New York
-laugh by building the Fifth Avenue Hotel so far north--away up at
-Twenty-Third Street--that it was known as Eno’s Folly. This he did
-nearly ten years before Dana went to the _Sun_, and in 1868 the hotel
-was not only the most fashionable in the United States, but the most
-profitable.
-
-A. A. Low was a merchant and the father of Seth Low, later mayor of
-New York. William H. Webb was a big ship-builder. Thomas Murphy was
-a Republican politician whom Grant made collector of the port of New
-York, and who gave Grant his place at Long Branch as a summer home.
-
-At least three of the men in the list were active in the _Sun_
-office. Thomas Hitchcock was a young man of wealth and scholarship
-who had become acquainted with Dana when both were interested in
-Swedenborgianism. He wrote, among other books, a catechism of that
-doctrine. For many years he contributed to the _Sun_, under the name
-“Matthew Marshall,” financial articles which appeared on Mondays, and
-which were regarded as the best reviews and criticisms of their kind.
-
-Charles S. Weyman got out the _Weekly Sun_, and edited that delightful
-column, “Sunbeams.”
-
-Salem H. Wales was a merchant whose daughter became Mrs. Elihu Root.
-Dorman B. Eaton was one of the pioneers of civil-service reform.
-Marshall O. Roberts, F. A. Palmer, David Dows, and E. C. Cowdin were
-great names in the business and financial world.
-
-Why Dana and his friends did not start a new paper is explained in the
-following letter, written by Dana to General Wilson:
-
- Just as we were about commencing our own paper, the purchase of
- the _Sun_ was proposed to me and accepted. It had a circulation
- of from fifty to sixty thousand a day, and all among the
- mechanics and small merchants of this city. We pay a large
- sum for it--$175,000--but it gives us at once a large and
- profitable business.
-
- If you have a thousand dollars at leisure, you had better
- invest it in the stock of our company, which is increased to
- $350,000 in order to pay for the new acquisition. Of this sum
- about $220,000 is invested in the Tammany Hall real estate,
- which is sure to be productive, independent of the business of
- the paper.
-
-The “Tammany Hall real estate” was the building at the corner of
-Nassau and Frankfort Streets, where Tammany kept its headquarters
-from 1811, when it moved from Martling’s Long Room, at Nassau and
-Spruce Streets, to 1867, when Dana and his friends bought the building
-with the expectation of starting a new paper. If Moses S. Beach had
-attracted Dana’s attention to the _Sun_ in time, he might have sold
-him, as well as the paper, his own building at Nassau and Fulton
-Streets. But the Tammany Hall building was a better-placed home for the
-_Sun_ than its old quarters. It faced City Hall Park and was a part of
-Printing-House Square. Dana was right about the productiveness of the
-real estate, for no spot in New York sees more pedestrians go by than
-the Nassau-Frankfort corner. The _Sun_ lived there for forty-three
-years, and its present home, taken when the old hall became too small
-and ancient, is only a block away.
-
-The first number of the _Sun_ issued under Dana--Monday, January 27,
-1868--contained a long sketch of Tammany Hall and its former home,
-concluding:
-
- Peace succeeds to strife. No new Halleck can sing:
-
- There’s a barrel of porter at Tammany Hall,
- And the Bucktails are enjoying it all the night long;
- In the time of my boyhood ’twas pleasant to call
- For a seat and cigar ’mid the jovial throng.
-
- So far as the corner of Nassau and Frankfort Streets is
- concerned, _L’Empire est paix_. The _Sun_ shines for all; and
- on the site of old Tammany’s troubles and tribulations we turn
- back the leaves of the past, dispel the clouds of discord, and
- shed our beams far and near over the Regenerated Land.
-
-Dana changed the appearance of the _Sun_ overnight. He kept it as a
-folio, for he always believed in a four-page paper, even when he was
-printing ten pages, but he reduced the number of columns on a page from
-eight to seven, widening each column a little.
-
-The principal head-lines, which had been irregular in size and two to
-the page, were made smaller and more uniform, and four appeared at the
-top of the front page. The editorial articles, which had been printed
-in minion, now appeared a size larger, in brevier, and the heads on
-them were changed to the simple, dignified full-face type of the size
-that is still used.
-
-Dana changed the title-head of the _Sun_ from Roman, which it had
-been from the beginning, to Old English, as it stands to-day. He also
-changed the accompanying emblem. It had been a variation of the seal
-of the State of New York, with the sun rising in splendour behind
-mountains; on the right, Liberty with her Phrygian cap held on a staff,
-gazing at an outbound vessel; on the left, Justice with scales and
-sword, so facing that if not blindfolded she would see a locomotive and
-a train of cars crossing a bridge. These classic figures were kept, but
-the eagle--the State crest--which brooded above the sunburst in Beach’s
-time, was removed, so that the rays went skyward without hindrance.
-
-Dana liked “It Shines for All,” the _Sun’s_ old motto--everybody liked
-it, but only one newspaper, the _Herald_, ever had the effrontery to
-pilfer it--but he took it from the scroll in the emblem and replaced
-there the State motto, “Excelsior.”
-
-The _Sun_, under its new master, rose auspiciously--master, not
-masters, for in spite of the number of his financial associates,
-Dana was absolute. The men behind him realized the folly of dividing
-authority. The _Sun_, whether under Day or one of the Beaches, had
-always been a one-man paper. Therefore it succeeded, just as the
-_Herald_, another journal governed by an autocrat, went ahead; but with
-the _Tribune_, where the stockholders ruled and argued, things were
-different.
-
-Dana was the boss. As General Wilson wrote in his biography:
-
- From this time forth it may be truthfully said that Dana was
- the _Sun_, and the _Sun_ Dana. He was the sole arbiter of its
- policy, and it was his constant practice to supervise every
- editorial contribution that came in while he was on duty. The
- editorial page was absolutely his, whether he wrote a line in
- it or not, and he gave it the characteristic compactness of
- form and directness of statement which were ever afterward its
- distinguishing features.
-
-Dana was a man whose natural intellectual gifts had been augmented by
-his travels, his experience on the _Tribune_, his exploits in the war,
-and his association with the big men of his time. Add to all this his
-solid financial backing and his acquirement of a paper with a large
-circulation, and the combination seemed an assurance of success. Yet,
-had Dana lacked the peculiarly human qualities that were his, the
-indefinable newspaper instinct that knows when a tom-cat on the steps
-of the City Hall is more important than a crisis in the Balkans, the
-_Sun_ would have set.
-
-Only genius could enable a lofty-minded Republican, with a Republican
-aristocracy behind him, to take over the _Sun_ and make a hundred
-thousand mechanics and tradesmen, nearly all Democrats, like their
-paper better than ever before. And that is what Dana did, except
-that he added to the _Sun’s_ former readers a new army of admirers,
-recruited by the magic of his pen.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-DANA: HIS “SUN” AND ITS CITY
-
- _The Period of the Great Personal Journalists.--Dana’s Avoidance of
- Rules and Musty Newspaper Conventions.--His Choice of Men and His
- Broad Definition of News._
-
-
-When Dana came into control of the _Sun_, the city of New York, which
-then included only Manhattan and the Bronx, had less than a million
-population, yet it supported, or was asked to support, almost as many
-newspapers as it has to-day. That was the day of the great personal
-editor. Bennett had his _Herald_, with James Gordon Bennett, Jr.,
-as his chief helper. Horace Greeley was known throughout America as
-the editor of the _Tribune_. Henry J. Raymond was at the head of
-the _Times_. Manton Marble--who died in England in 1917--was the
-intellectual chief of the highly intellectual _World_.
-
-The greatest Republican politician of that day, Thurlow Weed, was
-the editor of the _Commercial Advertiser_. He had just changed his
-political throne from the Astor House to the comparatively new Fifth
-Avenue Hotel. Weed was seventy-one years old, but not the Nestor of New
-York editors, for William Cullen Bryant was three years his senior and
-still the active editor of the _Evening Post_. The _Evening Express_,
-later to be incorporated with the _Mail_, was ruled by the brothers
-Brooks, James as editor-in-chief and Erastus as manager. David M. Stone
-ran the _Journal of Commerce_. Ben Wood owned the only penny paper
-in town--the _Evening News_. Marcus M. Pomeroy, better known as Brick
-Pomeroy, had just started his sensational sheet, the _Democrat_, on
-the strength of the reputation he had won in the West as editor of the
-La Crosse _Democrat_. Later he changed the title of the _Democrat_ to
-_Pomeroy’s Advance Thought_.
-
-These were the men who assailed or defended the methods of the
-reconstruction of the South; who stood up for President Johnson, or
-cried for his impeachment; who supported the Presidential ambitions of
-Grant, then the looming figure in national politics, or decried the
-elevation of one whose fame had been exclusively military; who hammered
-at the wicked gates of Tammany Hall, or tried to excuse its methods.
-
-Tweed had not yet committed his magnificent atrocities of loot, but he
-was practically the boss of the city, at the same time a State Senator
-and the street commissioner. John Kelly, then forty-six--two years the
-senior of the boss--was sheriff of New York. Richard Croker, who was
-to succeed Kelly as Kelly succeeded Tweed at the head of the wigwam,
-was then a stocky youth of twenty-five, engineer of a fire-department
-steamer and the leader of the militant youth of Fourth Avenue. He was
-already actively concerned in politics, allied with the Young Democracy
-that was rising against Tweed. In the year when Dana took the _Sun_,
-Croker was elected an alderman.
-
-A slender boy of ten played in those days in Madison Square Park, hard
-by his home in East Twentieth Street, just east of Broadway. His name
-was Theodore Roosevelt.
-
-New York’s richest man was William B. Astor, with a fortune of perhaps
-fifty million dollars. He was then seventy-six years old, but he walked
-every day from his home in Lafayette Place--from its windows he could
-see the Bowery, which had been a real bouwerie in his boyhood--to the
-little office in Prince Street where he worked all day at the tasks
-that fell upon the shoulders of the Landlord of New York. He probably
-never had heard of John D. Rockefeller, a prosperous young oil man in
-the Middle West.
-
-Cornelius Vanderbilt, only two years younger than Astor, was president
-of the New York Central Railroad, and was linking together the great
-railway system that is now known by his name, battling the while
-against the strategy of Jay Gould and his sinister associates. By
-far the most imposing figure in financial America, Vanderbilt had
-everything in the world that he wanted--except Dexter, and that great
-trotter was in the stable of Robert Bonner, who was not only rich
-enough to keep Dexter, but could afford to pay Henry Ward Beecher
-thirty thousand dollars for a novel, “Norwood,” to be printed serially
-in the _Ledger_.
-
-Only one other New Yorker of 1868 ranked in wealth with Astor and
-Vanderbilt--Alexander T. Stewart, whose yearly income was perhaps
-greater than either’s. He was then worth about thirty million dollars,
-and he had astonished the business world by building a retail shop on
-Broadway, between Ninth and Tenth Streets--now half of Wanamaker’s--at
-a cost of two millions and three-quarters.
-
-In Wall Street the big names were August Belmont, Larry Jerome, Jay
-Gould, Daniel Drew, and Jim Fisk. Gould and Fisk were doing what
-they pleased with Erie stock. They and the leaders of Tammany Hall,
-like Tweed and Peter B. Sweeny and Slippery Dick Connelly, hatched
-schemes for fortunes as they sat either in the Hoffman House, where
-Fisk sometimes lived, or at dinner in the house in West Twenty-Third
-Street, where the only woman at table was Josie Mansfield.
-
-Of the great hotels of that day not more than one or two are left. The
-Fifth Avenue then took rank not only as the finest hostelry in New
-York, but perhaps in the world. The Hoffman House was running as a
-European-plan hotel. It had not yet become a Democratic headquarters,
-for the Democrats still preferred the New York, on the American plan.
-The other big “everything included” hotels were the St. Nicholas, where
-Middle West folk stayed, and the Metropolitan, where the exploiter of
-mining-stock held forth. Among the smaller and European-plan hotels
-were the St. James, the St. Denis, the Everett, and the Clarendon,
-all more or less fashionable, and the Brevoort and the Barcelona,
-patronized largely by foreigners.
-
-The restaurants were limited in number, for New York had not acquired
-the restaurant habit as strongly as it has it now. When you have
-mentioned Delmonico’s, Taylor’s, Curet’s, and the Café de l’Université,
-you have almost a complete list of the places to which fashion drove in
-its brougham after the theatre.
-
-The playhouses were plentiful enough, considering the size of the
-city. None was north of Twenty-Fourth Street. Wallack’s, at Broadway
-and Thirteenth Street, was considered the best theatre in America. The
-Grand Opera House, at Eighth Avenue and Twenty-Third Street, was called
-the handsomest. Surely it was costly enough, for Jim Fisk, who had his
-own way with Erie finances, paid eight hundred thousand dollars of the
-railroad stockholders’ gold for it, to buy it from the railroad later
-with some of its own stock, of problematical value.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE FIRST NUMBER OF “THE SUN” UNDER DANA
- The Title Heading Has Remained Unchanged for Fifty Years.
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THE HOME OF “THE SUN” FROM 1868 TO 1915
- The Famous Old Building at Nassau and Spruce Streets.
-]
-
-The Academy of Music, at Fourteenth Street and Irving Place, housed
-Italian opera. The Théâtre Français, also on Fourteenth Street,
-but near Sixth Avenue, was the original home in this country of opera
-bouffe. Opera burlesque prevailed at the Fifth Avenue Opera House,
-on West Twenty-Fourth Street. The Olympic, on Broadway near Houston,
-had been built for Laura Keene; it was there that Edward A. Sothern
-first appeared under his own name. Barney Williams, the _Sun’s_ first
-newsboy, was managing the Broadway Theatre, in Broadway near Broome
-Street. Edwin Booth was building a fine theatre of his own at Sixth
-Avenue and Twenty-Third Street--destined to score an artistic but not a
-financial success.
-
-Club life was well advanced. In the house of the Century Club, then
-in East Fifteenth Street, the member would come upon Bayard Taylor,
-George William Curtis, Parke Godwin, William Allen Butler, Edwin
-Booth, Lester Wallack, John Jacob Astor, August Belmont. The Union
-League was young, and was just about to move from a rented home at
-Broadway and Seventeenth Street to the Jerome house, at Madison Avenue
-and Twenty-Sixth Street, where it remained until 1881, then to go to
-its present home in Fifth Avenue at Thirty-Ninth Street. In the Union
-League could be seen John Jay, Horace Greeley, William E. Dodge, and
-other enthusiastic Republicans. Upon occasion Mr. Dana went there, but
-he was not an ardent clubman.
-
-All in all, the New York of Dana’s first year as an absolute editor
-was an interesting island, with just about as much of virtue and vice,
-wisdom and folly, sunlight and drabness, as may be found on any island
-of nine hundred thousand people. He did not set out to reform it. He
-did not try to turn the general journalism of that day out of certain
-deep grooves into which it had sunk. He had his own ideas of what news
-was, how it should be written, how displayed; but they were ideas, not
-theories. He was not perturbed because the _Sun_ had not handled a big
-story just the way the _Herald_ or the _Tribune_ dished it up; nor was
-it of the slightest consequence to him what Mr. Bennett or Mr. Greeley
-thought of the way the _Sun_ used the story.
-
-Dana made no rules. Other newspapers have printed commandments for
-their writers, but the _Sun_ has never wasted a penny’s worth of
-paper on rules. If there ever was a rule in the office, it was “Be
-interesting,” and it was not only an unwritten rule, but generally an
-unspoken one.
-
-Dana’s realization that journalism was a profession which could be
-neither guided nor governed by set rules was expressed in a speech made
-by him before the Wisconsin Editorial Association at Milwaukee, in 1888:
-
- There is no system of maxims or professional rules that I
- know of that is laid down for the guidance of the journalist.
- The physician has his system of ethics and that sublime oath
- of Hippocrates which human wisdom has never transcended. The
- lawyer also has his code of ethics and the rules of the courts
- and the rules of practice which he is instructed in; but I
- have never met with a system of maxims that seemed to me to be
- perfectly adapted to the general direction of a newspaperman. I
- have written down a few principles which occurred to me, which,
- with your permission, gentlemen, I will read for the benefit of
- the young newspapermen here to-night:
-
- Get the news, get all the news, get nothing but the news.
-
- Copy nothing from another publication without perfect credit.
-
- Never print an interview without the knowledge and consent of
- the party interviewed.
-
- Never print a paid advertisement as news-matter. Let every
- advertisement appear as an advertisement; no sailing under
- false colors.
-
- Never attack the weak or the defenseless, either by argument,
- by invective, or by ridicule, unless there is some absolute
- public necessity for so doing.
-
- Fight for your opinions, but do not believe that they contain
- the whole truth or the only truth.
-
- Support your party, if you have one; but do not think all the
- good men are in it and all the bad ones outside of it.
-
- Above all, know and believe that humanity is advancing; that
- there is progress in human life and human affairs; and that, as
- sure as God lives, the future will be greater and better than
- the present or the past.
-
-In other words, don’t loaf, don’t cheat, don’t dissemble, don’t bully,
-don’t be narrow, don’t grouch. Mr. Dana’s maxims were as applicable to
-any other business as to his own. In a lecture delivered at Cornell
-University in 1894--three years before his death--Mr. Dana uttered more
-maxims “of value to a newspaper-maker”:
-
- Never be in a hurry.
-
- Hold fast to the Constitution.
-
- Stand by the Stars and Stripes. Above all, stand for liberty,
- whatever happens.
-
- A word that is not spoken never does any mischief.
-
- All the goodness of a good egg cannot make up for the badness
- of a bad one.
-
- If you find you have been wrong, don’t fear to say so.
-
-All these maxims were quite as useful to the merchant as to the
-newspaperman. They related to the broad conduct of life. They
-counselled against folly, so far as the making of newspapers was
-concerned, but they did not convey the mysterious prescription with
-which Dana revived American journalism from that trance in which it
-had forgotten that everybody is human and that the English language is
-alive and fluid.
-
-If there had been rules by which a living newspaper could be made
-from men and ink and wood-pulp, Dana would have known them; but there
-were none, nor are there now. The present editor of the _Sun_, E. P.
-Mitchell, who knew Dana better than any other man knew him, said in an
-address at the Pulitzer School of Journalism a few years ago:
-
- Mr. Dana used to lecture on journalism sometimes, when he was
- invited, but in the bottom of my heart I don’t believe he had
- any theories of journalism other than common sense and free
- play for individual talent when discovered and available.
- And I do remember distinctly that when he sent Mr. Joseph
- Pulitzer, then fresh from St. Louis, on to Washington to
- report in semieditorial correspondence the critical stage of
- the electoral controversy of 1876, Mr. Dana did not think it
- necessary to instruct that correspondent to assimilate his
- style to the _Sun’s_ methods and traditions. Never was a job of
- momentous journalistic importance better done in the absence
- of plain sailing directions; but that, perhaps, was due partly
- to the fact that Mr. Pulitzer was somewhat of an individualist
- himself.
-
- For the ancient common law of journalism, as derived from
- England, and perhaps before that from away back in Bœotia, Mr.
- Dana didn’t care one comic supplement. If anybody had asked
- Mr. Dana to compile a set of specific directions for running a
- newspaper, his reply, I am sure, would have been something like
- this:
-
- “Heaven bless you, young man, there aren’t any rules! Go ahead
- and write when you have something to say, not when you think
- you ought to say something. I’ll edit out the nonsense. And,
- by the way, unless there happens to have been born into your
- noddle a little bit of the native aptitude, you ought to go and
- be a lawyer or a farmer or a banker or a great statesman.”
-
-Mr. Dana had no regard for typographical gymnastics. To him a head-line
-was something to fill the mind rather than the eye. He knew the utter
-impossibility of trying to startle the reader eight times in as many
-adjacent columns--a feat which Mr. Bennett and some of his imitators
-seemed to consider feasible. Surprise is not the only emotion upon
-which a newspaper can play. The _Sun_ stretched all the human octaves
-from horror to amusement, but the keys of horror were only touched when
-it was necessary.
-
-Make rules for news? How is it possible to make a rule for something
-the value of which lies in the fact that it is the narrative of what
-never had happened, in exactly the same way, before? John Bogart, a
-city editor of the _Sun_ who absorbed the Dana idea of news and the
-handling thereof, once said to a young reporter:
-
-“When a dog bites a man, that is not news, because it happens so often.
-But if a man bites a dog, that is news.”
-
-The _Sun_ always waited for the man to bite the dog.
-
-Here is Mr. Dana’s own definition of news:
-
- The first thing which an editor must look for is news. If the
- newspaper has not the news it may have everything else, yet
- it will be comparatively unsuccessful; and by news I mean
- everything that occurs, everything which is of human interest,
- and which is of sufficient interest to arrest and absorb the
- attention of the public or of any considerable part of it.
-
- There is a great disposition in some quarters to say that the
- newspapers ought to limit the amount of news that they print;
- that certain kinds of news ought not to be published. I do not
- know how that is. I am not prepared to maintain any abstract
- proposition in that line; but I have always felt that whatever
- the divine Providence permitted to occur I was not too proud to
- report.
-
-A belief has been accepted in some quarters that the _Sun_ of Dana’s
-time preferred college men for its staff. This was in a way false, but
-it is true that a great many of the _Sun’s_ young men came from the
-colleges. Mr. Dana’s views on the matter of educational equipment were
-quite plainly expressed by himself:
-
- If I could have my way, every young man who is going to be a
- newspaperman, and who is not absolutely rebellious against it,
- should learn Greek and Latin after the good old fashion. I had
- rather take a young fellow who knows the “Ajax” of Sophocles,
- and has read Tacitus, and can scan every ode of Horace--I would
- rather take him to report a prize-fight or a spelling-match,
- for instance, than to take one who has never had those
- advantages.
-
- At the same time, the cultivated man is not in every case the
- best reporter. One of the best I ever knew was a man who could
- not spell four words correctly to save his life, and his verb
- did not always agree with the subject in person and number; but
- he always got the fact so exactly, and he saw the picturesque,
- the interesting, the important aspect of it so vividly, that it
- was worth another man’s while, who possessed the knowledge of
- grammar and spelling, to go over the report and write it out.
-
- Now, that was a man who had genius; he had a talent the most
- indubitable, and he got handsomely paid in spite of his lack of
- grammar, because after his work had been done over by a scholar
- it was really beautiful. But any man who is sincere and earnest
- and not always thinking about himself can be a good reporter.
- He can learn to ascertain the truth; he can acquire the habit
- of seeing.
-
- When he looks at a fire, what is the most important thing about
- that fire? Here, let us say, are five houses burning; which is
- the greatest? Whose store is that which is burning? And who has
- met with the greatest loss? Has any individual perished in the
- conflagration? Are there any very interesting circumstances
- about the fire? How did it occur? Was it like Chicago, where a
- cow kicked over a spirit-lamp and burned up the city?
-
- All these things the reporter has to judge about. He is the eye
- of the paper, and he is there to see which is the vital fact
- in the story, and to produce it, tell it, write it out.
-
-Dana saw the usefulness to a reporter of certain qualities which are
-acquired neither at school nor in the office:
-
- In the first place, he must know the truth when he hears it
- and sees it. There are a great many men who are born without
- that faculty, unfortunately. But there are some men that a
- lie cannot deceive; and that is a very precious gift for a
- reporter, as well as for anybody else. The man who has it is
- sure to live long and prosper; especially if he is able to tell
- the truth which he sees, to state the fact or the discovery
- that he has been sent out after, in a clear and vivid and
- interesting manner.
-
- The invariable law of the newspaper is to be interesting.
- Suppose you tell all the truths of science in a way that bores
- the reader; what is the good? The truths don’t stay in the
- mind, and nobody thinks any the better of you because you have
- told the truth tediously. The reporter must give his story in
- such a way that you know he feels its qualities and events and
- is interested in them.
-
-Dana was catholic not only in his taste for news, but in his idea of
-the manner of writing it. Nothing gave him more uneasiness than to find
-that a _Sun_ man was drifting into a stereotyped way of handling a news
-story or writing an editorial article. Even as he advised young men to
-read everything from Shakespeare and Milton down, he repeatedly warned
-them against the imitation, unconscious or otherwise, of another’s
-style:
-
- Do not take any model. Every man has his own natural style, and
- the thing to do is to develop it into simplicity and clearness.
- Do not, for instance, labor after such a style as Matthew
- Arnold’s--one of the most beautiful styles that has ever been
- seen in any literature. It is no use to try to get another
- man’s style or to imitate the wit or the mannerisms of another
- writer. The late Mr. Carlyle, for example, did, in my judgment,
- a considerable mischief in his day, because he led everybody to
- write after the style of his “French Revolution,” and it became
- pretty tedious.
-
-If a writer could not keep on without aping the literary fashion of
-another, then he was not for the _Sun_. Dana wanted good English
-always, but a constant spice of variety in the treatment of a subject,
-and in the style itself; therefore he chose a variety of men.
-
-If he believed that the best report of a ship-launching could be
-written by a longshoreman, he would have hired the hard-handed toiler
-and assigned him to the job. He wanted men who would look at the world
-with open eyes and find the new things that were going on. Dana knew
-that they were going on. His vision had not been narrowed by too close
-application to newspaper offices where editors and managing editors had
-handled the stock stories year in and year out in the same wearisome
-way.
-
-To Dana life was not a mere procession of elections, legislatures,
-theatrical performances, murders, and lectures. Life was everything--a
-new kind of apple, a crying child on the curb, a policeman’s epigram,
-the exact weight of a candidate for President, the latest style in
-whiskers, the origin of a new slang expression, the idiosyncrasies
-of the City Hall clock, a strange four-master in the harbour, the
-head-dresses of Syrian girls, a new president or a new football coach
-at Yale, a vendetta in Mulberry Bend--everything was fish to the great
-net of Dana’s mind.
-
-Human interest! It is an old phrase now, and one likely to cause lips
-to curl along Park Row. But the art of picking out the happenings of
-every-day life that would appeal to every reader, if so depicted that
-the events lived before the reader’s eye, was an art that did not exist
-until Dana came along. Ben Day knew the importance of the trifles of
-life and the hold they took on the people who read his little _Sun_,
-but it remained for Dana to bring out in journalism the literary
-quality that made the trifle live. Whether it was an item of three
-lines or an article of three columns, it must have life, or it had no
-place in the _Sun_.
-
-Dana did not teach his men how to do it. If he taught them anything,
-it was what not to do. His men did the work he wanted them to do, not
-by following instructions, but by being unhampered by instructions. He
-set the writer free and let him go his own way to glory or failure.
-There were no conventions except those of decency, of respect for the
-English language. Because newspapermen had been doing a certain thing
-in a certain way for a century, Dana could not see why he and his
-men should go in the same wagon-track. With a word or an epigram he
-destroyed traditions that had fettered the profession since the days of
-the Franklin press.
-
-One day he held up a string of proofs--a long obituary of Bismarck, or
-Blaine, or some celebrity who had just passed away.
-
-“Mr. Lord,” he said to his managing editor, “isn’t that a lot of space
-to give to a dead man?”
-
-Yet the next day the same Dana came from his office to the city
-editor’s desk to inquire who had written a certain story two inches
-long, and, upon learning, went over to the reporter who was the author.
-
-“Very good, young man, very good,” he said, pointing to the item. “I
-wish I could write like that!”
-
-Names of writers meant nothing to Dana. He judged everything that was
-printed in the _Sun_, or offered to it for publication, on its own
-merits. He went through manuscript with uncanny speed, the gaze that
-seemed to travel only down the centre of the page really taking in the
-whole substance. A dull article from a celebrity he returned to its
-envelope with the note “Respectfully declined,” and without a thought
-of the author’s surprise, or possibly rage. But over a poem from an
-up-State unknown he might spend half an hour if the verses contained
-the germ of an idea new to him.
-
-One clergyman who had come into literary prominence offered to write
-some articles for the _Sun_. Dana told him he might try. The clergyman
-evidently had a notion that the _Sun’s_ cleverness was a worldly,
-reckless devilishness, and he adapted the style of his first article to
-what he supposed was the tone of the paper. Dana read it, smiled, wrote
-across the first page “This is too damned wicked,” and mailed it back
-to the misguided author.
-
-He was a patient man. A clerk in the New York post-office copied by
-hand Edward Everett Hale’s story, “The Man Without a Country,” and
-offered it to the _Sun_--as original matter--for a hundred dollars. It
-was suggested to Mr. Dana that the poor fool should be exposed.
-
-“No,” said Dana, “mark it ‘Respectfully declined,’ and send it back to
-him. He has been honest enough to enclose postage-stamps.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-DANA, AS MITCHELL SAW HIM
-
- _A Picture of the Room Where One Man Ruled for Thirty Years.--The
- Democratic Ways of a Newspaper Autocrat.--W. O. Bartlett, Pike,
- and His Other Early Associates._
-
-
-The English historian, Kinglake, wrote a description of John T.
-Delane, the most famous editor of the London _Times_, which Mr. Dana’s
-associate, Mr. Mitchell, liked to quote as a picture of what Mr.
-Dana was _not_. It is a fine limning of the great editor, as great
-editors were supposed to be before Dana showed his disregard for the
-journalistic dust of the ages:
-
- From the moment of his entering the editor’s room until four or
- five o’clock in the morning, the strain he had to put on his
- faculties must have been always great, and in stirring times
- almost prodigious. There were hours of night when he often had
- to decide--to decide, of course, with great swiftness--between
- two or more courses of action momentously different; when,
- besides, he must judge the appeals brought up to the paramount
- arbiter from all kinds of men, from all sorts of earthly
- tribunals; when despatches of moment, when telegrams fraught
- with grave tidings, when notes hastily scribbled in the Lords
- or Commons, were from time to time coming in to disturb,
- perhaps even to annul, former reckonings; and these, besides,
- were the hours when, on questions newly obtruding, yet so
- closely, so importunately, present that they would have to be
- met before sunrise, he somehow must cause to spring up sudden
- essays, invectives, and arguments which only strong power of
- brain, with even much toil, could supply. For the delicate
- task any other than he would require to be in a state of
- tranquillity, would require to have ample time. But for him
- there are no such indulgences; he sees the hand of the clock
- growing more and more peremptory, and the time drawing nearer
- and nearer when his paper must, _must_ be made up.
-
-That, mark you, was Delane, not Dana. When Mr. Dana counselled the
-young men at Cornell never to be in a hurry, he meant it. Fury was
-never a part of his system of life and work. Probably he viewed with
-something like contempt the high-pressure editor of his own and former
-days. There was no agony in the daily birth of the _Sun_. Mr. Mitchell
-said of his chief:
-
- Mr. Dana has always been the master, and not the slave, of the
- immediate task. The external features of his journalism are
- simplicity, directness, common sense, and the entire absence
- of affectation. He would no more think of living up to Mr.
- Kinglake’s ideal of a great, mysterious, and thought-burdened
- editor, than of putting on a conical hat and a black robe
- spangled with suns, moons, and stars, when about to receive a
- visitor to his editorial office in Nassau Street.
-
-That office in Nassau Street, of which every reader of the _Sun_, and
-surely every newspaperman in America, formed his own mental picture!
-To some imaginations it probably was a bare room, with a desk for the
-editor and, close by, the famous cat. To other imaginations, whose
-owners were familiar with Mr. Dana’s love for the beautiful, the office
-may have been a studio unmarred by the presence of a single unbeautiful
-object. Both visions were incorrect.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- (_Drawn from Life by Corwin Knapp Linson_)
-
- MR. DANA IN HIS OFFICE
-]
-
-Surroundings were nothing to Dana. To him an office was a place to
-work, to convert ideas into readable form. What would works of art be
-in such a place to a man who took more interest in the crowds that
-went to and fro on Park Row beneath his window? Let the room itself be
-described by Mr. Mitchell, who set down this picture of it after he had
-spent hours in it with Mr. Dana almost daily for twenty years:
-
- In the middle of the small room a desk-table of black walnut
- of the Fulton Street style and the period of the first
- administration of Grant; a shabby little round table at
- the window, where Mr. Dana sits when the day is dark; one
- leather-covered chair, which does duty at either post, and
- two wooden chairs, both rickety, for visitors on errands of
- business or ceremony; on the desk a revolving case with a
- few dozen books of reference; an ink-pot and pen, not much
- used except in correcting manuscript and proofs, for Mr. Dana
- talks off to a stenographer his editorial articles and his
- correspondence, sometimes spending on the revision of the
- former twice as much time as was required for the dictation;
- a window-seat filled with exchanges, marked here and there
- in blue pencil for the editor’s eyes; a big pair of shears,
- and two or three extra pairs of spectacles in cache against
- an emergency--these few items constitute what is practically
- the whole objective equipment of the editor of the _Sun_. The
- shears are probably the newest article of furniture in the
- list. They replaced, three or four years ago, another pair of
- unknown antiquity, besought and obtained by Eugene Field, and
- now occupying, alongside of Mr. Gladstone’s ax, the place of
- honor in that poet’s celebrated collection of edged instruments.
-
- For the non-essentials, the little trapezoid-shaped room
- contains a third table containing a file of the newspaper for
- a few weeks back, and a heap of new books which have passed
- review; an iron umbrella-rack; on the floor a cheap Turkish
- rug; and a lounge covered with horsehide, upon which Mr. Dana
- descends for a five minutes’ nap perhaps five times a year.
-
- The adornments of the room are mostly accidental and
- insignificant. Ages ago somebody presented to Mr. Dana, with
- symbolic intent, a large stuffed owl. The bird of wisdom
- remains by inertia on top of the revolving bookcase, just as
- it would have remained there if it had been a stuffed cat or a
- statuette of “Folly.” Unnoticed and probably long ago forgotten
- by the proprietor, the owl solemnly boxes the compass as Mr.
- Dana swings the case, reaching in quick succession for his
- Bible, his Portuguese dictionary, his compendium of botanical
- terms, or his copy of the Democratic national platform of 1892.
- On the mantelpiece is an ugly, feather-haired little totem
- figure from Alaska, which likewise keeps its place solely
- by possession. It stands between a photograph of Chester
- A. Arthur, whom Mr. Dana liked and admired as a man of the
- world, and the japanned calendar-case which has shown him
- the time of year for the last quarter of a century. A dingy
- chromolithograph of Prince von Bismarck stands shoulder to
- shoulder with George, the Count Joannes.
-
- The same mingling of sentiment and pure accident marks the rest
- of Mr. Dana’s picture-gallery. There is a large and excellent
- photograph of Horace Greeley, who is held in half-affectionate,
- half-humorous remembrance by his old associate in the
- management of the _Tribune_. Another is of the late Justice
- Blatchford, of the United States Supreme Court; it is the
- strong face of the fearless judge whose decision from the
- Federal bench in New York twenty years ago blocked the attempt
- to drag Mr. Dana before a servile little court in Washington to
- be tried without a jury on the charge of criminal libel, at the
- time when the _Sun_ was demolishing the District Ring.
-
- Over the mantel is Abraham Lincoln. There are pictures of the
- four Harper brothers and of the Appletons. Andrew Jackson is
- there twice, once in black and white, once in vivid colors.
- An inexpensive Thomas Jefferson faces the livelier Jackson.
- A framed diploma certifies that Mr. Dana was one of several
- gentlemen who presented to the State a portrait in oils of
- Samuel J. Tilden. On different sides of the room are William
- T. Coleman, the organizer of the San Francisco Vigilantes, and
- a crude colored print of the Haifa colony at the foot of Mount
- Carmel in Syria. Strangest of all in this singular collection
- is a photograph of a tall, lank, and superior-looking New
- England mill-girl, issued as an advertisement by some
- Connecticut concern engaged in the manufacture of spool-cotton.
-
- For a good many years the most available wall-space in Mr.
- Dana’s office was occupied by a huge pasteboard chart, showing
- elaborately, in deadly parallel columns, the differences
- in the laws of the several States of the Union respecting
- divorce. It was put there, and it remained there, serving no
- earthly purpose except to illustrate the editor’s indifference
- as to his immediate surroundings, until it disappeared as
- mysteriously as it had come.
-
-Such were Mr. Dana’s surroundings, with nothing to indicate, as Mr.
-Mitchell remarked, that the occupant “knew Manet from Monet, or old
-Persian lustre from Gubbio.”
-
-It is twenty years since Dana went out of that room for the last time,
-and the room and the old building are no more, but the stuffed owl
-is still at his post in the office of the editor of the _Sun_. He
-is an older if not wiser bird, and he is no longer subjected to the
-revolutions of the bookcase, for Mr. Mitchell has given him a firmer
-perch beside his door. From a nearby wall Mr. Dana’s pictures of the
-four Harpers keep vigil, too.
-
-Dana was interested in everything, read everything, saw almost
-everybody. His own office was almost as free as the great main office
-of the _Sun_, where sat everybody from the managing editor down to the
-office-boy. One day Dana, coming into the big room, saw carpenters
-building a partition between the room and the head of the stairs that
-led to the street. It was explained to him that the public was inclined
-to be unnecessarily intrusive at times.
-
-“Take the partition down,” he said. “A newspaper is for the public.”
-
-That this was not always a desirable plan is illustrated in a story
-about Dana, probably apocryphal, but characteristic. One night the city
-editor rushed into his chief’s room.
-
-“Mr. Dana,” he said, “there’s a man out there with a cocked revolver.
-He is very much excited, and he insists on seeing the editor-in-chief.”
-
-“Is he very much excited?” inquired Mr. Dana, returning to the proof
-that he was reading. “If you think it is worth while, ask Amos Cummings
-if he will see the gentleman and write him up.”
-
-Persons in search of alms would enter Mr. Dana’s room without ceremony.
-If they were Sisters of Charity, as often was the case, Mr. Dana would
-walk up and down, telling them of his visit with the Pope, and would
-finish by giving them one of the silver dollars of which his pocket
-seemed to have an endless supply. Almost every day, when he despatched
-a boy to a nearby restaurant for his sandwich and bottle of milk, he
-would give him a five-dollar bill and instruct him to bring back the
-change all in silver. He liked to jingle the coins in his pocket and to
-have them ready for alms-giving.
-
-Dana was never fussy, never overbearing with his men. He bore patiently
-with the occasional sinner, and tried to put the best face on a mistake.
-
-The Dana patience extended also to outsiders. On one occasion William
-M. Laffan, then the dramatic critic and later the owner of the _Sun_,
-wrote a severe criticism of a performance by Miss Ada Rehan. Augustin
-Daly hurried to Mr. Dana’s office the next afternoon.
-
-“Mr. Dana,” he said, “I have called to try to convince you that you
-should discharge your dramatic editor. He has--”
-
-“I see,” said Dana, smiling. “Well, Mr. Daly, I will speak to Mr.
-Laffan about the matter, and if he thinks that he really deserves to be
-discharged, I will most certainly do it!”
-
-Thirty or forty years ago the belief was not uncommon, among those
-ignorant of editorial methods and the limitations of human powers,
-that Mr. Dana wrote every word that appeared on the editorial page of
-the _Sun_. It is likely that this flattering myth came to his ears and
-caused him more than one chuckle. Dana wrote pieces for the _Sun_, many
-of them, but he never essayed the superhuman task of filling the whole
-page with his own self. Nobody knew better than he what a bore a man
-becomes who flows opinion constantly, whether by voice or by pen.
-
-For Dana, not the eternal verities in allopathic doses, but the
-entertaining varieties, carefully administered. He might be immensely
-interested in the destruction of the Whisky Ring, and in writing about
-that infamy articles which would scorch the ears of Washington; but
-he knew that not every man, woman, and child who read the _Sun_ was
-furious about the Whisky Ring or cared to read columns of opinion about
-it every day. They must have pabulum in the form of an article about
-the princely earnings of Charles Dickens, or the identification of
-Mount Sinai, or the mysterious murder of a French count.
-
-So he hired men who could compare Dickens’s lectures with Thackeray’s,
-or were familiar with the controversy over Mount Barghir, or who knew a
-murder mystery when they saw it. They wrote, and he read and sometimes
-edited, but usually approved, for he knew that newspaper success lay
-not so much in a choice of topics as in a choice of men. He knew that
-the success of an editorial page came less from inside opinions than
-from outside interest. Dana’s remarkable success in the exaltation
-of journalism to literary heights was won not so much through what he
-wrote, but through what he left other men free to write.
-
-His own work as a writer for the _Sun_ took but a fraction of his busy
-day. He dictated his articles to Tom Williams, his stenographer, a
-Fenian and a bold man.
-
-“Can you write as fast as I talk?” asked Dana when Williams applied for
-the job.
-
-“I doubt it, Mr. Dana,” said Williams; “but I can write as fast as any
-man ought to talk.”
-
-For twenty years Tom Williams transcribed articles that absorbed the
-readers of the _Sun_, but his own heart was down the bay, near his
-Staten Island home, where he spent most of his spare time in fishing
-and sailing. It was always a grief to Williams to enter the office on
-an election or similarly important night, and to find that no one paid
-any attention to his stories about how the fish were biting.
-
-Dana had no doubt--nor had any one, least of all those who came under
-his editorial condemnation--of his own ability as a trenchant writer.
-The expression of thought was an art which he had studied from boyhood.
-Whatever of the academic appeared in his early work had been driven out
-during his service on the _Tribune_ and in the war, particularly the
-latter, for as a reporter for the government he learned to avoid all
-but the salients of expression. But as the editor of the _Sun_ he found
-less delight in his own product than in the work of some other man
-whose literary ability answered his own standards of terseness, vigour,
-and illumination. The new man would help the _Sun_, and that was all
-that Dana asked.
-
-That another man’s work should be mistaken for his own, or his own for
-another man’s, was to Dana nothing at all, except perhaps a source of
-amusement. The anonymity of the writers on the _Sun_ was so complete
-that the public knew their work only as a whole; but whenever anything
-particularly biting or humorous appeared, the same public instantly
-decided that Dana must have written it.
-
- No king, no clown, to rule this town!
-
-That line, born in the _Sun’s_ editorial page, will live as long as
-Shakespeare. In eight words it embodied the protest of New York against
-the arrogance and stupidity of machine political rule. Ten thousand
-times, at least, it has been credited to Dana, but as a matter of fact
-it was written by W. O. Bartlett.
-
-Bartlett was one of those great newspaper writers whose fate--or
-choice--it is never to own a newspaper and never to attract public
-attention through the writing of signed articles or books. Writing
-was not primarily his profession, and by the older men of New York
-who remember him he is recalled as a brilliant lawyer rather than
-as a writer. He met Dana through Secretary Stanton, and he was the
-_Sun’s_ attorney soon after Dana and his friends bought the paper. His
-law-offices were in the Sun Building, directly below Mr. Dana’s own
-offices. There, and also at the Hoffman House, where he lived when he
-was not on his estate at Brookhaven, Long Island, Mr. Bartlett wrote
-his articles for the _Sun_.
-
-Bartlett was a writer of the school of simplicity. His style of
-reducing a proposition to its most elementary form, so that it was
-clear to even the Class B intellect, was the admiration and envy of
-all who knew his articles. It was an inspiration, too, to many young
-newspapermen of his day.
-
-The manner of Mr. Arthur Brisbane of the _Evening Journal_, luring
-the reader into a sociological dissertation by first inquiring
-whether he knows “Why a Flea Jumps So Far,” is the Bartlett manner,
-with such modifications as are necessary to reach the attention of a
-group intellectually somewhat different from Bartlett’s readers. Only
-Bartlett did not spend too much time on the flea. Of the three men
-whose articles have most distinguished the first column of the _Sun’s_
-editorial page, each has had his own weapon when leading to attack.
-Dana struck with a sword. Mitchell used--and uses--the rapier. Bartlett
-swung the mace. It was jewelled with the gems of language, but still
-it was a mace; and if it crushed the skull of the enemy at the first
-blow, so much the better. It was Bartlett, for instance, who wrote
-the article in which the Democratic candidate for President in 1880,
-General Hancock, was referred to as “a good man, weighing two hundred
-and forty pounds.”
-
-W. O. Bartlett wrote for the _Sun_ from 1868 until his death in 1881.
-He was the foremost figure in the group of older men around Dana--the
-men who had been prominent in political and literary life before the
-Civil War. Other notable men of middle age who were chosen by Mr. Dana
-to write editorial articles were James S. Pike, Fitz-Henry Warren,
-Henry B. Stanton, and John Swinton.
-
-James Shepherd Pike’s articles appeared more frequently in the columns
-of the _Sun_ than Pike himself appeared in the office, for most of his
-work was done in Washington. He was about eight years older than Mr.
-Dana, but they were great friends from the earliest days of Dana’s
-_Tribune_ experience. For five years, beginning in 1855, Pike was
-a Washington correspondent and one of the associate editors of the
-_Tribune_. During the Civil War he was United States minister to the
-Netherlands, a reward for his services in his home State, Maine, where
-he was useful in uniting the anti-slavery forces. He was a brother of
-Frederick A. Pike, a war-time Representative from Maine, whose “Tax,
-fight, emancipate!” was the Republican watchword from its utterance in
-1861.
-
-Pike was one of the group that supported Greeley for the Presidency in
-1872. He was one of the really great publicists of his day. He wrote
-“The Restoration of the Currency,” “The Financial Crisis,” “Horace
-Greeley in 1872,” “A Prostrate State”--which was a description of the
-Reconstruction era in South Carolina--and “The First Blows of the Civil
-War,” this last a volume of reminiscent correspondence, some newspaper,
-some personal. The friendship and literary association of Pike and Dana
-lasted more than thirty years, and ended only with Pike’s death in
-1882, just after he had passed threescore and ten.
-
-Fitz-Henry Warren, who has been already referred to in this narrative
-as the author of the _Tribune’s_ cry, “On to Richmond!” wrote many
-editorial articles for Dana, who had conceived a great admiration for
-Warren when both were in the service of the _Tribune_, Dana as managing
-editor and Warren as head of the Washington bureau. Warren emerged from
-the Civil War not only a major-general, but a powerful politician, and
-it was not until several years later, after he had served in the Iowa
-Senate and as minister to Guatemala, that Dana was able to bring the
-pen of this transplanted New Englander to the office of the _Sun_. Once
-there, it did splendid work.
-
-It is not easy to identify the editorials that appeared in the _Sun_
-under the Dana régime; not so much because of the lapse of years, but
-because the spirit of Dana so permeated everything that was printed on
-his page that it is difficult to say with certainty, “This Dana wrote,
-this Bartlett, this Mitchell, this Warren, and this Pike.” But, for
-the purpose of giving some small idea of the grace and magnificence of
-Warren’s style, here is a paragraph from an editorial article known to
-have been written by him on the death of Charles Sumner in March, 1874:
-
- Men spoke softly on the street; their very voices betokened the
- impending event, and even their footfalls are said to have been
- lighter than common. But in the neighborhood of the Senator’s
- house there was a sense of singular and touching interest.
- Splendid equipages rolled to the corner, over pavements
- conceived in fraud and laid in corruption, to testify the
- regard of their occupants for eminent purity of life. Liveried
- servants carried hopeless messages from the door of him who was
- simplicity itself, and to whom the pomp and pageantry of this
- evil day were but the evidences of guilty degeneracy. Through
- all those lingering hours of anguish the sad procession came
- and went.
-
- On the sidewalk stood a numerous and grateful representation
- of the race to whom he had given the proudest efforts and the
- best energies of his existence. The black man bowed his head
- in unaffected grief, and the black woman sat hushing her babe
- upon the curbstone, in mute expectation of the last decisive
- intelligence from the chamber above.
-
-General Warren continued to write for the _Sun_ until 1876, and he
-died two years afterward, when he was only sixty-two years old, in
-Brimfield, Massachusetts, the town of his birth.
-
-[Illustration: JOSEPH PULITZER]
-
-[Illustration: ELIHU ROOT]
-
-[Illustration: JUDGE WILLARD BARTLETT]
-
-Although Henry Brewster Stanton was a comparatively old man when
-he began writing for the _Sun_, his activities in that line lasted
-for nearly twenty years. In 1826, when he was twenty-one years old,
-he entered newspaper work on Thurlow Weed’s _Monroe Telegraph_,
-published in Rochester. Soon afterward he became an advocate of the
-anti-slavery cause. In 1840 he married Elizabeth Cady, and with her
-went abroad, where in Great Britain and France they worked for the
-relief of the slaves in the United States. It was during that journey
-that Elizabeth Cady Stanton signed the first call for a woman’s rights
-convention.
-
-On his return to America Stanton studied law with his father-in-law,
-Daniel Cady. After his admission to the bar he practised in Boston, but
-he returned to New York and politics in 1847. He left the Democratic
-party to become one of the founders of the Republican party.
-
-Dana met Stanton when the latter was a writer for the _Tribune_, and
-when Dana came into the control of the _Sun_ he secured the veteran
-as a contributor. Stanton knew politics from A to Z, and his brief
-articles, filled with political wisdom and often salted with his
-dry humour, were just the class of matter that Dana wanted for the
-editorial page. Stanton was also a capable reviewer of books. He wrote
-for the _Sun_ from 1868 until his death in 1887. Henry Ward Beecher
-said of him:
-
-“I think Stanton has all the elements of old John Adams--able, staunch,
-patriotic, full of principle, and always unpopular. He lacks that sense
-of other people’s opinions which keeps a man from running against them.”
-
-John Swinton was one of the few of Dana’s men who might be described
-as a “character.” He lived a double intellectual life, writing
-conservative articles in his newspaper hours and making socialistic
-speeches when he was off duty. Yet it was a double life without
-duplicity, for there was no concealment in it, no hypocrisy, and
-no harm. When he had finished his day in the office of the _Sun_,
-perhaps at writing some instructive paragraphs about the possibilities
-of American trade in Nicaragua, he would take off his skull-cap,
-place a black soft hat on his gray head, and go forth to dilate on
-the advantages of super-Fourierism to some sympathetic audience of
-socialists.
-
-There was a story in the office that one evening Mr. Swinton, making a
-speech at a socialistic gathering, referred hotly to the editor of the
-_Sun_ as one of the props of a false form of government, and added that
-“some day two old men will come rolling down the steps of the _Sun_
-office,” and that at the bottom of the steps he, Swinton, would be on
-top.
-
-This may be of a piece with the story about Mr. Dana and the man with
-the revolver; but the young men in the reporters’ room liked to tell
-it to younger men. It probably had its basis in the fact that on the
-morning after a particularly ferocious assault on capital, John Swinton
-would poke his head into Mr. Dana’s room to tell him how he had given
-him the dickens the night before--information which tickled Mr. Dana
-immensely. And Dana never went to the bottom of the _Sun_ stairs except
-on his own sturdy legs.
-
-Swinton was a Scotsman, born in Haddingtonshire in 1830. He emigrated
-to Canada as a boy, learned the printer’s trade, and worked at the case
-in New York. After travels all over the country, he lived for a time
-in Charleston, South Carolina, and there acquired an abhorrence for
-slavery. He went to Kansas and took part in the Free Soil contest, but
-returned to New York in 1857 and began the study of medicine.
-
-While so engaged he contributed articles to the New York _Times_, and
-Henry J. Raymond, who liked his work, took him as an editorial writer.
-He was the managing editor of the _Times_ during the Civil War, and
-had sole charge during Raymond’s absences. At the end of the war
-Swinton’s health caused him to resign from the managing editorship, but
-he continued to write for the editorial page. He went to work on the
-_Sun_ about 1877.
-
-His specialty was paragraphs. Dana liked men who could do anything, but
-he also preferred that every man should have some specialty. Swinton
-had the imagination and the light touch of the skilful weaver of
-small items. Also, he was much interested in Central America, and his
-knowledge of that region was of frequent use to the _Sun_.
-
-Swinton left the _Sun_ in 1883 to give his whole time to _John
-Swinton’s Paper_, a weekly journal in which he expounded his
-labour-reform and other political views. He was the author of many
-pamphlets and several books, including a “Eulogy of Henry J. Raymond”
-and an “Oration on John Brown.”
-
-Such were the editorial writers of what may be called the iron age of
-the _Sun_; the men who helped Dana to build the first story of a great
-house. As they passed on, younger men, some greater men, trained in the
-Dana school, took their places and spanned the _Sun’s_ golden age--such
-men as E. P. Mitchell, Francis P. Church, and Mayo W. Hazeltine.
-
-Meanwhile, on the other side of a partition on the third floor of the
-old brick building at the corner of Frankfort Street, another group of
-men were doing their best to advance Dana’s _Sun_ by making it the best
-newspaper as well as the best editorial paper in America. These, too,
-were giants.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-DANA’S FIRST BIG NEWS MEN
-
- _Amos J. Cummings, Dr. Wood, and John B. Bogart.--The Lively Days
- of Tweedism.--Elihu Root as a Dramatic Critic.--The Birth and
- Popularity of “The Sun’s” Cat._
-
-
-Managing editors did not come into favour in American newspaper offices
-until the second half of the last century. As late as 1872 Frederic
-Hudson, in his “History of Journalism in the United States,” grumbled
-at the intrusion of a new functionary upon the field:
-
- If a journal has an editor, and editor-in-chief, it is fair to
- assume that he is also its managing editor.
-
-That historian (he was a _Herald_ man, and Bennett would have no
-managing editor) had not been reconciled to the fact that between
-the editor of a newspaper--the director of its policies and opinions
-and general style and tone--and the subeditors to whose various
-desks comes the flood of news there must be some one who will act
-as a link, lightening the labours of the editor and shouldering the
-responsibilities of the desk men. He may never write an editorial
-article; may never turn out a sheet of news copy or put a head on an
-item; may never make up a page or arrange an assignment list--but he
-must know how to do every one of these things and a great deal more.
-
-A managing editor is really the newspaper’s manager of its employees
-in the news field. He is an editor to the extent that he edits men.
-He may appear to spend most of his time and judgment on the acceptance
-or rejection of news matter, the giving of decisions as to the length
-or character of an article, its position in the paper, and, more
-broadly, the general make-up of the next day’s product; but a man
-might be able to perform all these professional functions wisely and
-yet be impossible as a managing editor through his inability to handle
-newspapermen.
-
-The _Tribune_ was the first New York paper to have a managing editor.
-He was Dana. Serene, tactful, and a man of the world, he was able
-by judicious handling to keep for the _Tribune_ the services of men
-like Warren and Pike, who might have been repelled by the sometimes
-irritable Greeley. The title came from the London _Times_, where it had
-been used for years, perhaps borrowed from the _directeur gérant_ of
-the French newspapers.
-
-The _Sun_ had no managing editor until Dana bought it, Beach having
-preferred to direct personally all matters above the ken of the city
-editor. The _Sun’s_ first managing editor was Isaac W. England, whom
-Dana had known and liked when both were on the _Tribune_. England
-was of Welsh blood and English birth, having been born in Twerton, a
-suburb of Bath, in 1832. He worked at the bookbinding trade until he
-was seventeen, and then came to the United States and made his living
-at bookbinding and printing. He used to tell his _Sun_ associates of
-his triumphal return to England, when he was twenty, for a short visit,
-which he spent in the shop of his apprenticeship, showing his old
-master how much better the Yankees were at embossing and lettering.
-
-England returned to America in the steerage and saw the brutal
-treatment of immigrants. This he described in several articles and
-sold them to the _Tribune_. Greeley gave him a job pulling a hand-press
-at ten dollars a week, but later made him a reporter. He was city
-editor of the _Tribune_ until after the Civil War, and then he went
-with his friend Dana to Chicago for the short and profitless experience
-with the Chicago _Republican_. In the period between Dana’s retirement
-from the _Republican_ and his purchase of the _Sun_, England was
-manager of the Jersey City _Times_.
-
-England was managing editor of the _Sun_ only a year, then becoming
-its publisher--a position for which he was well fitted. An example of
-his business ability was given in 1877, when Frank Leslie went into
-bankruptcy. England was made assignee, and he handled the affairs of
-the Leslie concern so well that its debts were paid off in three years.
-This was only a side job for England, who continued all the time to
-manage the business matters of the _Sun_. When he died, in 1885, Dana
-wrote that he had “lost the friend of almost a lifetime, a man of
-unconquerable integrity, true and faithful in all things.”
-
-The second managing editor of the _Sun_ was that great newspaperman
-Amos Jay Cummings. He was born to newspaper work if any man ever was.
-His father, who was a Congregational minister--a fact which could not
-be surmised by listening to Amos in one of his explosive moods--was
-the editor of the _Christian Palladium and Messenger_. This staid
-publication was printed on the first floor of the Cummings home at
-Irvington, New Jersey. Entrance to the composing-room was forbidden the
-son, but with tears and tobacco he bribed the printer, one Sylvester
-Bailey, who set up the Rev. Mr. Cummings’s articles, to let him in
-through a window. Cummings and Bailey later set type together on the
-_Tribune_. They fought in the same regiment in the Civil War. They
-worked together on the _Evening Sun_, and they are buried in the same
-cemetery at Irvington.
-
-The trade once learned, young Amos left home and wandered from State
-to State, making a living at the case. In 1856, when he was only
-fourteen, he was attracted by the glamour that surrounded William
-Walker, the famous filibuster, and joined the forces of that daring
-young adventurer, who then had control of Nicaragua. The boy was one of
-a strange horde of soldiers of fortune, which included British soldiers
-who had been at Sebastopol, Italians who had followed Garibaldi, and
-Hungarians in whom Kossuth had aroused the martial flame.
-
-Like many of the others in Walker’s army, Cummings believed that the
-Tennessean was a second Napoleon, with Central America, perhaps South
-America, for his empire. But when this Napoleon came to his Elba by his
-surrender to Commander Davis of the United States navy, in the spring
-of 1857, Cummings decided that there was no marshal’s baton in his own
-ragged knapsack and went back to be a wandering printer.
-
-Cummings was setting type in the _Tribune_ office when the Civil War
-began. He hurried out and enlisted as a private in the Twenty-Sixth New
-Jersey Volunteer Infantry. He fought at Antietam, Chancellorsville, and
-Fredericksburg. At Marye’s Hill, in the battle of Fredericksburg, his
-regiment was supporting a battery against a Confederate charge. Their
-lines were broken and they fell back from the guns. Cummings took the
-regimental flag from the hands of the colour-sergeant and ran alone,
-under the enemy’s fire, back to the guns. The Jerseymen rallied, the
-guns were recovered, and Cummings got the Medal of Honor from Congress.
-He left the service as sergeant-major of the regiment and presently
-appeared in Greeley’s office, a seedy figure infolded in an army
-overcoat.
-
-“Mr. Greeley,” said Amos, “I’ve just got to have work.”
-
-“Oh, indeed!” creaked Horace. “And why have you got to have work?”
-
-Cummings said nothing, but turned his back on the great editor,
-lifted his coat-tails and showed the sad, if not shocking, state of
-his breeches. He got work. In 1863, when the _Tribune_ office was
-threatened by the rioters, Amos helped to barricade the composing-room
-and save it from the mob.
-
-Cummings served as editor of the _Weekly Tribune_ and as a political
-writer for the daily. This is the way he came to quit the _Tribune_:
-
-John Russell Young, the third managing editor of the _Tribune_, got
-the habit of issuing numbered orders. Two of these orders reached
-Cummings’s desk, as follows:
-
- Order No. 756--There is too much profanity in this office.
-
- Order No. 757--Hereafter the political reporter must have his
- copy in at 10.30 P.M.
-
-Cummings turned to his desk and wrote:
-
- Order No. 1234567--Everybody knows ---- well that I get most of
- the political news out of the Albany _Journal_, and everybody
- knows ---- ---- well that the _Journal_ doesn’t get here until
- eleven o’clock at night, and anybody who knows anything knows
- ---- ---- well that asking me to get my stuff up at half past
- ten is like asking a man to sit on a window-sill and dance on
- the roof at the same time.
-
- CUMMINGS.
-
-
-The result of this multiplicity of numbered orders was that shortly
-afterward Cummings presented himself to the editor of the _Sun_.
-
-“Why are you leaving the _Tribune_?” asked Mr. Dana.
-
-“They say,” replied Amos, “that I swear too much.”
-
-“Just the man for me!” replied Dana, according to the version which
-Cummings used to tell.
-
-At any rate, Amos went on the _Sun_ as managing editor, and he
-continued to swear. The compositors now in the _Sun_ office who
-remember him at all remember him largely for that.
-
-The union once set apart a day for contributions to the printers’-home
-fund, and each compositor was to contribute the fruits of a thousand
-ems of composition. Cummings, who was proud of being a union printer,
-left his managing-editor’s desk and went to the composing-room.
-
-“Ah, Mr. Cummings,” said Abe Masters, the foreman, “I’ll give you some
-of your own copy to set.”
-
-“To hell with my own copy!” said Cummings, who knew his handwriting
-faults. “Give me some reprint.”
-
-Green reporters got a taste of the Cummings profanity. One of them put
-a French phrase in a story. Cummings asked him what it meant, and the
-youth told him.
-
-“Then why the hell didn’t you write it that way?” yelled Cummings.
-“This paper is for people who read English!”
-
-In those days murderers were executed in the old Tombs prison in Centre
-Street. Cummings, who was full of enterprise, sought a way to get
-quickly the fall of the drop. The telephone had not been perfected,
-but there was a shot-tower north of the _Sun’s_ office and east of the
-Tombs. Cummings sent one man to the Tombs, with instructions to wave a
-flag upon the instant of the execution. Another man, stationed at the
-top of the shot-tower, had another flag, with which he was to make a
-sign to Cummings on the roof of the Sun Building, as soon as he saw the
-flag move at the prison.
-
-The reporter at the Tombs arranged with a keeper to notify him just
-before the execution, but the keeper was sent on an errand, and
-presently Cummings, standing nervously on the roof of the Sun Building,
-heard the newsboys crying the extras of a rival sheet. The plan had
-fallen through. No blanks could adequately represent the Cummings
-temper upon that occasion.
-
-Cummings was probably the best all-round news man of his day. He
-had the executive ability and the knowledge of men that make a good
-managing editor. He knew what Dana knew--that the newspapers had yet to
-touch public sympathy and imagination in the news columns as well as in
-editorial articles; and he knew how to do it, how to teach men to do
-it, how to cram the moving picture of a living city into the four pages
-of the _Sun_. He advised desk men, complimented or corrected reporters,
-edited local articles, and, when a story appealed to him strongly, he
-went out and got it and wrote it himself.
-
-In such brief biographies of Cummings as have been printed you will
-find that he is best remembered in the outer world as a managing
-editor, or as the editor of the _Evening Sun_, or as a Representative
-in Congress fighting for the rights of Civil War veterans, printers’
-unions, and letter-carriers; but among the oldest generation of
-newspapermen he is revered as a great reporter. He was the first real
-human-interest reporter. He knew the news value of the steer loose in
-the streets, the lost child in the police station, the Italian murder
-that was really a case of vendetta. The _Sun_ men of his time followed
-his lead, and a few of them, like Julian Ralph, outdid him, but he was
-the pioneer; and a thousand _Sun_ men since then have kept, or tried
-to keep, on the Cummings trail.
-
-It was Cummings who sent men to cover the police stations at night and
-made it possible for the _Sun_ to beat the news association on the
-trivial items which were the delight of the reader, and which helped,
-among other things, to shoot the paper’s daily circulation to one
-hundred thousand in the third year of the Dana ownership.
-
-The years when Cummings was managing editor of the _Sun_ were years
-stuffed with news. Even a newspaperman without imagination would have
-found plenty of happenings at hand. The Franco-Prussian War, the gold
-conspiracy that ended in Black Friday (September 24, 1869), the Orange
-riot (July 12, 1871), the great Chicago fire, the killing of Fisk by
-Stokes, Tweedism--what more could a newspaperman wish in so brief a
-period? And, of course, always there were murders. There were so many
-mysterious murders in the _Sun_ that a suspicious person might have
-harboured the thought that Cummings went out after his day’s work was
-done and committed them for art’s sake.
-
-When men and women stopped killing, Cummings would turn to politics.
-Tweed was the great man then; under suspicion, even before 1870, but a
-great man, particularly among his own. The _Sun_ printed pages about
-Tweed and his satellites and the great balls of the Americus Club,
-their politico-social organisation. It described the jewels worn by
-the leaders of Tammany Hall, including the two-thousand-dollar club
-badge--the head of a tiger with eyes of ruby and three large diamonds
-shining above them.
-
-Everybody who wanted the political news read the _Sun_. As Jim Fisk
-remarked one evening as he stood proudly with Jay Gould in the lobby
-of the Grand Opera House--proud of his notoriety in connection with
-the Erie Railroad jobbery, proud of the infamy he enjoyed from the fact
-that he owned two houses in the same block in West Twenty-third Street,
-housing his wife in one and Josie Mansfield in the other; proud of his
-guilty partnership in Tweedism--
-
- “The _Sun’s_ a lively paper. I can never wait for daylight for
- a copy. I have my man down there with a horse every morning,
- and just as soon as he gets a _Sun_ hot from the press he jumps
- on the back of that horse and puts for me as if all hell was
- after him.
-
- “Gould’s the same way; he has to see it before daylight, too.
- My man has to bring him up a copy. You always get the news
- ahead of everybody else. Why, the first news I got that Gould
- and me were blackballed in the Blossom Club we got from the
- _Sun_. I’m damned if I’d believe it at first, and Gould says,
- ‘What is this Blossom Club?’ Just then Sweeny came in. I asked
- Sweeny if it was true, and Sweeny said yes, that Tweed was the
- man that done it all. There it was in the _Sun_, straight’s a
- die.”
-
-The _Sun_ reporter who chronicled this--it may have been Cummings
-himself--had gone to ask Fisk whether he and his friends had hired a
-thug to black-jack the respectable Mr. Dorman B. Eaton, a foe of the
-Erie outfit; but he took down and printed Fisk’s tribute to the _Sun’s_
-enterprise. As there was scarcely a morning in those days when the
-_Sun_ did not turn up some new trick played by the Tweed gang and the
-Erie group, their anxiety to get an early copy was natural.
-
-Tweed and his philanthropic pretences did not deceive the _Sun_. On
-February 24, 1870--a year and a half before the exposure which sent
-the boss to prison--the _Sun_ printed an editorial article announcing
-that Tweed was willing to surrender his ownership of the city upon the
-following terms:
-
-[Illustration:
-
- (_From a Photograph by Paul Dana_)
-
- MR. DANA AT SEVENTY
-]
-
- To give up all interest in the court-house swindle.
-
- To receive no more revenue from the department of survey and
- inspection of buildings; and he hopes the people of New York
- will remember his generosity in giving up this place, inasmuch
- as his share amounts to over one hundred thousand dollars a
- year.
-
-Tweed was liked by many New Yorkers, particularly those who knew him
-only by his lavish charities. One of these wrote the following letter,
-which the _Sun_ printed on December 7, 1870, under the heading “A
-Monument to Boss Tweed--the Money Paid In”:
-
- Enclosed please find ten cents as a contribution to erect a
- statue to William M. Tweed on Tweed Plaza. I have no doubt that
- fifty thousand to seventy-five thousand of his admirers will
- contribute. Yours, etc.,
-
- SEVENTEENTH WARD VOTER.
-
-
-On December 12 the _Sun_ said editorially:
-
- Has Boss Tweed any friends? If he has, they are a mean set.
- It is now more than a week since an appeal was made to them
- to come forward and put up the ancillary qualities to erect a
- statue of Mr. Tweed in the centre of Tweed Plaza; but as yet
- only four citizens have sent in their subscriptions. These were
- not large, but they were paid in cash, and there is reason for
- the belief that they were the tokens of sincere admiration
- for Mr. Tweed. But the hundreds, or, rather, thousands, of
- small-potato politicians whom he has made rich and powerful
- stand aloof and do not offer a picayune.
-
- We propose that the statue shall be executed by Captain
- Albertus de Groot, who made the celebrated Vanderbilt bronzes,
- but we have not yet decided whether it shall represent the
- favorite son of New York afoot or ahorseback. In fact, we
- rather incline to have a nautical statue, exhibiting Boss Tweed
- as a bold mariner, amid the wild fury of a hurricane, splicing
- the main brace in the foretopgallant futtock shrouds of his
- steam-yacht. But that is a matter for future consideration. The
- first thing is to get the money; and if those who claim to be
- Mr. Tweed’s friends don’t raise it, we shall begin to believe
- the rumor that the Hon. P. Brains Sweeny has turned against
- him, and has forbidden every one to give anything toward the
- erection of the projected statue.
-
-Ten days later the _Sun_ carried on the editorial page a long news
-story headed “Our Statue of Boss Tweed--the Readers of the _Sun_
-Going to Work in Dead Earnest--The _Sun’s_ Advice Followed, Ha!
-Ha!--Organisation of the Tweed Testimonial Association of the City of
-New York--A Bronze Statue Worth Twenty-Five Thousand Dollars to Be
-Erected.”
-
-Sure enough, the ward politicians had taken the joke seriously. Police
-Justice Edward J. Shandley, Tim Campbell, Coroner Patrick Keenan,
-Police Commissioner Smith, and a dozen other faithful Tammany men were
-on the list of trustees. They decided upon the space then known as
-Tweed Plaza, at the junction of East Broadway and New Canal and Rutgers
-Streets as the site for the monument.
-
-The _Sun_ added to the joke by printing more letters from contributors.
-One, from Patrick Maloy, “champion eel-bobber,” brought ten cents and
-the suggestion that the statue should be inscribed with the amount of
-money that Tweed had made out of the city. This sort of thing went
-on into the new year, the _Sun_ aggravating the movement with grave
-editorial advice.
-
-At last the jest became more than Tweed could bear, and from his
-desk in the Senate Chamber at Albany, on March 13, 1871, he sent
-the following letter to Judge Shandley, the chairman of the statue
-committee:
-
- MY DEAR SIR:
-
- I learn that a movement to erect a statue to me in the city of
- New York is being seriously pushed by a committee of citizens
- of which you are chairman.
-
- I was aware that a newspaper of our city had brought forward
- the proposition, but I considered it one of the jocose
- sensations for which that journal is so famous. Since I left
- the city to engage in legislation the proposition appears to
- have been taken up by my friends, no doubt in resentment at the
- supposed unfriendly motive of the original proposition and the
- manner in which it had been urged.
-
- The only effect of the proposed statue is to present me
- to the public as assenting to the parade of a public and
- permanent testimonial to vanity and self-glorification which
- do not exist. You will thus perceive that the movement, which
- originated in a joke, but which you have made serious, is doing
- me an injustice and an injury; and I beg of you to see to it
- that it is at once stopped.
-
- I hardly know which is the more absurd--the original
- proposition or the grave comments of others, based upon the
- idea that I have given the movement countenance. I have been
- about as much abused as any man in public life; I can stand
- abuse and bear even more than my share; but I have never yet
- been charged with being deficient in common sense.
-
- Yours very truly,
- WM. M. TWEED.
-
-
-This letter appeared in the _Sun_ the next day under the facetious
-heading: “A Great Man’s Modesty--The Most Remarkable Letter Ever
-Written by the Noble Benefactor of the People.” Editorial regret
-was expressed at Tweed’s declination; and, still in solemn mockery,
-the _Sun_ grieved over the return to the subscribers of the several
-thousand dollars that had been sent to Shandley’s committee. William J.
-Florence, the comedian, had put himself down for five hundred dollars.
-
-Was it utterly absurd that the Tweed idolaters should have taken
-seriously the _Sun’s_ little joke? No, for so serious a writer as
-Gustavus Myers wrote in his “History of Tammany Hall” (1901) that “one
-of the signers of the circular has assured the author that it was a
-serious proposal. The attitude of the _Sun_ confirms this.” And another
-grave literary man, Dr. Henry Van Dyke, set this down in his “Essays on
-Application” (1908):
-
- William M. Tweed, of New York, who reigned over the city for
- seven years, stole six million dollars or more for himself and
- six million dollars or more for his followers; was indorsed at
- the heights of his corruption by six of the richest citizens of
- the metropolis; had a public statue offered to him by the New
- York _Sun_ as a “noble benefactor of the city,” etc.
-
-Of course Mr. Myers and Dr. Van Dyke had never read the statue articles
-from beginning to end, else they would not have stumbled over the brick
-that even Tweed, with all his conceit, was able to perceive.
-
-In July, 1871, when the New York _Times_ was fortunate enough to have
-put in its hands the proof of what everybody already suspected--that
-Senator Tweed, Comptroller Connolly, Park Commissioner Sweeny, and
-their associates were plundering the city--the _Sun_ was busy with
-its own pet news and political articles, the investigation of the
-Orange riots and the extravagance and nepotism of President Grant’s
-administration.
-
-The _Sun_ did not like the _Times_, which had been directed, since
-the death of Henry J. Raymond, in 1869, by Raymond’s partner, George
-Jones, and Raymond’s chief editorial writer, Louis J. Jennings; but
-the _Sun_ liked the Tweed gang still less. It had been pounding at it
-for two years, using the head-lines “Boss Tweed’s Legislature,” or
-“Mr. Sweeny’s Legislature,” every day of the sessions at the State
-capital; but neither the _Sun_ nor any other newspaper had been able to
-obtain the figures that proved the robbery until the county bookkeeper,
-Matthew J. O’Rourke, dug them out and took them to the _Times_.
-
-The books showed that the city had been gouged out of five million
-dollars in one item alone--the price paid in two years to a Tweed
-contracting firm, Ingersoll & Co., for furniture and carpets for the
-county court-house. Enough carpets had been bought--or at least paid
-for--to cover the eight acres of City Hall Park three layers deep. And
-that five million dollars was only a fraction of the loot.
-
-In September, 1871, after the mass-meeting of citizens in Cooper Union,
-the _Sun_ began printing the revelations of Tweedism under the standing
-head, “The Doom of the Ring.”
-
-Tweed engaged as counsel, among others, William O. Bartlett, who was
-not only counsel for the _Sun_ but, next to Mr. Dana, the paper’s
-leading editorial writer at that time. The boss may have fancied that
-in retaining Bartlett he retained the _Sun_, but it is more likely that
-he sought Bartlett’s services because of that lawyer’s reputation as
-an aggressive and able counsellor. If Tweed had any delusions about
-influencing the _Sun_, they were quickly dispelled. On September 18, in
-an editorial article probably written by Dana, the _Sun_ said:
-
- While Mr. Bartlett, in his able argument before Judge Barnard
- on Friday, vindicated Mr. Tweed from certain allegations set
- forth in the complaint of Mr. Foley, he by no means relieved
- him from all complicity in the enormous frauds and robberies
- that have been committed in the government of this city. With
- all his ability, that is something beyond Mr. Bartlett’s
- power; and it is vain to hope that either of the leaders of
- the Tammany Ring can ever regain the confidence of the public,
- or for any length of time exercise the authority of political
- office. They must all go, Sweeny, Tweed, and Hall, as well as
- Connolly.
-
- Mr. Tweed must not imagine that he can buy his way out of
- the present complication with money, as he did in 1870. The
- next Legislature will be made up of different material from
- the Republicans he purchased, and the people will exercise a
- sterner supervision over its acts.
-
-A good picture of Tweed’s popularity, which he still retained among his
-own people, was drawn in an editorial article in the _Sun_ of October
-30, 1871, three days after the boss had been arrested and released in a
-million dollars’ bail:
-
- In the Fourth District William M. Tweed is sure to be
- re-elected [to the State Senate]. The Republican factions,
- after a great deal of quarreling, have concentrated on
- O’Donovan Rossa, a well-known Fenian, but his chance is
- nothing. Even if it had been possible by beginning in season to
- defeat Tweed, it cannot be done with only a week’s time.
-
- Besides, his power there is absolute. The district comprises
- the most ignorant and most vicious portion of the city.
- It is full of low grog-shops, houses of ill-fame, low
- gambling-houses, and sailor boarding-houses, whose keepers
- enjoy protection and immunity, for which they pay by the most
- efficient electioneering services. Moreover, the district is
- full of sinecures paid from the city treasury. If, instead
- of having stolen millions, Mr. Tweed were accused of a dozen
- murders, or if, instead of being in human form, he wore the
- semblance of a bull or a bear, the voters of the Fourth
- District would march to the polls and vote for him just as
- zealously as they will do now, and the inspectors of election
- would furnish for him by fraudulent counting any majority that
- might be thought necessary in addition to the votes really
- given.
-
-Tweed was re-elected to the State Senate by twelve thousand plurality.
-
-The great robber-boss was a source of news from his rise in the late
-sixties to his death in 1878. As early as March, 1870, the _Sun_ gave
-its readers an intimate idea of Tweed’s private extravagances under
-the heading: “Bill Tweed’s Big Barn--Democratic Extravagance Versus
-That of the White House--Grant’s Billiard Saloon, Caligula’s Stable,
-and Leonard Jerome’s Private Theatre Eclipsed--Martin Van Buren’s Gold
-Spoons Nowhere--Belmont’s Four-in-Hand Overshadowed--a Picture for
-Rural Democrats.”
-
-Beneath this head was a column story beginning:
-
- The Hon. William M. Tweed resides at 41 West Thirty-sixth
- Street. The Hon. William M. Tweed’s horses reside in East
- Fortieth Street, between Madison and Park Avenues.
-
-That was the _Sun’s_ characteristic way of starting a story.
-
-Tweed was, in a way, responsible for the appearance of a _Sun_ more
-than four pages in size. Up to December, 1875, there was no issue of
-the _Sun_ on Sundays. In November of that year it was announced that
-beginning on December 5 there would be a Sunday _Sun_, to be sold at
-three cents, one cent more than the week-day price, but nothing was
-said, or thought, of an increase In size.
-
-On Saturday, December 4, Tweed, with the connivance of his keepers,
-escaped from his house in Madison Avenue. This made a four-column story
-on which Mr. Dana had not counted. Also, the advertisers had taken
-advantage of the new Sunday issue, and there were more than two pages
-of advertisements. There was nothing for it but to make an eight-page
-paper, for which Dana, who then believed that all the news could be
-told in a folio, apologised as follows:
-
- We confess ourselves surprised at the extraordinary pressure of
- advertisements upon our pages this morning; and disappointed
- in being compelled to present the _Sun_ to our readers in a
- different form from that to which they are accustomed. We
- trust, however, that they will find it no less interesting
- than usual; and, still more, that they will feel that although
- the appearance may be somewhat different, it is yet the same
- friendly and faithful _Sun_.
-
-But the Sunday issue of the _Sun_ never went back to four pages, for
-the eight-page paper had been made so attractive with special stories,
-reprint, and short fiction that both readers and advertisers were
-pleased. It was ten years, however, before the week-day _Sun_ increased
-its size. Even during the Beecher trial (January, 1875) when the
-_Sun’s_ reporter, Franklin Fyles, found himself unable to condense the
-day’s proceedings within a page of seven columns, the _Sun_ still gave
-all the rest of the day’s news.
-
-Cummings’s right-hand man in the news department of the _Sun_ was Dr.
-John B. Wood, the Great American Condenser. All the city copy passed
-through his hands. He was then nearing fifty, a white-haired man who
-wore two pairs of glasses with thick lenses, these crowned with a green
-shade. He had been a printer on several papers and a desk man on the
-_Tribune_, whence Dana brought him to the _Sun_. Wood’s sense of the
-value of words was so acute that he could determine, as rapidly as his
-eye passed along the pages of a story, just what might be stricken out
-without loss. It might be a word, a sentence, a page; sometimes it
-would be ninety-eight per cent of the article.
-
-Even when his sight so failed that he was unable to read copy
-continuously, Dr. Wood performed the remarkable feat of condensing
-through a reader. Willis Holly read copy to him for months, six hours
-a night. Holly might read three pages without interruption, while Wood
-sat as silent as if he were asleep. Then----
-
-“Throw out the introduction down to the middle of the second page,
-begin with ‘John Elliott killed,’ and cut it off at ‘arrested him.’”
-
-Joseph C. Hendrix, who became a member of Congress and a bank
-president, was a _Sun_ cub reporter. One night he was assigned to read
-copy to Dr. Wood. He picked up a sheet and began:
-
-“‘The application of Mrs. Jane Smith for divorce from her husband, John
-Smith--’”
-
-“Cut out ‘her husband,’” said Wood.
-
-“‘--who alleges cruelty,’” Hendrix continued, “‘in that he--’” Here the
-reporter’s writing was blurred, and Hendrix, who could not decipher it,
-said “Damn!”
-
-“Cut out the ‘damn,’” said Dr. Wood.
-
-In keeping news down to the bone Wood was of remarkable value to the
-_Sun_ in those years when Dana showed that it was possible to tell
-everything in four pages. New York was smaller then, and display
-advertising had not come to be a science. The _Sun_ got along nicely on
-its circulation, for the newsdealers paid one and one-third cents for
-each copy. With the circulation receipts about fourteen hundred dollars
-a day, the advertising receipts were clear profit. Amos Cummings had
-such a fierce disregard for the feelings of advertisers that often,
-when a good piece of news came in late, he would throw out advertising
-to make room for it.
-
-The city editors of the _Sun_ under Cummings were, in order, John
-Williams, Lawrence S. Kane, Walter M. Rosebault, William Young, and
-John B. Bogart. Williams, who had been a Methodist preacher, left the
-_Sun_ in 1869 to become religious editor of the _Herald_. Kane, a big
-blond Irishman with mutton-chop whiskers, held the city desk until the
-summer of 1870 and then returned to the reportorial staff. Rosebault,
-who had been one of the _Sun’s_ best young reporters, resigned from the
-city editorship late in 1870 in order to study law. He afterward went
-to San Francisco to be principal editorial writer of the _Chronicle_,
-but soon returned to New York and for many years, while practising
-law, he contributed editorial and special articles to the _Sun_. Mr.
-Rosebault, who is still an active lawyer, told the present writer, in
-July, 1918, that of all the reporters who served on his staff when
-he was city editor of the _Sun_ only one, Sidney Rosenfeld, later a
-dramatist and the first editor of _Puck_, was still alive.
-
-The first telegraph editor of the _Sun_ was an Episcopalian clergyman,
-Arthur Beckwith, afterward connected with the Brooklyn _Eagle_ and the
-Brooklyn _Citizen_ as a law reporter. When he left the telegraph desk
-of the _Sun_ his place was taken by Colonel Henry Grenville Shaw, a
-Civil War veteran. Colonel Shaw left the _Sun_ to become night editor
-of the San Francisco _Chronicle_ and was succeeded by Amos B. Stillman,
-a ninety-pound man from Connecticut. He was a newspaperman in his
-native state until the Civil War, and after Appomattox he went back
-to Connecticut. He went on the _Sun_ in 1870 as telegraph editor, and
-stayed on the same desk for forty-five years.
-
-In the early days of Dana’s _Sun_ there were no night editors, for
-it had not been found necessary to establish a central desk where
-all the news of all the departments could be gathered together for
-judgment as to relative value. Each desk man sent his own copy to the
-composing-room, and the pages were made up by the managing editor or
-the night city editor after midnight. Leisurely nights, those, with
-no newspaper trains to catch and no starting of the presses until four
-o’clock in the morning!
-
-[Illustration:
-
- AMOS JAY CUMMINGS
-]
-
-One evening in that period the other desk men in the news department of
-the _Sun_ observed that Amos Stillman was extraordinarily busy and more
-than usually silent. He scribbled away, revising despatches and writing
-subheads, and it was after twelve o’clock when he got up, stretched,
-and uttered one sentence:
-
-“Quite a fire in Chicago!”
-
-That was the October evening in 1871 when Mrs. O’Leary’s cow started
-the blaze that consumed seventeen thousand buildings. To Deacon
-Stillman it was just a busy night.
-
-Deacon Stillman was born only eighteen months after the _Sun_--Ben
-Day’s _Sun_; but even as this is being written he is strolling up and
-down a corridor in the _Sun_ office, waiting for another old-timer,
-some mere lad of sixty, to come out and have dinner with him.
-
-Under Cummings was developed a young man who turned out to be one of
-the great city editors of New York--John B. Bogart, of whom Arthur
-Brisbane wrote that he was the best teacher of journalism that America
-had produced. He was in most respects the opposite of Cummings. He had
-all of Cummings’s love for the business, but not his tremendous rush.
-Cummings was an explosion, Bogart a steady flame. Cummings roared,
-Bogart was gentle.
-
-Like Cummings and Stillman, Bogart was a Union veteran. In 1861, when
-he was only sixteen years old, he left the New Haven store where
-he was a clerk and enlisted in the Seventh Connecticut Volunteers.
-After serving three years in the army, he returned home to become a
-bookkeeper in a dry-goods store. He went on the _Sun_ February 21,
-1871, as a general reporter. On March 17, 1873--his twenty-eighth
-birthday--he was made city editor, the former city editor, William
-Young, having been promoted to the managing editor’s desk to take the
-place of Cummings, whose health was poor.
-
-John Bogart remained at the city desk for seventeen years of tireless
-work. He was a master of journalistic detail, a patient follower-up of
-the stories which, like periscopes, appear and reappear on the sea of
-events.
-
-“He was a whole school of journalism in himself,” Brisbane wrote of
-Bogart years afterward. “He could tell the young men where to go for
-their news, what questions to ask, what was and what was not worth
-while. Above all, he could give enthusiasm to his men. He worked by
-encouraging, not by harsh criticism.”
-
-Bogart always asked a young reporter whether he had read the _Sun_ that
-morning. If one confessed that he had read only part of it, Bogart
-would invite him to sit down, and would say:
-
-“Mr. Jones, it is one of the salutary customs of this paper that every
-reporter shall read everything in it before appearing for duty. Don’t
-even skip the advertisements, because there are stories concealed in
-many of them. The _Sun_ is good breakfast-food.”
-
-The custom of Bogart’s time is the custom still, but a reporter has to
-go harder at his reading than he did in the days of the four-page _Sun_.
-
-If a new reporter had not absorbed the _Sun_ style, Bogart gently tried
-to saturate him with it.
-
-“I notice,” he said to a man who had covered a little fire the night
-before, “that you begin your story with ‘at an early hour yesterday
-morning,’ and that you say also that ‘smoke was seen issuing from an
-upper window.’”
-
-“Isn’t that good English?” asked the young man.
-
-“It is excellent English,” Bogart replied calmly, “and it has been
-indorsed by generations of reporters and copy-readers. If you look in
-the other papers you will find that some of them also discovered smoke
-issuing from an upper window at an early hour yesterday morning. We do
-not deny that it is good English; but it is not good _Sun_ English.”
-
-Never again did smoke issue from an upper window of that reporter’s
-copy.
-
-Under Cummings and Bogart the _Sun_ turned out _Sun_ men. A young
-man from Troy, Franklin Fyles, was one of their first police-station
-reporters. He did not know as many policemen as did Joseph Josephs,
-who wore a silk hat and a gambler’s mustache, and who covered the West
-Side stations, but he wrote well. He did not know as many desperate
-characters as were honoured with the acquaintance of David Davids, the
-East Side police reporter, but he knew a _Sun_ story when he saw it.
-In 1875, five years after Fyles came on the _Sun_, he was the star
-reporter, and he reported the Beecher trial. Ten thousand words a
-day in longhand was an easy day’s work for the reports of that great
-scandal. Fyles became the dramatic critic of the _Sun_ in 1885, and
-continued as such until 1903. In that period he wrote several plays,
-including “The Girl I Left Behind Me,” in which David Belasco was his
-collaborator; “Cumberland ’61,” and “The Governor of Kentucky.” Fyles
-died in 1911 at the age of 64.
-
-Another police-station reporter of the _Sun_ was Edward Payson Weston,
-who had been an office-boy in various newspaper offices until about
-the beginning of the Civil War and had then become a reporter. Before
-Dana bought the _Sun_ Weston had walked from Portland, Maine, to
-Chicago--thirteen hundred and twenty-six miles--in twenty-six days.
-Forty years later he walked it in twenty-five days.
-
-Cummings liked Weston. Whatever faults there may have been in his
-literary style, his knee action was a perfect poem. He could bring a
-story down from the Bellevue morgue faster than all the horse-cars. He
-was the best “leg man” in the history of journalism. In 1910, more than
-four decades after the _Sun_ first took him on, Weston, then a man of
-seventy years, walked from Los Angeles to New York in seventy-seven
-days.
-
-Henry Mann, a Civil War veteran, was the _Sun’s_ principal court
-reporter. He covered the Tweed and Stokes trials and the impeachment of
-Judge Barnard. Later he was exchange editor and he is remembered also
-as the author of “The History of Ancient and Medieval Republics.”
-
-Other _Sun_ reporters were Tom Cook, who came from California, had
-the shiniest silk hat on Park Row, and knew Fisk and the rest of the
-Erie crowd; Big Jim Connolly, one of the best news writers of his day;
-the McAlpin brothers, Robert and Tod; and Chester S. Lord, who was to
-become the managing editor of the _Sun_ and serve it in that capacity
-for a third of a century.
-
-William Young, who was city editor when Lord went on the paper, gave
-him his first assignment--to get a story about the effect of the
-Whisky Ring’s work on the liquor trade. Lord wrote a light and airy
-piece which indicated that the ring’s operations would bring highly
-moral results by decreasing the supply of intoxicants; but when the
-copy-reader got through with the story this is the way it read:
-
- A _Sun_ reporter interviewed several leading wholesale
- liquor-dealers yesterday concerning the despatch from
- Louisville, saying that all the old whisky in the country had
- been purchased by a Western firm for a rise. They said that
- they had sold their accumulated stock of prime whisky months
- ago. One firm, the largest in the city, had sold nearly two
- thousand barrels, stored since 1858. One shrewd dealer said it
- was reported that Grant was in the ring, and that he wanted to
- secure a supply to fall back on in his retirement.
-
-Mark Maguire, the celebrated “Toppy,” was the chief of the sporting
-writers. He was about the oldest man in the _Sun_ office, born before
-Napoleon went to Elba. He was the first king of the New York newsboys,
-and Barney Williams, the boy who first sold Ben Day’s _Sun_, once
-worked for him.
-
-Maguire had as customers, when they visited New York, Jackson, Webster,
-Clay, and Calhoun. When prosperity came to him he opened road-houses
-that were the resorts of horse-owners like Commodore Vanderbilt and
-Robert Bonner. His Cayuga House, at McComb’s Dam, was named after his
-own fast trotter, Cayuga Girl. Maguire’s intimacy with Bonner was such
-that the hangers-on in the racing game believed that Bonner owned the
-_Sun_ and transmitted his views to Dana through “Toppy.” Maguire worked
-for the _Sun_ up to his death in 1889.
-
-When Amos Cummings had an evening to spare from his regular news work
-he would go with Maguire to a prize-fight and write the story of it.
-Maguire invented the chart by which a complete record of the blows
-struck in a boxing match is kept--one circle for the head and one
-for the body of each contestant, with a pencil-mark for every blow
-landed. After an evening in which Jem Mace was one of the entertainers,
-Maguire’s chart looked like a shotgun target, but Cummings, who watched
-the fighters while Mark tallied the blows, would make a live story from
-it.
-
-The _Sun_ of that day had women reporters; indeed, it had the first
-real woman reporter in American journalism, Mrs. Emily Verdery Battey.
-She worked on fashion stories, women’s-rights stories, and general-news
-stories. She was one of the Georgia Verderys, and she went on the _Sun_
-shortly after Mr. Dana took hold. Her brother, George Verdery, was
-also a _Sun_ reporter. Another _Sun_ woman of that time was Miss Anna
-Ballard, who wrote, among other things, the news stories that bobbed up
-in the surrogates’ court.
-
-The dramatic criticisms of the _Sun_, in the first three or four years
-of the seventies, were written by two young lawyers recently graduated
-from the law school of New York University, Willard Bartlett and Elihu
-Root. Bartlett was a year the younger, but he ranked Root as a critic
-because of his acquaintance--through his father, W. O. Bartlett--with
-newspaper ways. If Lester Wallack was putting on “Ours,” that would be
-Mr. Bartlett’s assignment, while Mr. Root went to report the advance
-of art at Woods’s Museum, where was the Lydia Thompson troupe. If it
-befell that on the same evening Edwin Booth produced “Hamlet” in a new
-setting and George L. Fox appeared in a more glorious than ever “Humpty
-Dumpty,” Critic Bartlett would see Booth; Assistant Critic Root, Fox.
-
-In time these young journalists passed on to be actors in that more
-complex and perhaps equally interesting drama, the law, which for
-fourteen years they practised together. Mr. Bartlett figured as one of
-Mr. Dana’s counsel in several of the _Sun’s_ legal cases. After thirty
-years on the bench, retiring from the chief judgeship of the Court of
-Appeals of the State of New York through the age statute in 1916, Judge
-Bartlett is still actively interested in the _Sun_, and many of its
-articles on legal and literary topics are contributed by him.
-
-As for Mr. Root, his friendship with the _Sun_ has been unbroken for
-almost fifty years, and he has made more news for it than most men.
-Under such circumstances even the most jealous newspaper is willing to
-forgive the desertion of an assistant dramatic critic.
-
-It was Willard Bartlett, incidentally, who was the inventor of the
-_Sun’s_ celebrated office cat. One night in the eighties the copy of
-a message from President Cleveland to Congress came to the desk of
-the telegraph editor. It was a warm evening, and the window near the
-telegraph desk was open. The message fluttered out and was lost in
-Nassau Street. The _Sun_ had nothing about it the next morning, and in
-the afternoon, when Mr. Bartlett called on Mr. Dana, the matter of the
-lost message was under discussion. The editor remarked that it was a
-matter difficult to explain to the readers.
-
-“Oh, say that the office cat ate it up,” suggested Bartlett.
-
-Dana chuckled and dictated a paragraph creating the cat. Instantly the
-animal became famous. Newspapers pictured it as Dana’s inseparable
-companion, and the _Sun_ presently had another, and longer, editorial
-article about the wonderful beast:
-
- The universal interest which this accomplished animal has
- excited throughout the country is a striking refutation that
- genius is not honored in its own day and generation. Perhaps no
- other living critic has attained the popularity and vogue now
- enjoyed by our cat. For years he worked in silence, unknown,
- perhaps, beyond the limits of the office. He is a sort of
- Rosicrucian cat, and his motto has been “to know all and to
- keep himself unknown.” But he could not escape the glory his
- efforts deserved, and a few mornings ago he woke up, like
- Byron, to find himself famous.
-
- We are glad to announce that he hasn’t been puffed up by the
- enthusiastic praise which comes to him from all sources.
- He is the same industrious, conscientious, sharp-eyed, and
- sharp-toothed censor of copy that he has always been, nor
- should we have known that he is conscious of the admiration
- he excites among his esteemed contemporaries of the press had
- we not observed him in the act of dilacerating a copy of the
- _Graphic_ containing an alleged portrait of him.
-
- It was impossible not to sympathize with his evident
- indignation. The _Graphic’s_ portrait did foul injustice to his
- majestic and intellectual features. Besides, it represented him
- as having a bandage over one eye, as if he had been involved
- in controversy and had had his eye mashed. Now, aside from the
- fact that he needs both eyes to discharge his literary duties
- properly, he is able to whip his weight in office cats, and
- his fine, large eyes have never been shrouded in black, and we
- don’t believe they ever will be. He is a soldier as well as a
- scholar.
-
- We have received many requests to give a detailed account
- of the personal habits and peculiarities of this feline
- Aristarchus. Indeed, we have been requested to prepare a full
- biographical sketch to appear in the next edition of “Homes of
- American Authors.” At some future day we may satisfy public
- curiosity with the details of his literary methods. But genius
- such as his defies analysis, and the privacy of a celebrity
- ought not to be rudely invaded.
-
- It is not out of place, however, to indicate a few traits which
- illustrate his extraordinary faculty of literary decomposition,
- so to speak. His favorite food is a tariff discussion. When
- a big speech, full of wind and statistics, comes within his
- reach, he pounces upon it immediately and digests the figures
- at his leisure. During the discussion of the Morrison Bill he
- used to feed steadily on tariff speeches for eight hours a day,
- and yet his appetite remained unimpaired.
-
- When a piece of stale news or a long-winded, prosy article
- comes into the office, his remarkable sense of smell instantly
- detects it, and it is impossible to keep it from him. He always
- assists with great interest at the opening of the office mail,
- and he files several hundred letters a day in his interior
- department. The favorite diversion of the office-boys is to
- make him jump for twelve-column articles on the restoration of
- the American merchant marine.
-
- He takes a keen delight in hunting for essays on civil-service
- reform, and will play with them, if he has time, for hours.
- They are so pretty that he hates to kill them, but duty
- is duty. Clumsy and awkward English he springs at with
- indescribable quickness and ferocity; but he won’t eat it. He
- simply tears it up. He can’t stand everything.
-
- We don’t pretend he is perfect. We admit that he has an
- uncontrollable appetite for the _Congressional Record_. We have
- to keep this peculiar publication out of his reach. He will sit
- for hours and watch with burning eyes the iron safe in which
- we are obliged to shut up the _Record_ for safe-keeping. Once
- in a while we let him have a number or two. He becomes uneasy
- without it. It is his catnip.
-
- With the exception of this pardonable excess he is a blameless
- beast. He mouses out all the stupid stuff and nonsense that
- finds its way into the office and goes for it tooth and claw.
- He is the biggest copyholder in the world. And he never gets
- tired. His health is good, and we have not deemed it necessary
- to take out a policy on any one of his valuable lives.
-
- Many of our esteemed contemporaries are furnishing their
- offices with cats, but they can never hope to have the equal of
- the _Sun’s_ venerable polyphage. He is a cat of genius.
-
-The cat may have contracted his hatred of the dull and prosy from the
-men who worked in the _Sun_ office when Amos Cummings smiled and swore
-and got out the greatest four-page paper ever seen, singing the while
-the song of Walker’s filibusters:
-
- How would you like a soldier’s life
- On the plains of Nicara-goo?
- Marching away and fighting all day,
- Nothing to eat and as much to pay--
- We do it all for glory, they say,
- On the plains of Nicara-goo.
- Not a bit of breakfast did I see,
- And dinner was all the same to me;
- Two fried cats and three fried rats
- Was a supper at Nicara-goo.
- Marching away and fighting all day,
- Nothing to eat and as much to pay--
- We do it all for glory, they say,
- On the plains of Nicara-goo!
-
-Cummings worked so hard that in 1873 he broke down and the _Sun_ sent
-him to Florida. There he wandered about, exploring rivers, studying
-the natives, and writing for the _Sun_, over the signature of “Ziska,”
-a series of travel letters as interesting as any that ever appeared
-in a newspaper. When he returned to New York in 1876, John Kelly,
-then endeavouring to raise Tammany from the mire into which Tweed had
-dropped it, persuaded Cummings to become managing editor of the New
-York _Express_. Cummings did not stay long on the _Express_, being
-disgusted with Kelly’s hostility toward Tilden’s candidacy for the
-presidential nomination, and he went back to the _Sun_.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- DANIEL F. KELLOGG
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- AMOS B. STILLMAN
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- JOHN B. BOGART
-]
-
-For the next ten years his efforts were mostly in the direction of
-improving the weekly issue. In 1886 he was elected to the House
-of Representatives from a West Side district, but he maintained
-his connection with the _Sun_, and in 1887 he became editor of the
-_Evening Sun_, then just started. In 1888 Cummings resigned from the
-House, saying that he was too poor to be a Congressman, but on the
-death of Representative Samuel Sullivan (“Sunset”) Cox he consented
-to take the vacant place and continue Cox’s battles for the welfare
-of the letter-carriers. His service in the House lasted fifteen
-years. Cummings was a great labour advocate, not only in behalf
-of letter-carriers, but of printers, navy-yard employees, and
-musicians. He had the last-named in mind when he said in a speech on an
-alien-labour bill:
-
- As the law now stands, when a German student, or one of those
- fellows that swill beer along the Rhine, desires to come here
- for the summer, all he has to do is to get a saxophone or some
- other kind of musical instrument, call himself an artist, and
- be allowed to land here.
-
-That was Amos’s convincing, if inelegant, style. When he introduced a
-bill to compensate navy-yard men for labour already performed, but not
-paid for, Representative Holman, of Indiana, asked:
-
-“How much money will it take out of the Treasury?”
-
-“None of your business!” snapped Cummings. “The government must pay its
-just debts.”
-
-While he was in the House, Cummings wrote a series of articles on the
-big men of Washington. He was a delegate to the Democratic national
-conventions of 1892 and 1896. He died in Baltimore May 2, 1902, and
-a Republican House of Representatives voted a public funeral to this
-militant Democrat.
-
-Greater news men than Cummings followed him, undoubtedly, but there was
-no newspaperman in New York before his time who knew better what news
-was or how to handle it; not even the elder Bennett, for that great man
-knew only the news that looked big. Cummings was the first to know the
-news that felt big.
-
-It was Cummings and his work that Henry Watterson had in mind when he
-one day remarked to Mr. Dana:
-
-“The _Sun_ is a damned good paper, but you don’t make it.”
-
-That statement undoubtedly pleased the editor of the _Sun_, for it was
-evidence from an expert that he had carried his theory to success.
-He had set men free to write what they saw, as they saw it, in their
-own way. It was the _Sun_ way, and that was what he wanted. As Dana
-himself handed down this heritage of literary freedom in his editorial
-page to Mitchell, so he gave to the men on the news pages, through Amos
-Cummings and Chester S. Lord and their successors, the right to watch
-with open eyes the world pass by, and to describe that parade in a
-different way three hundred and sixty-five days a year.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-DANA’S FAMOUS RIVALS PASS
-
- _The Deaths of Raymond, Bennett, and Greeley Leave Him the Dominant
- Figure of the American Newspaper Field.--Dana’s Dream of a Paper
- Without Advertisements._
-
-
-Four years after he became the master of the _Sun_, and a quarter
-of a century before death took him from it, Dana found himself the
-Nestor of metropolitan journalism. Of the three other great New York
-editors of Dana’s time--three who had founded their own papers and
-lived with those papers until the wing of Azrael shut out the roar of
-the presses--Raymond had been the first, and the youngest, to go; for
-his end came when he was only forty-nine, eighteen years after the
-establishment of his _Times_.
-
-Bennett, the inscrutable monarch of the _Herald_, died in 1872, three
-years after Raymond, but Bennett, who did not establish the _Herald_
-until he was forty, had owned it, and had given every waking hour to
-its welfare, for thirty-seven years. The year of Bennett’s death saw
-the passing of the unfortunate Greeley, broken in body and mind from
-his fatuous chase of public office, within three weeks of his defeat
-for the presidency. As the sprightly young editor of the Louisville
-_Courier-Journal_, Colonel Henry Watterson, wrote in his paper in
-January, 1873:
-
- Mr. Bryant being no longer actively engaged in newspaper work,
- Mr. Dana is left alone to tell the tale of old-time journalism
- in New York. He, of all his fellow editors of the great
- metropolis, has passed the period of middle age; though--years
- apart--he is as blithe and nimble as the youngest of them,
- and has performed, with the _Sun_, a feat in modern newspaper
- practice that entitles him to the stag-horns laid down at his
- death by James Gordon Bennett. Mr. Dana is no less a writer and
- scholar than an editor; as witness his sketch of Mr. Greeley,
- which for thorough character-drawing is unsurpassed. In a word,
- Mr. Dana at fifty-three is as vigorous, sinewy, and live as a
- young buck of thirty-five or forty.
-
- His professional associates were boys when he was managing
- editor of the _Tribune_. Manton Marble was at college at
- Rochester, and Whitelaw Reid was going to school in Ohio. Young
- Bennett and Bundy were wearing short jackets.
-
- They were rough-and-tumble days, sure enough, even for New
- York. There was no Central Park. Madison Square was “out of
- town.” Franconi’s Circus, surnamed a “hippodrome,” sprawled its
- ugly wooden towers, minarets, and sideshows over the ground
- now occupied by the Fifth Avenue Hotel. _Miss Flora McFlimsy_
- of the opposite square had not come into being; nay, Madison
- Square itself existed in a city ordinance merely, and, like the
- original of Mr. Praed’s Darnell Park, was a wretched waste of
- common, where the boys skated and played shinny.
-
- The elder Harpers stood in the shoes now worn by their
- sons, who were off at boarding-school. George Ripley was as
- larky as John Hay is. Delmonico’s, down-town, was the only
- Delmonico’s. The warfare between the newspapers constituted
- the most exciting topic of the time. Bennett was “Jack Ketch,”
- Raymond was the “little villain,” and Greeley was by turns an
- “incendiary,” a “white-livered poltroon,” and a “free-lover.”
- Parke Godwin and Charles A. Dana were managing editors
- respectively; both scholars and both, as writers, superior to
- all the rest, except Greeley, who, as a newspaper writer, never
- had a superior.
-
- The situation is changed completely. Bennett, Greeley, and
- Raymond are dead. Dana and Godwin, both about of an age, stand
- at the head of New York journalism; while Reid, Marble, and
- Jennings, all young men, wear the purple of a new era.
-
- Will it be an era of reforms? There are signs that it will be.
- Marble is a recruit. Reid is essentially a man of the world.
- Jennings is an Englishman. One would think that these three,
- led by two ripe scholars and gentlemen like Godwin and Dana,
- would alter the character of the old partisan warfare in one
- respect at least, and that if they have need to be personal,
- they will be wittily so, and not brutally and dirtily personal;
- the which will be an advance.
-
- There will never be an end to the personality of journalism.
- But there is already an end of the efficacy of filth. In this,
- as in other things, there are fashions. What ill thing, for
- example, can be said personally injurious of Reid, Marble,
- Jennings, Bundy, and the rest, all hard-working, painstaking
- men, without vices or peculiarities, who do not invite attack?
-
- On the whole, the newspaper prospect in New York is very good.
- There will be, perhaps, less of what we call “character” in New
- York journalism, but more usefulness, honesty, and culture and
- as the New York dailies, like the New York milliners, set the
- fashion, these excellent qualities will diffuse themselves over
- the country. They may even reach Nashville and Memphis. It is
- an age of miracles. Who can tell?
-
-“There will never be an end to the personality of journalism.” It is
-curious to note in passing that Henry Watterson, who retired from the
-active editorship of the _Courier-Journal_ on August 7, 1918, after
-fifty years’ service, was the last of the men who, according to the
-measure of forty years ago, were “personal journalists.” “Dana says,”
-“Greeley says,” “Raymond says”--such oral credits are no longer given
-by the readers of the really big and reputable newspapers of New York
-to the men who write opinions. “Henry Watterson says” was the last of
-the phrases of that style.
-
-Dana believed in personal journalism and thought it would not pass
-away. A few days after the death of Horace Greeley, the editor of the
-_Sun_ printed his views on the subject:
-
- A great deal of twaddle is uttered by some country newspapers
- just now over what they call personal journalism. They say that
- now that Mr. Bennett, Mr. Raymond, and Mr. Greeley are dead,
- the day for personal journalism is gone by, and that impersonal
- journalism will take its place. That appears to be a sort of
- journalism in which nobody will ask who is the editor of a
- paper or the writer of any class of article, and nobody will
- care.
-
- Whenever in the newspaper profession a man rises up who is
- original, strong, and bold enough to make his opinions a
- matter of consequence to the public, there will be personal
- journalism; and whenever newspapers are conducted only by
- commonplace individuals whose views are of no interest to the
- world and of no consequence to anybody, there will be nothing
- but impersonal journalism.
-
- And this is the essence of the whole question.
-
-For all that, Dana must have felt lonely, for at that moment, at any
-rate, the new chiefs of the _Sun’s_ rivals did not measure up to the
-heights of their predecessors. To Dana, the trio that had passed
-were men worthy of his steel, and worthy, each in his own way, of
-admiration. Toward Greeley, in spite of the circumstances under which
-Dana left the _Tribune_, the editor of the _Sun_ showed a kindly
-spirit; not only in his support of Greeley for the presidency, which
-may have sprung from Dana’s aversion to Grantism, but in his general
-attitude toward the brilliant if erratic old man. As for Bennett, Dana
-frankly believed him to be a great newspaperman, and never hesitated to
-say so.
-
-What Dana thought of the three may be judged by his editorial article
-in the _Sun_ on the day after Greeley’s funeral:
-
- In burying Mr. Greeley we bury the third founder of a newspaper
- which has become famous and wealthy in this city during the
- last thirty-five years. Mr. Raymond died three years and Mr.
- Bennett barely six months ago.
-
- These three men were exceedingly unlike each other, yet each of
- them possessed extraordinary professional talents. Mr. Raymond
- surpassed both Mr. Bennett and Mr. Greeley in the versatility
- of his accomplishments, and in facility and smoothness as a
- writer. But he was less a journalist than either of the other
- two. Nature had rather intended him for a lawyer, and success
- as a legislative debater and presiding officer had directed his
- ambition toward that kind of life.
-
- Mr. Bennett was exclusively a newspaperman. He was equally
- great as a writer, a wit, and a purveyor of news; and he never
- showed any desire to leave a profession in which he had made
- himself rich and formidable.
-
- Horace Greeley delighted to be a maker of newspapers, not so
- much for the thing itself, though to that he was sincerely
- attached, as for the sake of promoting doctrines, ideas, and
- theories in which he was a believer; and his personal ambition,
- which was very profound and never inoperative, made him wish to
- be Governor, Legislator, Senator, Cabinet Minister, President,
- because such elevation seemed to afford the clearest possible
- evidence that he himself was appreciated and that the cause he
- espoused had gained the hearts of the people. How incomplete,
- indeed, would be the triumph of any set of principles if
- their chief advocate and promoter were to go unrecognized and
- unhonored!
-
- It is a most impressive circumstance that each of these three
- great journalists has had to die a tragic and pitiable death.
- One perished by apoplexy long after midnight in the entrance
- of his own home; another closed his eyes with no relative near
- him to perform that last sad office; and the third, broken down
- by toils, excitements, and sufferings too strong to be borne,
- breathed his last in a private madhouse. What a lesson to the
- possessors of power, for these three men were powerful beyond
- others! What a commentary upon human greatness, for they were
- rich and great, and were looked upon with envy by thousands
- who thought themselves less fortunate than they! And amid such
- startling surprises and such a prodigious conflict of lights
- and shadows, the curtain falls as the tired actor, crowned with
- long applause, passes from that which seems to that which is.
-
-Louis J. Jennings succeeded Raymond as the editor of the _Times_, and
-acted as such until 1876, when he returned to England, his desk being
-taken by John Foord. Jennings went into politics in England, and was
-elected a member of Parliament. He also wrote a life of Gladstone and
-edited a collection of Lord Randolph Churchill’s speeches.
-
-Bennett was followed in the possession of the _Herald_ by his son
-and namesake. Whitelaw Reid took Greeley’s place at the head of the
-_Tribune_. Dana did not like Reid in those days. In a “Survey of
-Metropolitan Journalism” which appeared in the editorial columns of the
-_Sun_ on September 3, 1875--the _Sun’s_ forty-second birthday--Dana
-dismissed his neighbour of the then “tall tower” with--
-
- We pass the _Tribune_ by. Our opinion of it is well known. It
- is Jay Gould’s paper, and a disgrace to journalism.
-
-Dana’s attitude toward the other big newspapers was more kindly:
-
- The _Times_ is a very respectable paper, and more than that, a
- journal of which the Republican party has reason to be proud.
- It is not a servile organ, but a loyal partisan. We prefer for
- our own part to keep aloof from the party politicians. They are
- disagreeable fellows to have hanging about a newspaper office,
- and their advice we do not regard as valuable. But we do not
- decry party newspapers. They have their field, and must always
- exist. The _Times_ is a creditable example of such a newspaper.
- It would be better, however, if Mr. Jennings himself wrote the
- whole editorial page.
-
- The mistake of the _Times_ was in lapsing into the dulness of
- respectable conservatism after its Ring fight. It should have
- kept on and made a crusade against frauds of all sorts.
-
- The _Herald_ has improved since young Mr. Bennett’s return. We
- are attracted toward this son of his father. He has a passion
- for manly sports, and that we like. If the shabby writers who
- make jest of his walking-matches had an income of three or
- four hundred thousand dollars a year, perhaps they would drive
- in carriages instead of walking and dawdle away their time
- on beds of ease or the gorgeous sofas of the Lotos Club. Mr.
- Bennett does otherwise. He strides up Broadway with the step of
- an athlete, dons his navy blue and commands his yacht, shoots
- pigeons, and prefers the open air of Newport to the confinement
- of the _Herald_ office.
-
- The _World_ is a journal which pleases us on many accounts ...
- but occasionally there is a bit of prurient wit in its columns
- that might better be omitted. The _World_ is also too often
- written in too fantastic language. Its young men seem to vie
- with each other in tormenting the language. They will do better
- when they learn that there is more force in simple Anglo-Saxon
- than in all the words they can manufacture. We advise them to
- read the Bible and Common Prayer Book. Those books will do
- their souls good, anyway, and they may also learn to write less
- affectedly.
-
-The _Sun_ was as frank in discussing its own theories and ambitions
-as it was in criticising its contemporaries for dulness and poor
-writing. Dana’s dream, never to be realized, was a newspaper without
-advertisements. He believed that by getting all the news, condensing
-it into the smallest readable space, and adding such literary matter
-as the readers’ tastes demanded, a four-page paper might be produced
-with a reasonable profit from the sales, after paper and ink, men and
-machinery, had been paid for.
-
-An editorial article in the _Sun_ on March 13, 1875, was practically a
-prospectus of this idea:
-
- Until Robert Bonner sagaciously foresaw a handsome profit to
- be realized by excluding advertisements and crowding a small
- sheet with such choice literature as would surely attract a
- mighty throng of readers, never did the owner of any serial
- publication so much as dream of making both ends meet without
- a revenue from advertisements. The _Tribune_, the _Times_, and
- the _Herald_ at length ceased to expect a profit from their
- circulation, and then they came to care for large editions only
- so far as they served to attract advertisers.
-
- It was then that the _Sun_ conceived the idea of a daily
- newspaper that should yield more satisfactory dividends from
- large circulation than had ever been declared by the journals
- that had looked to the organism of political parties and to
- enterprising advertisers for the bulk of their income. It saw
- in New York a city of sufficient population to warrant the
- experiment of a two-cent newspaper whose cost should equal that
- of the four-cent dailies in every respect, the cost of white
- paper alone excepted. Accordingly we produced the _Sun_ on a
- sheet that leaves a small margin for profit, and by restricting
- the space allotted to advertisers and eliminating the verbiage
- in which the eight-page dailies hide the news, we made room in
- the _Sun_ for not only all the real news of the day, but for
- interesting literature and current political discussion as well.
-
- It was an enterprise that the public encouraged with avidity.
- The edition rapidly rose to one hundred and twenty thousand
- copies daily, and it is now rising; while the small margin
- of profit on that enormous circulation makes the _Sun_
- able to exist without paying any special attention to
- advertising--approaching very closely, in fact, to the
- condition of a daily newspaper able to support itself on the
- profits of its circulation alone.
-
- Only a single further step remains to be taken. That step was
- recently foreshadowed in a leader in which the _Sun_ intimated
- that the time was not far distant in which it would reject more
- advertising than it would accept. With a daily circulation of
- fifty or a hundred thousand more, there is little doubt that
- the _Sun_ would find it necessary to limit the advertisers as
- the reporters and other writers for its columns are limited,
- each to a space to be determined by the public interest in his
- subject.
-
- It will be a long stride in the progress of intellectual
- as distinguished from commercial journalism, and the _Sun_
- will probably be the first to make it, thus distancing the
- successors of Raymond, Bennett, and Greeley in the great
- sweepstakes for recognition as the Journal of the Future.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- JAMES GORDON BENNETT, SR.
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- HORACE GREELEY
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- HENRY J. RAYMOND
-]
-
-It must be remembered, in recalling the failure of Dana’s dream of a
-paper _sans_ advertising, that his mind was not usually the port of
-vain dreams. He was a practical man, with more business sense than any
-other editor of his time, Bennett alone excepted. In him imagination
-had not swallowed arithmetic, and there is no possible doubt that he
-had good reason to believe in the practicability of the program he
-so candidly outlined to his readers. It was part and parcel of his
-faith in a four-page newspaper--a faith so strong, so well grounded on
-results, that for the first twenty years of the Dana régime the _Sun_
-never appeared in more than four pages, except in emergencies.
-
-In the end, of course, the scheme was beaten by the very excellence of
-its originator’s qualities. The _Sun_, by its popularity, drew more
-and more advertising. By its good English, its freedom from literary
-shackles, and the spirit of its staff, it attracted more and more
-writers of distinction, each unwilling to be denied his place in the
-_Sun_. Dana always had unlimited space for a good story, just as the
-cat had an insatiable appetite for a bad one; and thus, through his
-own genius, he destroyed his own dream, but not without having almost
-proved that it was possible of realisation.
-
-Dana believed that most of the newspapers of his day--particularly in
-the seventies--were tiring out not only the reader, but the writer.
-Commenting on a decline in the newspaper business in the summer of
-1875, the _Sun_ said:
-
- Some of our big contemporaries have been overdoing the thing.
- They seem to think that to secure circulation it is necessary
- to overload the stomachs of their readers.
-
- The American newspaper-reader demands of an editor that he
- shall not give him news and discussions in heavy chunks, but
- so condensed and clarified that he shall be relieved of the
- necessity of wading through a treatise to get at a fact, or
- spending time on a dilated essay to get a bite at an argument.
-
- Six or seven dreary columns are filled with leading
- articles, no matter whether there are subjects to discuss of
- public interest, or brains at hand to treat them. Our big
- contemporaries exhaust their young men and drive them too
- hard. The stock of ideas is not limitless, even in a New York
- newspaper office.
-
- Another thing has been bad. Men with actual capacity of
- certain sorts for acceptable writing have been frightened off
- from doing natural and vigorous work by certain newspaper
- critics and doctrinaires who are in distress if the literary
- proprieties are seemingly violated, and if the temper and
- blood of the writer actually show in his work. They measure
- our journalistic production by an English standard, which lays
- it down as its first and most imperative rule that editorial
- writing shall be free from the characteristics of the writer.
- This is ruinous to good writing, and damaging to the sincerity
- of writers.... If we choose to glow or cry out in indignation,
- we do so, and we are not a bit frightened at the sound of our
- own voice.
-
-Dana himself had that peculiar faculty, as indescribable as instinct,
-of knowing, when he saw an article in the paper, just how much work
-the author of it had put in--particularly in cases where the labour
-had been in leaving out, rather than in writing. As a result of this
-intuition he never drove his men. He would accept three lines or three
-columns for a day’s work, and his admiration might go out more heartily
-to the three lines. As for the appearance of characteristics in men’s
-writing, that was as necessary, in Dana’s opinion, as it was wicked in
-the judgment of the ancient editors.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-“THE SUN” AND THE GRANT SCANDALS
-
- _Dana’s Relentless Fight Against the Whisky Ring, Crédit Mobilier,
- “Addition, Division, and Silence,” the Safe Burglary Conspiracy
- and the Boss Shepherd Scandal._
-
-
-The first ten years of Dana’s service on the _Sun_ were marked by
-the uprooting of many public evils. To use the mild phrasing of the
-historian John Fiske, “Villains sometimes succeeded in imposing upon
-President Grant, who was an honest, simple-hearted soldier without
-much knowledge of the ways of the world.” To say it more concretely,
-hardly a department of the national government but was alive with
-fraud. The _Sun_, which had supported Grant in the election of
-1868, turned against his administration in its first months, and
-for years it continued to keep before the public the revelations of
-corruption--which were easily made, so bold were the scoundrels, so
-coarse their manner of theft.
-
-Among the scandals which the _Sun_ either brought to light or was most
-vigorous in assailing, these were the principal:
-
-The Crédit Mobilier Scandal--This involved the names of many Senators
-and Representatives who were accused of accepting stock in the Crédit
-Mobilier of America, the fiscal company organised to build the Union
-Pacific Railroad, as a reward for using their influence and votes in
-favour of the great enterprise.
-
-The Navy Department Scandal--In this the _Sun_ accused George M.
-Robeson, Secretary of the Navy, of having permitted double payment
-to contractors and of violating the law in making large purchases
-without competitive bidding. Mr. Dana appeared as a witness in the
-Congressional investigation of Robeson, who, in the end, while not
-convicted of personal corruption, was censured for the laxity of his
-official methods.
-
-The Whisky Ring--This evil combination cheated the government out
-of millions of dollars. It was made up of distillers, wholesale
-liquor-dealers, and employees of the internal revenue office, these
-conspiring together to avoid the payment of the liquor tax. The first
-attack on the corrupt alliance was made in the _Sun_ of February
-3, 1872, in an article by “Sappho,” one of the _Sun’s_ Washington
-correspondents. Other great newspapers took up the fight, but the _Sun_
-was the chief aggressor. As a result of the exposure, two hundred and
-thirty-eight men were indicted and many of them, including the chief
-clerk of the Treasury Department, were sent to prison.
-
-“Addition, Division, and Silence”--On March 20, 1867, W. H. Kemble,
-State Treasurer of Pennsylvania and one of the Republican bosses, wrote
-the following letter to Titian J. Coffey, a lawyer and claim-agent in
-Washington:
-
- MY DEAR TITIAN:
-
- Allow me to introduce to you my particular friend, Mr. George
- O. Evans. He has a claim of some magnitude that he wishes you
- to help him in. Put him through as you would me. He understands
- addition, division, and silence.
-
- W. H. KEMBLE.
-
-
-When this letter fell into the hands of the _Sun_, which had already
-made war on the ring formed for the collection of war claims, it saw
-in Kemble’s last four words the sententious platform of wide-spread
-fraud. It printed the letter, and kept on printing it, with that
-iteration which Dana knew was of value in a crusade. In a few months
-the whole country was familiar with the phrase so suggestive of plunder.
-
-Kemble was a politician with a thick skin, but he at last became so
-enraged at the repetition of “addition, division, and silence,” whether
-uttered by street urchins or printed all over America as the watchword
-of corruption--“honest graft,” he would have called it, if that phrase
-had then been common--that he sued out a writ of criminal libel against
-Mr. Dana and had him arrested as he was passing through Philadelphia.
-The only result of this was to make the phrase more common than before.
-
-Kemble was afterward convicted of trying to bribe Pennsylvania
-legislators, and was sent to prison for a year.
-
-The Post-Trader Scandal--William W. Belknap, Grant’s Secretary of
-War, was charged with receiving from Caleb P. Marsh fifteen hundred
-dollars in consideration for the appointment of John S. Evans to
-maintain a trading-establishment at Fort Sill, in the Indian Territory.
-The scandal came to the surface through the remark of Mrs. Belknap
-that Mrs. Evans would have no place in society, “as she is only a
-post-trader’s wife,” and the retort of Mrs. Evans, upon hearing of
-this, that “a post-trader’s wife is as good as the wife of an official
-who takes money for the appointment of a post-trader.”
-
-The _Sun_ laid the story of bribery wide open, and the Senate proceeded
-to impeach the Secretary of War. He escaped punishment by resigning
-his office, twenty-five Senators voting “not guilty” on the ground
-that Belknap’s resignation technically removed him from the Senate’s
-jurisdiction. Thirty-five Senators voted “guilty,” but a two-thirds
-vote was necessary to punish.
-
-The Salary Grab--This was the act of Congress of March 3, 1873, which
-raised the President’s salary from twenty-five thousand dollars to
-fifty thousand, and the salaries of Senators and Representatives
-from five thousand to seventy-five hundred. Its evil lay not in the
-increases, but in the retroactive clause which provided that each
-Congressman should receive five thousand dollars as extra pay for
-the two-year term then ending. The assaults of the _Sun_ and other
-newspapers so aroused public indignation that Congress was obliged to
-repeal the act in January, 1874, and many Members returned their share
-of the spoil to the Treasury.
-
-The Boss Shepherd Scandal--The _Sun_ printed an article from Washington
-accusing Alexander Shepherd, vice-president of the Board of Public
-Works of the District of Columbia, and Henry D. Cooke, governor of the
-District, with having a financial interest in the Metropolitan Paving
-Company, which had many street contracts in the national capital.
-Shepherd and Cooke laid a complaint of criminal libel against Mr. Dana,
-and an assistant district attorney of the District of Columbia came
-to New York and procured from United States Commissioner Davenport a
-warrant for the editor’s arrest.
-
-It was the intent of the prosecution to hale Dana to a Washington
-police-court, where he would be tried without a jury. Dana had gone
-willingly, even eagerly, to Washington when summoned in the Robeson
-case, but the Shepherd strategy was so manifestly an attempt to
-railroad him that an appeal was taken to the Federal court for the
-southern district of New York. The historic decision of the district
-judge--Samuel Blatchford, subsequently promoted to the United States
-Supreme Court--may be summed up in one of its paragraphs:
-
- The Constitution says that all trials shall be by jury, and
- the accused is entitled, not to be first convicted by a court
- and then to be convicted by a jury, but to be convicted or
- acquitted _in the first instance_ by a jury.
-
-As the _Sun_ said of this decision, important to the freedom of the
-individual as well as to that of the press:
-
- Those who sought to murder liberty, where they looked for a
- second Jeffreys, found a second Mansfield.
-
-The Safe Burglary Conspiracy--Columbus Alexander, a reputable citizen
-of Washington, was active in the movement to smash the Washington
-contractors’ ring. He sought to bring certain contractors’ books into
-court and exposed the false set that was produced. The ringsters hired
-a man to go to Mr. Alexander with a story that he could bring him the
-genuine books. Then the gang, which included men in the secret-service
-departments of the government, placed some of the genuine books in the
-safe of the district attorney’s office and employed three professional
-burglars to blow open the safe.
-
-The books, taken from the safe, were carried to Alexander’s home by the
-man who had approached him. Close behind came police, who were prepared
-to arrest Alexander as soon as he received the “stolen property.”
-He was to be accused of hiring the burglars to crack the district
-attorney’s safe. But the hour was early in the morning, Alexander was
-sleeping the deep sleep of the just, and the criminal rang his doorbell
-in vain.
-
-The ringsters then “arrested” the “thief,” and caused him to sign
-a false confession, accusing Alexander; but the failure of their
-theatricals had broken the hireling’s nerve as well as their own, and
-the conspiracy collapsed. Two of the hired criminals turned state’s
-evidence at the trial, but the powerful politicians of the ring were
-able to bring about a disagreement of the jury.
-
-These were the greatest of the scandals which the _Sun_ exposed in its
-news columns and denounced on its editorial page. It was the cry of the
-ringsters, and even of some honest men, that the _Sun’s_ assaults on
-the evils that marred Grant’s administration were the result of Dana’s
-personal dislike of the President. More specifically it was declared
-that Dana was a disappointed office-seeker, and that the place of
-collector of customs at the port of New York was the office he sought.
-
-We have it on the unimpeachable testimony of General James Harrison
-Wilson, the biographer of Dana, and, with Dana, a biographer of Grant,
-that General Rawlins, Grant’s most intimate friend, told Dana’s
-associates, and particularly General Wilson, that Dana was to be
-appointed collector. There is no evidence that Dana ever asked Grant,
-or any other man, for public office. One place, that of appraiser of
-merchandise at the port of New York, was offered him, and he refused
-it. The _Sun_ said editorially, replying to an insinuation made by the
-_Commercial Advertiser_ that if Dana had been made collector his paper
-would not denounce the administration:
-
- The idea that the editor of the _Sun_, which shines for all,
- could consent to become collector of the port of New York is
- extravagant and inadmissible. It would be stepping down and out
- with a vengeance.
-
- And yet we do not mean that the collector of New York need be
- other than an upright man. Moses H. Grinnell was such, and Tom
- Murphy, though a politician, a crony of Boss Grant, and one
- of the donors of Boss Grant’s cottage, certainly never took a
- dollar of money from the Federal Treasury to which he was not
- entitled. General Arthur, the present collector, is a gentleman
- in every sense of the word.
-
- The office of collector is respectable enough, but it is not
- one that the editor of the _Sun_ could desire to take without
- deserving to have his conduct investigated by a proceeding _de
- lunatico_.
-
-Dana and the _Sun_ lost friends because of the assaults on Grantism.
-The warfare was bitter and personal. In the case of Belknap, for
-instance, the _Sun_ was attacking a man whom Dana, having known him as
-a good soldier, had recommended for appointment as Secretary of War.
-But it must be recalled that at the very height of his antagonism to
-Grant, the President, Dana never receded from his opinion that Grant,
-the general, was the Union’s greatest soldier. And the _Sun_ was quick
-to applaud him as President when, as in currency matters, he took a
-course which Dana considered right.
-
-The friends of Grant, nevertheless, turned against Dana and his
-paper. Some of them, stockholders in the Sun Printing and Publishing
-Association, quit the concern when they found themselves unable to turn
-Dana from his purpose. All their pleadings were vain.
-
-“A few years from now,” Dana would reply, “I shall be willing to accept
-whatever judgment the nation passes on my course of action; but now I
-must do as I think right.”
-
-So far as the material prosperity of the _Sun_ was concerned, the
-desertion of Grant’s friends hurt it not a whit. For every reader lost,
-four or five were won. Men may stop reading a paper because it disgusts
-them; they rarely quit it because it is wounding them.
-
-“I don’t read the _Sun_,” said Henry Ward Beecher during his trial,
-“and don’t allow anybody to read it to me. What’s the good of a man
-sticking pins into himself?”
-
-The _Sun_ made this reply to Beecher’s assertion:
-
- Everybody reads the _Sun_--the good, that they may be
- stimulated to do better; the bad, in fear and trembling lest
- their wickedness shall meet its deserts.
-
-In Beecher’s case, as in Grant’s, the _Sun_ believed that it was doing
-a public service in laying open wrongful conditions. In answer to one
-who criticised its brutal candour about the Plymouth Church scandal the
-_Sun_ said:
-
- The exposure of the moral nastiness in Brooklyn is a salutary
- thing. If, when the exposure of the scandal took place, the
- people had been indifferent--as indifferent as Beecher assumed
- to be--and had received no shock to their sense of purity
- and propriety, then the Jeremiahs might well have bewailed
- the turpitude of society and prophesied evil things for the
- country. Then, indeed, the poison would have been in the whole
- social atmosphere....
-
- The Plymouth pastor, if a guiltless man, has brought all this
- trouble on himself by his cowardly course in dealing with the
- accusations against him....
-
- If he is not a bold man, strong in the truth and in purity,
- what business has he to preach the religion of the Apostles
- to his fellow men--he who distributed Sharp’s rifles to the
- Kansas combatants with slavery, who denounced sin and bore
- his head high as a man of freedom of thought and action? To
- have kept himself consistent, he should not have dallied with
- Tilton and Moulton in secret, but if entrenched in innocence
- he should have dragged out their slanders and torn to pieces
- their plans from the pulpit where he had preached courage under
- difficulties, divine faith under sorrow, and bold encounter
- with sin. This would soon have expelled the poison lurking in
- the social atmosphere, but Beecher did not do it.
-
-Perhaps Beecher’s thanks were not due to Dana, but Grant’s surely were.
-It is impossible that scandals like those of the Whisky Ring could
-have lain hidden forever. If they had not been exposed when they were,
-they would have come to the top later, perhaps after Grant went out of
-office, and when his cry, “Let no guilty man escape!” would have been
-in vain.
-
-The _Sun’s_ fights against the scandals of the Grant period were no
-more bitter than its attacks on the frauds attending the Presidential
-election of 1876, although Dana had no cause for personal animosity
-toward Hayes. The _Sun’s_ chief Washington correspondent, A. M. Gibson,
-who handled many of the Grant scandals, wrote most of the news stories
-about the theft of the Presidency by Mr. Hayes’s managers. He also
-published in book form an official history of the fraud.
-
-Joseph Pulitzer, then newly come from the West, was assigned by Dana
-to cover the proceedings of the Electoral Commission in semieditorial
-style. Pulitzer was later, in 1878, a European correspondent of the
-_Sun_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-“THE SUN” AND “HUMAN INTEREST”
-
- _Something About Everything, for Everybody.--A Wonderful Four-Page
- Paper.--A Comparison of the Styles of “Sun” Reporters in Three
- Periods Twenty Years Apart._
-
-
-The political scandals made good reading, but the _Sun_ was not
-content to feed its readers on investigations. It put a little bit of
-everything on their breakfast-plates--the Moody and Sankey revivals,
-Mr. Keely’s motor, which didn’t work, and young Edison’s multiple
-telegraph, which did; the baseball games of the days when Spalding
-pitched for Boston and Anson and Reach were at first and second base,
-respectively, for the Philadelphia Athletics; the presentation of a
-cup to John Cable Heenan, the prize-fighter, as the handsomest and
-best-dressed man at the ball of the Shandley Association; an interview
-with Joaquin Miller on Longfellow; the wiggles of the sea-serpent
-off Swampscott; a ghost-story from Long Island, with a beautiful
-spook lashed to the rigging of a spectral bark; the arrival of New
-York’s first Chinese laundryman; Father Tom Burke’s lectures on
-Ireland; the lectures of Tyndall on newly-discovered phenomena of
-light; the billiard-matches between Cyrille Dion and Maurice Daly; a
-tar-and-feathers party in Brooklyn--the _Sun_ skimmed the pan of life
-and served the cream for two cents.
-
-The familiar three-story head-line, which was first used by the
-_Sun_ on the day of Grant’s inauguration, and which stayed the same
-until long after Mr. Dana’s death, attracted readers with the magic
-of the head-writers’ art. “The Skull in the Chimney,” “Shaved by a
-Lady Barber,” “A Man Hanged by Women,” “Burned Alive for $5,000,”
-“The Murder in the Well,” “Death Leap in a Theatre,” “An Aged Sinner
-Hanged,” “The Duel in the Bedroom,” “Horrors of a Madhouse,” “A Life
-for a Love-Letter”--none could glance at the compelling titles of the
-_Sun_ stories without remaining to read. They are still fascinating in
-an age when lady barbers would attract no attention.
-
-A typical _Sun_ of 1874 might contain, in its four pages, six columns
-about the Beecher-Tilton case; four columns of editorial articles;
-a letter from Eli Perkins (Melville DeLancey Landon) at Saratoga,
-declaring that the spa was standing still commercially because of its
-lack of good drinking-water; a column, also from Saratoga, describing
-the defeat of Preakness by Springbok; the latest in the strange case
-of Charley Ross; a column headed “Life in the Metropolis--Dashes Here
-and There by the _Sun’s_ Reporters”; a column of “Sunbeams,” a column
-about trout-fishing, two columns of general news, and five columns of
-advertisements.
-
-Instead of Eli Perkins’s letter, there might be a critique by Leopold
-Damrosch, from Baireuth, of Wagner’s “Götterdämmerung,” just presented;
-or a dissection, by “Monsieur X,” of E. A. Sothern’s _Dundreary_.
-“Monsieur X” was Napoleon Leon Thiéblin, who was for years one of the
-_Sun’s_ most distinguished critics and essayists. He was that kind of
-newspaperman who could--and did--write on Saturday of the political
-news of Bismarck and on Sunday of the crowd at Coney Island.
-
-Thiéblin, who was of French blood, was born in St. Petersburg in 1834.
-He was graduated at the Russian Imperial Academy of Artillery, and
-commanded forty pieces of cannon at the siege of Sebastopol. At the
-close of the Crimean War he went to London and became a member of the
-staff of the _Pall Mall Gazette_, reporting for that journal the French
-side of the war with Germany in 1870–71, and the atrocities of the
-Commune, over the pen-name of “Azamet Batuk.” He reported the Carlist
-War in Spain for the New York _Herald_, and then came to America to
-lecture, but Dana persuaded him to join the _Sun_ staff. He contributed
-to the _Sun_ many articles on foreign affairs, including a series
-on European journalism; “The Stranger’s Note-Book,” which was made
-up of New York sketches; letters from the Centennial Exposition at
-Philadelphia; and the Wall Street letters signed “Rigolo.”
-
-In the “Sunbeams” column were crowded the vagrant wit and wisdom of
-the world. The items concerned everything from great men in European
-chancelleries to organ-grinders in Nassau Street:
-
- The mules are all dying in Arkansas.
-
- A printer in Texas has named his first-born Brevier Fullfaced
- Jones.
-
- Real estate is looking up at New Orleans.
-
- Translations from Hawthorne are becoming popular in France.
-
- Venison costs six cents a pound in St. Paul.
-
- Queen Victoria says every third woman in Cork is a beauty.
-
- Goldwin Smith is coming to the United States.
-
- The Pope denounces short dresses.
-
-The same terseness is seen in the “Footlight Flashes,” begun in 1876:
-
- Clara Morris takes her lap-dog out for a daily drive.
-
- Miss Claxton is meeting with indifferent success in
- “Conscience.”
-
- Not less than $30,000 was spent last evening in the theatres of
- New York.
-
- John T. Raymond drew excellent houses as _Colonel Sellers_ at
- the Brooklyn Theatre.
-
- For the term of their appearance in “King Lear,” Lawrence
- Barrett will receive $1,200 a week; E. E. Sheridan, $1,000;
- Frederick B. Warde, $500.
-
-The interview, invented by the elder Bennett, was becoming more and
-more popular. The _Sun_ used it, not only as the vehicle of acquired
-information, but sometimes as the envelope of humour. Take, for
-example, this bit, printed in 1875, but as fresh in style and spirit as
-if it were of the product of a reporter of 1918:
-
- INTERVIEWING VANDERBILT
-
- ANOTHER REPORTER COMES AWAY FREIGHTED WITH VALUABLE INFORMATION
-
- Commodore Vanderbilt was eighty-one years old yesterday. He
- spent the day in his Fourth Avenue offices, taking his usual
- drive in the afternoon. A _Sun_ reporter visited him in the
- evening to inquire about a favorable time for selling a few
- thousands of New York Central.
-
- “This,” said the commodore, slowly and solemnly, as he entered
- the drawing-room, “is my birthday.”
-
- “Indeed!” said the reporter. “Do you think the preferred
- stock----”
-
- “To-day,” the commodore interrupted, “I am eighty-one years
- old. I am stronger----”
-
- “Is there any prospect of an immediate rise?”
-
- “I have never gone into the late-supper business,” the
- commodore answered, apparently not catching the drift of the
- question; “and I have always been a very temperate man. But how
- did you find out that this was my birthday?”
-
- “You hinted at the fact yourself,” the reporter replied. “Will
- the Erie troubles----”
-
- “The Erie troubles will not prevent me from beginning my
- eighty-second year with a young heart and a clear conscience.”
-
- “And with the prospect of seeing a good many more birthday
- anniversaries?” the reporter asked.
-
- “That, my dear boy,” said the commodore, “is one of those
- things that no fellow can tell about.”
-
- “Do you think that this is a good time to sell?”
-
- “No, it’s never a good time to sell after banking-hours.”
-
- “Good evening!”
-
- “Good evening! Drop in again.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- JULIAN RALPH
-]
-
-How did the _Sun_ reporters of the seventies compare with those of
-later years? As no two reporters are alike in vision and style, no
-two occasions identical in incident, no two dramatic moments twin, it
-is better to make comparison by choosing arbitrarily scenes far apart
-in years, but set on similar stages, and to lay before the reader
-the work of the _Sun_ reporter in each case. Let us take, because of
-their resemblance in public interest and the similarity of physical
-surroundings, the close of the trials, twenty years apart, of Edward
-S. Stokes for the murder of James Fisk, Jr.; of Lizzie Borden for the
-killing of her father and step-mother, and of Charles Becker for the
-assassination of Herman Rosenthal.
-
-The following is from the _Sun_ of January 6, 1873:
-
- Stokes took his accustomed place, and his relatives sat down
- facing the jurors. The judge entered and took his place. Then,
- amid the most solemn silence, the twelve jurymen filed in and
- seated themselves. The awful conclusion at which they had
- arrived could be read in their faces. Each juror’s name was
- called, and with the usual response.
-
- The judge turned toward them, and in a low, clear voice asked:
-
- “Gentlemen, have you agreed on a verdict?”
-
- The foreman of the jury arose and said, “We have.”
-
- Clerk of the Court: “Gentlemen of the jury, rise. Prisoner,
- stand up. Gentlemen of the jury, look upon the prisoner.
- Prisoner, look upon the jury. What say you, gentlemen of the
- jury? Do you find the prisoner at the bar guilty or not guilty?”
-
- Foreman of the Jury: “Guilty of murder in the first degree.”
-
- A passionate wail that made men’s hearts leap rose from the
- group that clustered round the prisoner, and the head of the
- horror-stricken girl, from whose bosom the anguished cry was
- rent, fell upon the shoulder of her doomed brother.
-
- The jury was polled by request of the prisoner’s counsel. No
- sooner had the last man answered “Yes” to the question whether
- all agreed on the verdict than the prisoner, erect and firm,
- turned his face full upon Mr. Beach (of the prosecution), who
- at one time had been his counsel in a civil case.
-
- “Mr. Beach,” the prisoner said, slowly and in a full-toned
- voice, “you have done your work well. I hope you have been well
- paid for it.”
-
- Then the prisoner sank slowly into his seat. Mr. Beach made
- no reply. Mr. Fellows, assistant district attorney, explained
- that he had refused to try the case unless Mr. Beach and Mr.
- Fullerton were associated with him. They had consented to join
- him at the request of District Attorney Garvin, and without any
- fee from any member of Colonel Fisk’s family.
-
- The prisoner half-arose and, sweeping the air with his clenched
- fist, said:
-
- “Mr. Fellows, say that they were hired by Jay Gould. Please say
- that!”
-
- The sensation in court was such as is seldom known. You could
- hear it as you hear the wind stirring the trees of the forest.
- Then the court discharged the jury and the people began to move.
-
-The following was printed in the _Sun_ of June 21, 1893, under date of
-New Bedford, Massachusetts:
-
- “Lizzie Andrew Borden,” said the clerk of the court, “stand
- up!”
-
- She arose unsteadily, with a face as white as marble.
-
- “Gentlemen, have you agreed upon a verdict?” said the clerk to
- the jury.
-
- It was so still in court that the flutter of two fans made a
- great noise.
-
- “We have,” said Foreman Richards boldly.
-
- The prisoner was gripping the rail in front of the dock as if
- her standing up depended upon its keeping its place.
-
- “Lizzie Andrew Borden,” said the clerk, “hold up your right
- hand. Jurors, look upon the prisoner. Prisoner, look upon the
- foreman.”
-
- Every juryman stood at right-about-face, staring at the woman.
- There was such a gentle, kindly light beaming in every eye that
- no one questioned the verdict that was to be uttered. But God
- save every woman from the feelings that Lizzie Borden showed
- in the return look she cast upon that jury! It was what is
- pictured as the rolling gaze of a dying person. She seemed not
- to have the power to move her eyes directly where she was told
- to, and they swung all around in her head. They looked at the
- ceiling; they looked at everything, but they saw nothing. It
- was a horrible, a pitiful sight, to see her then.
-
- “What say you, Mr. Foreman?” said the gentle old clerk.
-
- “Not guilty!” shouted Mr. Richards.
-
- At the words the wretched woman fell quicker than ever an ox
- fell in the stockyards of Chicago. Her forehead crashed against
- the heavy walnut rail so as to shake the reporter of the _Sun_
- who sat next to her, twelve feet away, leaning on the rail.
- It seemed that she must be stunned, but she was not. Quickly,
- with an unconscious movement, she flung up both arms, threw
- them over the rail, and pressed them under her face so that it
- rested on them. What followed was mere mockery, but it was the
- well-governed order of the court and had to be gone through
- with.
-
-And finally, this is from the _Sun_ of May 23, 1914:
-
- “Charles Becker to the bar!”
-
- Once more the door that gives entrance toward the Tombs as well
- as to the jury-room was opened. A deputy sheriff appeared, then
- Becker, then a second deputy. One glance was all you needed to
- see that Becker had himself under magnificent control. His iron
- nerve was not bending. He swung with long strides around the
- walls and came to a stand at the railing. Those who watched him
- did not see a sign of agitation. He was breathing slowly--you
- could see that from the rise and fall of his powerful
- chest--and smiling slightly as he glanced toward his counsel.
-
- He looked for the first time toward the jurors. There was
- confidence and hope shining in his eyes. Coolly, without haste,
- he studied the face of every man in the box. Not one of them
- met his eye. Foreman Blagden gazed at the floor. Frederick G.
- Barrett, Sr., juror No. 12, studied the ceiling. The others
- gazed into space or turned their glance toward the justice.
-
- There was the most perfect silence in the court-room. The
- movements of trolley-cars in Centre Street made a noise like
- rolling thunder. A pneumatic riveter at work on a building
- close by set up a tremendous din.
-
- And yet such sounds and annoyances were forgotten, ceased to be
- of consequence, when Clerk Penny bent toward the foreman and
- slowly put the customary question:
-
- “Gentlemen of the jury, have you agreed upon your verdict?”
-
- Mr. Blagden’s reply was barely audible; many in the room sensed
- its import, but failed to grasp the actual words. It was
- obvious that the foreman, having to express the will of his
- associates, was stirred by such feeling as seldom comes to any
- man.
-
- “Guilty as charged in the indictment,” he breathed more than
- spoke.
-
- Becker’s right hand was then gripped to the railing. He held
- his straw hat in his left hand, which, as his arm was bent
- backward and upward, rested against the small of his back. It
- is the plain truth that he took the blow without a quiver.
- After a second, it may be, he coughed just a little; a mere
- clearing of the throat. But his mouth was firm. His dark face
- lost no vestige of color. His black eyes turned toward the
- jurymen, who still avoided his glance, who looked everywhere
- but at the man they had condemned.
-
-If comment were needed, it would be that the _Sun_ reporter in the
-court-room at New Bedford had the advantage of describing a protagonist
-who, by her sex and by the very mystery that was left unsolved at her
-acquittal, was a far more dramatic figure than Stokes or the police
-lieutenant. The climaxes quoted are useful as an illustration of the
-advance of reporting from 1873, when the _Sun_ style was still forming,
-to 1893 and 1914, when it was fully formed; not as a comparison between
-what may not have been the best work of the reporter of the Stokes
-trial, Henry Mann, and the stories by Julian Ralph, who saw Lizzie
-Borden fall, and Edwin C. Hill, who wrote the Becker article.
-
-The _Sun_ omitted the weary introductions that had been the fashion in
-newspapers--leading paragraphs which told over again what was in the
-head-lines and were merely a prelude to a third and detailed telling.
-The _Sun_ reporter began at the beginning, thus:
-
- The Hon. John Kelly, wearing a small bouquet in the lapel
- of his coat, stepped out of his coach in front of Cardinal
- McCloskey’s residence in Madison Avenue just before eight
- o’clock yesterday morning. A few minutes later three other
- coaches arrived, and their occupants entered the house. Many
- of the neighbors knew that a niece of the cardinal was to be
- married to Mr. Kelly, and they strained their eyes through
- plate-glass windows in the hope that they might see the bride
- and the groom. Cardinal McCloskey, having been apprized of the
- arrival of the wedding-party, went to the chapel in the other
- part of the house, and at about a quarter past eight, the time
- fixed for the mass _pro sponsis_, the marriage ceremony was
- begun.
-
-In the longer and more important stories, the rule was adhered to as
-closely as possible. Prolixity, fine writing, and hysteria were taboo.
-Mark the calmness with which the _Sun_ reporter began his story of the
-most sensational crime of the late seventies:
-
- Two little mounds of red-colored earth around a small hole in
- the ground, and a few feet of downtrodden grass, were all that
- marked the last resting-place of Alexander T. Stewart yesterday
- morning. In the dead of the night robbers had dug into the
- earth above the vault, removed one of the stones that covered
- it, and stolen the body of the dead millionaire.
-
-The human lights of life were caught by the _Sun_ men and transferred
-to every page of every issue. In 1878 a _Sun_ reporter was sent to
-Menlo Park, New Jersey, to see how a young inventor there, who had just
-announced the possibility of an incandescent electric light, worked:
-
- Here Mr. Edison dropped his cigar-stump from his mouth, and,
- turning to Griffin, asked for some chewing-tobacco. The private
- secretary drew open his drawer and passed out a yellow cake as
- large as a dinner-plate. The professor tore away a chew, saying:
-
- “I am partly indebted to the _Sun_ for this tobacco. It printed
- an article saying that I chewed poor tobacco. That was so. The
- Lorillards saw the article and sent me down a box of the best
- plug that ever went into a man’s mouth. All the workmen have
- used it, and Grif says there is a marked moral improvement in
- the men. It seems, however, to have the opposite effect on
- Grif. You see that he has salted away the last cake for his own
- use.”
-
-Nearly forty years later _Sun_ reporters still went to see Mr. Edison
-borrow white magic from nature and chewing-tobacco from his employees,
-and to describe both interesting processes.
-
-With Dana’s knowledge of what people wanted to read was mixed a
-curiosity, sometimes frankly expressed in the _Sun_, as to just why
-they wanted to read some things a great deal more than other things.
-It must be remembered that even in the seventies and eighties not
-everybody read a newspaper every day; some reserved their pennies
-and their eyes for great climaxes. The _Sun_, a paper which paid
-much attention to political matters, naturally found its circulation
-sharply affected by important political happenings. It sold ninety-four
-thousand extra copies on the morning after the Tilden-Hayes
-election--two hundred and twenty-two thousand copies, in all, being
-disposed of before eight o’clock in the morning. In 1875, when the
-pugilist, John Morrissey, who was supported by the _Sun_ for the State
-Senate because he was anti-Tammany, defeated Fox, the _Sun_ sold
-forty-nine thousand extra copies on the day after the election.
-
-The assassination of the Czar Alexander II of Russia did not sell an
-extra paper, but the hanging of Foster, the “car-hook murderer,” sent
-the sales up seventeen thousand. The deaths of Cornelius Vanderbilt
-and Alexander T. Stewart had no effect on the _Sun’s_ circulation, the
-passing of Napoleon III raised it only one thousand for the day, and
-the death of Pius IX caused only four thousand irregular readers to
-buy the paper; but the execution of Dolan, a murderer now practically
-forgotten, sent the sales up ten thousand. The beginning of coercive
-measures in Ireland by the arrest of Michael Davitt sold no extra
-papers in a city full of Irishmen, but the Fenian invasion of Canada
-meant the sale of ten thousand copies more than usual.
-
-Tweed’s death caused an increase of five thousand; the death of
-President Garfield, of seventy-four thousand. Only thirteen thousand
-extras were sold after the Brooklyn Theatre fire, while the Westfield
-steamboat explosion sold thirty-one thousand. Twenty-one thousand
-irregular readers bought the _Sun_ to read about the first blasting of
-Hell Gate in 1876, while only eight thousand were interested in the
-fact that Tilden had been counted out by the Electoral Commission.
-The flare-up of the Beecher scandal, in August, 1874, sold as many
-extras--ten thousand--as the shooting of Fisk.
-
-The beginning of the Crédit Mobilier exposé added only a thousand to
-the normal circulation, but on the morning after a big walking-match
-the presses had to run off forty thousand more than their usual daily
-grist. The resignation of Roscoe Conkling and Thomas C. Platt from the
-United States Senate hoisted the circulation only two thousand, but
-the fight between John L. Sullivan and Paddy Ryan meant a difference
-of eleven thousand. The opening of the Centennial Exposition in
-Philadelphia caused extra sales of three thousand; an international
-rifle-match at Creedmoor, ten thousand.
-
-In 1882 the _Sun_ made the calculation that the average effect of
-certain sorts of news in increase of circulation was about as follows:
-
- Presidential elections 82,000
- State and city elections 42,000
- Last days of walking-matches 25,000
- October State elections in Presidential years 21,000
- Great fires 10,000
- Notable disasters 9,000
- Hangings in or near New York 8,000
-
-The _Sun_ expressed a curiosity to know--
-
- Who are the eighty or ninety thousand people, not regular
- readers of the _Sun_, that buy the paper after a Presidential
- election? Where do they live? Do they read the papers only
- after exciting events?
-
-On its fiftieth birthday--September 3, 1883--the _Sun_ printed a table
-showing the high-tide marks of its circulation:
-
- November 8, 1876--Presidential election 222,390
- Sept. 20, 1881--Garfield’s death 212,525
- Nov. 3, 1880--Presidential election 206,974
- July 13, 1871--Orange riots 192,224
- Sept. 21, 1881--Second day after Garfield’s death 180,215
- Nov. 3, 1875--State and city election 177,588
- July 3, 1881--Garfield shot 176,093
-
-In the same article, a page review written by Mr. Mitchell, the reasons
-for the _Sun’s_ success were succinctly given:
-
- No waste of words, no nonsense, plain, outspoken expressions of
- honest opinion, the abolishment of the conventional measures of
- news importance, the substitution of the absolute standard of
- real interest to human beings, bright and enjoyable writing,
- wit, philosophical good humor, intolerance of humbug, hard
- hitting from the shoulder on proper occasions--do we not see
- all these qualities now in our esteemed contemporaries on every
- side of us, and in every part of the land?
-
-By this time Dana had framed a newspaper organisation more nearly
-perfect than any other in America. Grouping about him men suited to
-the _Sun_, to himself, and to one another, he had created a literary
-world of his own--a seeing, thinking, writing world of keen objective
-vision. Men of a hundred various minds, each with his own style, his
-own ambition, his own manner of life, the _Sun_ staff focused their
-abilities into the one flood of light that came out every morning. It
-was a bohemia of brightness, not of beer; unconventional in its manner
-of seeing and writing, but not in its collars or its way of living. The
-_Sun_ spirit, unquenchable then as now, burned in every corner of the
-shabby old rooms. It was the spirit of unselfish devotion, not so much
-to Dana or his likable lieutenants as to the invisible god of a machine
-in which each man was a pinion, meshing smoothly with his neighbour.
-
-That these pinions did mesh without friction was due, in largest part,
-to Dana’s intuitive faculty of choosing men who would “fit in” rather
-than men who could merely write. It was by his choosing that the _Sun_
-came to have for its editorial page writers like W. O. Bartlett and
-E. P. Mitchell, M. W. Hazeltine and N. L. Thiéblin, Henry B. Stanton
-and John Swinton, James S. Pike and Fitz-Henry Warren, Paul Dana and
-Thomas Hitchcock, Francis P. Church and E. M. Kingsbury. It was by
-his choosing that the Sun had managing editors like Amos J. Cummings
-and Chester S. Lord, city editors like John B. Bogart and Daniel F.
-Kellogg, and night city editors like Henry W. Odion, Ambrose W. Lyman,
-and S. M. Clarke.
-
-Managing editors and city editors hired men, hundreds of them, but
-always according to the Dana plan--first find the man, then find the
-work for him. Chester S. Lord, who took more men on the _Sun_ than
-any other of its executives, was fully familiar with the Dana method
-when he began, in 1880, a career as managing editor that lasted for
-thirty-two years of brilliant achievement; and he followed it until he
-retired. He had been on the _Sun_ since 1872, shortly after he came
-out of Hamilton College, and he had served as a reporter, as editor
-of suburban news, as assistant night city editor under Lyman, and
-as assistant managing editor in the brief period when Ballard Smith
-succeeded Cummings and Young as chief of the _Sun’s_ news department.
-
-At the beginning of his service as managing editor Lord found himself
-with a staff which included Bogart, Dr. Wood, Stillman, Odion, E. M.
-Rewey, Garrett P. Serviss, and Cyrus C. Adams, all trained desk men and
-most of them good reporters as well; and such first-class reporters and
-correspondents as Julian Ralph, S. S. Carvalho, Willis Holly, and E. J.
-Edwards. To these, by the time the _Sun_ reached its half-century mark,
-had been added the great night city editor Clarke and reporters like
-John R. Spears and Arthur Brisbane. Other great newspapermen were soon
-to join the army of Mr. Lord in that long campaign of which the editor
-of the _Sun_ said, on the occasion of Mr. Lord’s retirement:
-
- Every night of his ten thousand nights of service has been a
- Trafalgar or a Waterloo. He has fought ten thousand battles
- against the world, the flesh, and the devil; the woman
- applicant, the refractory citizen, the liar at the other end of
- the wire, and the ten thousand demons which make up the great
- army of nervous prostration.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-“SUN” REPORTERS AND THEIR WORK
-
- _Cummings, Ralph, W. J. Chamberlin, Brisbane, Riggs, Dieuaide,
- Spears, O. K. Davis, Irwin, Adams, Denison, Wood, O’Malley, Hill,
- Cronyn.--Spanish War Work._
-
-
-There is an unconventional club which has no home except on the one
-night each year when it holds a dinner in a New York hotel. Its members
-are men who have been writers on the _Sun_, and who, though they have
-left the paper, love it. They meet for no purpose except to toast the
-_Sun_ of their day and this. They call themselves the Sun Alumni.
-
-From the ranks of the novelists and magazine editors and writers come
-men like Will Irwin, Samuel Hopkins Adams, Robert Welles Ritchie,
-Albert W. Atwood, Henry James Forman, Cameron Mackenzie, Kirk Munroe,
-Charles Mason Fairbanks, Robert R. Whiting, James L. Ford, E. J.
-Edwards, Arthur F. Aldridge, George B. Mallon, Gustav Kobbé, and
-Frederick Kinney Noyes.
-
-From the lists of newspaper owners and editors come Arthur Brisbane,
-of the Washington _Times_; Edward H. Mott, of the Goshen _Republican_;
-Frank H. Simonds, of the New York _Tribune_; Martin J. Hutchins, of the
-Chicago _Journal_; C. L. Sherman, of the Hartford _Courant_.
-
-From the staffs of other New York newspapers come Charles Selden, Carr
-V. Van Anda, and Richard V. Oulahan, of the _Times_; William A. Willis,
-of the _Herald_; Rudolph E. Block, of the _American_; J. Arthur
-Seavey, of the _Tribune_; and Lindsay Denison, of the _Evening World_.
-
-From the bench come Judges Willard Bartlett, Warren W. Foster, and
-Willard H. Olmsted; from government work, Stephen T. Mather, Robert
-Sterling Yard, and E. W. Townsend; from business, Edward G. Riggs,
-Willis Holly, Collin Armstrong, Oscar King Davis, Robert Grier Cooke,
-John H. O’Brien, and Roy Mason. If the racing season is over in Cuba,
-C. J. Fitzgerald is present. If business on the San Diego _Sun_ is not
-too brisk, its editor, Clarence McGrew, crosses the continent to be
-at the feast. Until his death in 1917, Franklin Matthews, associate
-professor of journalism at Columbia University, who was with the _Sun_
-from 1890 to 1909 in many capacities, was one of the leading spirits of
-the Alumni. Dr. Talcott Williams, chief of the school of journalism, is
-another enthusiastic alumnus.
-
-These men, the outsider observes, gather and talk in groups. The men of
-the eighties recall the wonders of the four-page _Sun_ and its Bogarts,
-Ralphs, and Cummingses. Men of the nineties chat of the feats of
-“Jersey” Chamberlin and “Commodore” Spears. The alumni who matriculated
-in the present century speak of Riggs and Irwin, Denison and O’Malley
-and Hill. But all talk of the _Sun_, and of Dana and Mitchell and Lord
-and Clarke.
-
-It is only when they speak of reporters that there is a grouping of
-heroes. That is because it is a natural and pleasant practice, if an
-illogical one, for newspapermen of the present and previous decades to
-look back to this or that period of a paper and say:
-
-“That was _the_ day! The names of the men on the staff prove it.”
-
-An old _Sun_ man will point, for instance, to the _Sun’s_ roster of
-reporters in 1893, when the local staff included:
-
- Julian Ralph
- John R. Spears
- Oscar K. Davis
- C. J. Fitzgerald
- Carr V. Van Anda
- David Graham Phillips
- George B. Mallon
- Samuel Hopkins Adams
- Daniel F. Kellogg
- C. M. Fairbanks
- Lawrence Reamer
- W. J. Chamberlin
- Edward G. Riggs
- E. W. Townsend
- Rudolph E. Block
- Samuel A. Wood
- E. D. Beach
- E. O. Chamberlin
- Victor Speer
- Joseph Vila
- W. A. Willis
- Collin Armstrong
-
-The weak place in this sort of retrospection is that after twenty-five
-years the observer’s focus is twisted. Julian Ralph was a great
-reporter in 1893, but W. J. Chamberlin, whose name is linked with
-Ralph’s among great _Sun_ reporters, was only just arriving. John
-R. Spears had made his reputation, but Riggs’s fame as a political
-writer was not yet established. Townsend had tickled New York with his
-“Chimmie Fadden” stories, but Sam Adams was a cub. Wood, Vila, and
-Reamer were not as important to the _Sun_ in 1893 as they are at this
-writing.
-
-The men of 1893 probably agreed that there was no staff like the
-staff of 1868, just as the men of 1942 may gaze with proud regret at
-the staff list of 1917. Distance, like pay-day, lends enchantment;
-and newspaper history is a little more hazy than most other kinds of
-history, because the men who write what happens to other people have no
-time to set down what happens to themselves.
-
-The anonymity of the _Sun_ reporter has been almost complete. If
-Julian Ralph had never gone into the field of books and magazines, he
-would have been as little known to the general public as the _Sun’s_
-best reporter is to-day; but newspapermen would not have undervalued
-him. There is better quality in the things he wrote hastily and
-anonymously for the _Sun_ than in some of the eight or nine published
-volumes that bear his name, and the reason for this is that he was
-primarily a newspaperman.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- ARTHUR BRISBANE
-]
-
-He entered the game at fifteen, as an apprentice in the office of the
-Red Bank (New Jersey) _Standard_. At seventeen he was a city editor and
-a writer of humour. At eighteen he had founded the Red Bank _Leader_--a
-failure. At nineteen he was one of the editors of the Webster
-(Massachusetts) _Times_, and at twenty he was a reporter on the New
-York _Graphic_. At twenty-two he was on the _Sun_, where he remained
-from 1875 to 1893.
-
-Ralph was a news man who lacked none of the large reportorial
-qualities. He enjoyed seeing new places and new people. He liked to
-hunt news--an instinct missing in some good writers who fail to be
-great reporters. He liked to write--a taste found too seldom among
-men who write well, and too frequently among the graphomaniacs who
-fancy that everything is worth writing, and that perfection lies in an
-infinite number of words.
-
-Some one said of Ralph that he “could write five thousand words about
-a cobblestone.” If he had done that, it would have been an interesting
-cobblestone. He had a passion for detail, but it was not the lifeless
-and wearisome detail of the realistic novelist. When he wrote half
-a column about a horse eating a woman’s hat, the reader became well
-acquainted with the horse, the woman, and the crowd that had looked on.
-
-Ralph was untiring in mind, legs, and fingers. He liked the big one-man
-news story, such as an inauguration or a parade, or the general
-introduction of a national convention. His quiet, easy style, his
-ability to cover an event of many hours and much territory, were shown
-to good advantage in his description of the funeral of General Grant
-in August, 1885. He wrote it all--a full front page of small type--in
-about seven hours, and with a pencil. It began:
-
- There have not often been gathered in one place so many men
- whose names have been household words, and whose lives have
- been inwoven with the history of a grave crisis in a great
- nation’s life, as met yesterday in this city. The scene was
- before General Grant’s tomb in Riverside Park; the space was
- less than goes to half an ordinary city block, and the names
- of the actors were William T. Sherman, Joe Johnston, Phil
- Sheridan, Simon B. Buckner, John A. Logan, W. S. Hancock, Fitz
- John Porter, Chester A. Arthur, Thomas A. Hendricks, John
- Sherman, Fitzhugh Lee, John B. Gordon, David D. Porter, Thomas
- F. Bayard, John L. Worden, and a dozen others naturally linked
- in the mind with these greater men. Among them, like children
- amid gray-heads, or shadows beside monuments, were other men
- more newly famous, and famous only for deeds of peace in times
- of quiet and plenty--a President, an ex-President, Governors,
- mayors, and millionaires. And all were paying homage to the
- greatest figure of their time, whose mortal remains they
- pressed around with bared, bowed heads.
-
-That was the beginning of a story of about eleven thousand words, all
-written by Ralph in one evening. It told everything that was worth
-reading about the burial--the weather, the crowded line of march, the
-people from out of town, the women fainting at the curbs, the uniforms
-and peculiarities of the Union and Confederate heroes who rode in the
-funeral train; told everything from eight o’clock in the morning,
-when the sightseers began to gather, until the bugler blew taps and
-the regiments fired their salute volleys. It was a story typical of
-Ralph, who saw everything, remembered everything, wrote everything. In
-detail it is unlikely that any reporter of to-day could surpass it. In
-dramatic quality it has been excelled by half a dozen _Sun_ reporters,
-including Ralph himself.
-
-For example, there is the story of a similar event--Admiral Dewey’s
-funeral--written in January, 1917, by Thoreau Cronyn, of the _Sun_,
-with a dramatic climax such as Ralph did not reach. This is the end of
-Cronyn’s story--the incident of the old bugler whose art failed him in
-his grief:
-
- Chattering of spectators in the background hushed abruptly. A
- light breeze, which barely rumpled the river, set a few dry
- leaves tossing about the tomb of Farragut, Dewey’s mentor at
- Mobile. The voice of Chaplain Frazier could be heard repeating
- a prayer, catching, and then going on smoothly.
-
- A second of silence, then the brisk call of the lieutenant
- commanding the firing-squad of Annapolis cadets.
-
- “Load!”
-
- Rifles rattling.
-
- “Aim!”
-
- Rifles pointed a little upward for safety’s sake, though the
- cartridges had no bullets.
-
- “Fire!”
-
- Twenty rifles snapped as one. This twice repeated--three
- volleys over the tomb into which the twelve sailors had just
- carried the admiral’s body.
-
- And now came the moment for Master-at-Arms Charles Mitchell,
- bugler on the Olympia when Dewey sank the Spanish fleet, to
- perform his last office for the admiral. Raising the bugle to
- his lips and looking straight ahead at the still open door of
- the tomb, he sounded “taps.” The first three climbing notes and
- the second three were perfect. Then the break and the recovery,
- and the funeral was over.
-
-Julian Ralph saw more of the world, and made more copy out of what he
-saw, than any other newspaperman. While still on the _Sun_ he was
-making books out of the material he picked up on his assignments. In
-the early nineties, while still on the _Sun_ staff, he made two tours
-for _Harper’s Magazine_ and wrote “On Canada’s Frontier,” “Our Great
-West,” and “Chicago and the World’s Fair,” the last of which was the
-official book of the Columbian Exposition. After his experiences in the
-Boer War he wrote “Towards Pretoria,” “War’s Brighter Side” (with Conan
-Doyle), and “An American with Lord Roberts.” His other books are “Alone
-in China,” “Dixie; or, Southern Scenes and Sketches,” “People We Pass,”
-and a novel, “The Millionairess.” He was the author of the “German
-Barber” sketches, which appeared almost weekly in the _Sun_ for a long
-time, and which are remembered as among the genuine examples of real
-humour in dialect. During the Boer War, Ralph joined the staff of the
-London _Daily Mail_, and after returning from South Africa he made his
-home in London until his death in 1903.
-
-A tradition about Ralph, indicating the pleasure that his articles
-gave to his own colleagues as well as to the public, concerns one
-of the great football-games of the eighties. John Spears discovered
-the picturesqueness of the Yale-Princeton games, usually played
-on Thanksgiving Day, and the _Sun_ featured them year after year.
-Reporters hungered for the job, for it meant not only money, but the
-opportunity to write a fine story.
-
-When Ralph’s turn came he wrote such a good article that the copy-desk
-let it run for five columns. Lord admired it, Clarke was enthusiastic
-over it, and the other men in the office took turns in reading the
-story in the proofs, so happily was it turned. It was not until the
-first edition was off the press that an underling, who cared more for
-football than for literature, suggested that the story ought to contain
-the score of the game. Ralph had forgotten to state it, and all the
-desks, absorbed in the thrill of the article itself, had overlooked the
-omission.
-
-Ralph reported for the _Sun_ the outrages of the Molly Maguires in the
-Pennsylvania coal-fields. After the execution of two of the outlaws for
-murder, he was bold enough to follow their bodies back to their village
-where they had lived, in order to describe the wake. He was warned to
-leave the place before sunset, on pain of death, and he went, for there
-was nothing to be gained by staying.
-
-On another assignment, a murder mystery, the relatives of the victim,
-who were ignorant and superstitious people, suspected Ralph of being
-the murderer. When he came into their house to see the body, they
-demanded that he should touch it, their belief being that the body
-would turn over, or the wounds reopen, if touched by the murderer.
-There was an implied threat of death for the reporter if he refused,
-but Ralph walked out without complying.
-
-Ralph was a believer in the sixth sense of journalists, that
-inexplicable gift by which a man, and particularly a newspaperman,
-comes to a clairvoyant knowledge that something is about to happen--in
-other words, an exalted hunch. John B. Bogart, city editor in Ralph’s
-_Sun_ days, had this sense, and he called it a “current of news.” He
-thus described its workings to Ralph:
-
- One day I was walking up Broadway when suddenly a current
- of news came up from a cellar and enveloped me. I felt the
- difference in the temperature of the air. I tingled with the
- electricity or magnetism in the current. It seemed to stop me,
- to turn me around, and to force me to descend some stairs which
- reached up to the street by my side.
-
- I ran down the steps, and as I did so a pistol-shot sounded in
- my ears. One man had shot another, and I found myself at the
- scene upon the instant.
-
-While acting as the legislative correspondent of the _Sun_ at Albany,
-Ralph was in the habit of walking to one of the local parks to enjoy
-the view across a valley southwest of the city. One day, while gazing
-across the valley, he was seized with a desire to go to the mountains
-in the distance beyond it. The impulse remained with him for two days,
-and then, on the third day, he read of a news happening that had
-occurred in the mountains on the very day when the current of news had
-thrilled him.
-
-Ralph reported the Dreyfus court-martial at Rennes, in France. One
-morning he could not sleep after five o’clock. As he was on his way to
-court he said to George W. Steevens, of the London _Daily Mail_, who
-was walking with him:
-
-“Wait a moment while I go into the telegraph office and wire my paper
-that I expect exciting news to-day.”
-
-At that hour there was no apparent reason to expect any news out of
-the ordinary, but it was only a few hours later that Maître Labori,
-Dreyfus’s counsel, was shot down on his way to court.
-
-Young newspapermen who are fortunate enough to be possessed of--or
-by--the sixth sense must remember, however, that it cannot be relied
-upon to sound the alarm on every occasion. Mr. Bogart, who felt that
-he had a friend in the current of news, kept close track of the
-assignment-book. As a city editor he was unsurpassed for his diligence
-in following up news stories. One day he assigned Brainerd G. Smith,
-afterward professor of journalism at Cornell, to report the first
-reception given by Judge Hilton after the death of the judge’s partner,
-A. T. Stewart.
-
-“And above all,” Mr. Bogart wound up, “don’t leave the house without
-asking Judge Hilton whether they’ve found Stewart’s body yet.”
-
-Julian Ralph attributed his success as a journalist chiefly to three
-things--a liking for his work, the ability to get what he was sent for,
-and good humour. He omitted mention of something which distinguished
-him and Chamberlin and all other great reporters--hard work. Ralph
-himself gives a brief but complete picture of a day’s hard work in his
-description, in “The Making of a Journalist,” of the way in which he
-reported the inauguration of a President:
-
- I had myself called at five o’clock in the morning, and, having
- a cab at hand, mounted the box with the negro driver and
- traveled about the city from end to end and side to side. I did
- this to see the people get up and the trains roll in and the
- soldiers turn out--to catch the capital robing like a bride for
- her wedding.
-
- After breakfast, eaten calmly, I made another tour of the
- town, and then began to approach the subject more closely,
- calling at the White House, mingling with the crowds in the
- principal hotels, moving between the Senate and the House of
- Representatives, to report the hurly-burly of the closing
- moments of a dying administration. I saw the old and the new
- President, and then witnessed the inauguration ceremonies and
- the parade.
-
- Then, having seen the new family in place in the White House, I
- took a hearty luncheon, and sat down at half past one o’clock
- to write steadily for twelve hours, with plenty of pencils
- and pads and messenger-boys at hand, and with my notebook
- supplemented by clippings from all the afternoon papers,
- covering details to which I might or might not wish to refer.
- Cigars, a sandwich or two at supper-time, and a stout horn of
- brandy late at night were my other equipments.
-
-As Ralph remarked, that was hard work, but it was nothing when compared
-with the job of reporting a national convention. “One needs only to
-_see_ an inauguration,” he said. “In a national convention one must
-_know_.”
-
-Wilbur J. Chamberlin’s name is not in any book of American biography.
-In library indexes his name is found only as the author of “Ordered
-to China,” a series of letters he wrote to his wife while on the
-assignment to report the Boxer rebellion--one of the many pieces of
-_Sun_ work which he did faithfully and well. He never found time to
-write books, although he wished to do so. He was a _Sun_ man from the
-day he went on the staff, in 1890, until the day of his death, August
-14, 1901.
-
-Chamberlin was born in Great Bend, Pennsylvania, March 12, 1866. While
-he was still a boy he went to Jersey City, where he worked in newspaper
-offices and became the local correspondent of several newspapers,
-including the _Sun_. He came to be known as “Jersey” Chamberlin to
-the _Sun_ men who did not know how much he detested the nickname.
-His intimates called him Wilbur, and the office knew him generally
-as “W. J.”--an easy way of distinguishing him from other Chamberlins
-and Chamberlains. He lacked Ralph’s rather distinguished personal
-appearance, but his strong personality, his courage, ability, and
-industry overshadowed any lack of fashion.
-
-Like Ralph, he was indefatigable. Like his brother, E. O. Chamberlin,
-he let nothing stop him in the pursuit of news. Like Henry R.
-Chamberlain, he had the gift of divining rapidly the necessary details
-of any intricate business with which his assignment dealt. If a bank
-cashier had gone wrong, “W. J.” was the man to describe how the sinner
-had manœuvred the theft; to wring from usually unwilling sources the
-story which appeared in the bank only in figures, but which must appear
-in the _Sun_ in terms of human life. The world of finance was more
-dumb then than it is now, for Wall Street had not learned the wisdom of
-uttering its own pitiless publicity.
-
-Chamberlin had one idiosyncrasy and one hatred. The mental peculiarity
-was a wish to conceal his own age. Unlike most successful men, he
-wished to be thought older than he was; and he looked older. He was
-only thirty-five when he died in Carlsbad, on his way home from China;
-yet he had packed into that brief life the work of an industrious man
-of fifty.
-
-His single enmity was directed against cable companies, and he had good
-reason to dislike them. One day, during the Spanish-American War he
-boarded the _Sun_ boat, the Kanapaha, and ran to Port Antonio, Jamaica,
-with an exclusive story. The women clerks in the telegraph office took
-his despatch and counted the words three times before they would start
-sending it. They told Chamberlin the cost, about a hundred dollars,
-which he promptly paid in cash.
-
-Three or four days later he went back to Port Antonio with another
-important despatch. The cable clerk told him that on his previous visit
-their count had been one word short.
-
-“That’s all right,” said Chamberlin, and he threw down a shilling to
-pay for the one word.
-
-“Thank you,” said the lady. “_Now_ we can send the message!”
-
-The cable hoodoo pursued Chamberlin to China. As soon as he arrived
-in Peking he began sending important news stories by telegraph to
-Tientsin, where he had left a deposit of three hundred dollars with
-the cable company that was to forward the messages to New York. After
-working in Peking for two weeks, he discovered that all his stories
-were lying in a pigeonhole at Tientsin; not one had been relayed.
-
-A third time an important despatch was held up overnight because it had
-not been written on a regular telegraph-blank. But Chamberlin’s most
-bitter grudge against the cable companies was the result of his adding
-to a message sent to the _Sun_ on Christmas Eve, 1900, the words “Madam
-Christmas greeting.” This was a short way of saying, “Please call
-up Mrs. Chamberlin and tell her that I wish her a Merry Christmas.”
-Under the cable company’s rules nothing could be sent at the special
-newspaper rate except what was intended for publication. Chamberlin got
-a despatch from the manager of the cable company as follows:
-
- Your cable _Sun_ New York December 24 words “Madam Christmas
- greeting” not intended for publication. Please explain.
-
-There was nothing for Chamberlin to do but assure the cable manager
-that if the _Sun_ had wished to print “Madam Christmas greeting” in its
-columns it was welcome to do so.
-
-In spite of his cable misfortunes Chamberlin got more news to the _Sun_
-about the Boxer troubles than any other correspondent obtained. He was
-the first reporter in China who told the truth about the outrageous
-treatment of the Chinese by some of the so-called Christians. He was
-particularly frank in describing the brutality of Count von Waldersee’s
-German soldiers. In November, 1900, he wrote to his wife:
-
- As you have probably noticed in my despatches, I have not much
- use for the German soldiers anyhow. They are a big lot of
- swine, if human beings ever are swine.
-
-Chamberlin had a reputation for possessing the ability to write any
-kind of a story, no matter how technical or how delicate. Edward G.
-Riggs was sitting beside him in the Populist convention of July, 1896,
-when the suspenders of the sergeant-at-arms of the convention, who was
-standing on a chair, cheering, surrendered to cataclasm. Riggs turned
-to his colleague and said triumphantly:
-
-“At last, W. J., there’s one story you can’t write!”
-
-But Chamberlin wrote it:
-
- He clutched, but he clutched too late. He dived and grabbed
- once, twice, thrice, but down those trousers slipped. Mary
- E. Lease was only three feet away. Miss Mitchell, of Kansas,
- was less than two feet away. Helen Gougar was almost on the
- spot. Mrs. Julia Ward Pennington was just two seats off, and
- all around and about him were gathered the most beautiful and
- eloquent women of the convention, and every eye was upon the
- unfortunate Deacon McDowell.
-
- Then he grabbed, and then again, again, and again they eluded
- him. Down, down he dived. At last victory perched on him. He
- got the trousers, and, with a yank that threatened to rip them
- from stem to stern, he pulled them up. At no time had the
- applause ceased, nor had there been any sign of a let-up in the
- demonstration. Now it was increased twofold. The women joined
- in.
-
- McDowell, clutching the truant trousers closely about him,
- attempted to resume his part in the demonstration, but it
- was useless, and after frantic efforts to show enthusiasm
- he retired to hunt up tenpenny nails. When it was over, an
- indignant Populist introduced this resolution:
-
- “Resolved, that future sergeants-at-arms shall be required to
- wear tights.”
-
- The chairman did not put the resolution.
-
-The number of Chamberlains and Chamberlins in the history of American
-journalism is enough to create confusion. The _Sun_ alone had four at
-one time. They were Wilbur J. Chamberlin and his almost equally valued
-brother, Ernest O. Chamberlin, who later became managing editor of the
-_Evening World_; Henry Richardson Chamberlain, and Henry B. Chamberlin.
-
-E. O. Chamberlin went on the _Sun’s_ local staff while Wilbur was still
-engaged in small work in Jersey City. In the late eighties he was a
-colabourer with reporters like Daniel F. Kellogg, Edward G. Riggs,
-William McMurtrie Speer, Charles W. Tyler, Robert Sterling Yard, Samuel
-A. Wood, Paul Drane, and Willis Holly.
-
-Henry Richardson Chamberlain, who was born in Peoria, Illinois, became
-a _Sun_ reporter in May, 1889. He was then thirty years old, and had
-had twelve years’ experience in Boston and New York. In 1888 he had
-served as managing editor of the New York _Press_. He was particularly
-valuable to the _Sun_ on the stories most easily obtained by reporters
-of wide acquaintance, such as business disasters. In 1891 he returned
-to Boston to become managing editor of the Boston _Journal_, but he was
-soon back on the _Sun_.
-
-In 1892 he was sent to London as the _Sun’s_ correspondent there,
-and it was at this post that he won his greatest distinction. He had
-a news eye that looked out over political Europe and an imagination
-that compelled him to concern himself as much with the future of the
-continent as with its past and present. The Balkans and their feuds
-interested him strongly, and he was forever writing of what might come
-from the complications between the little states through their own
-quarrels and through their tangled relations with the powers. It was
-the habit of some newspapermen, both in London and New York, to stick
-their tongues in their cheeks over “H. R. C.’s war-cloud articles.”
-
-“H. R. is always seeing things,” was a common remark, even when the
-logic of what he had written was undeniable. There couldn’t be a
-general war in Europe, said his critics, kindly; it was impossible.
-
-Besides having general supervision over the _Sun’s_ European news,
-Chamberlain personally reported the Macedonian disturbances, the Panama
-Canal scandal in France, the Russian crisis of 1906, and the Messina
-earthquake. He was the author of many short stories and of one book,
-“Six Thousand Tons of Gold.” He died in London in 1911, while still
-in the service of the _Sun_; still believing in the impossibility of
-putting off forever the great war which so often rose in his visions.
-
-Henry B. Chamberlin’s service on the _Sun_ was briefer than that of
-the Chamberlin brothers or H. R. Chamberlain. He came to New York from
-Chicago, where he had been a reporter on the _Herald_, the _Tribune_,
-the _Inter-Ocean_, the _Times_, and the _Record_. After 1894, when he
-left the _Sun_, he was again with the Chicago _Record_, and in that
-paper’s service he saw the Santiago sea-fight from his boat--the only
-newspaper boat with the American squadron.
-
-Nor must any of these Chamberlins and Chamberlains be confused with
-some of their distinguished contemporaries not of the _Sun_--Joseph
-Edgar Chamberlin, who was the Cuban correspondent of the New York
-_Evening Post_ in 1898, and later an editorial writer on the New York
-_Evening Mail_ and the Boston _Transcript_; Eugene Tyler Chamberlain,
-one-time editor of the Albany _Argus_; and Samuel Selwyn Chamberlain,
-son of the famous Ivory Chamberlain of the New York _Herald_, founder
-of the _Matin_ of Paris, and at various times editor of the San
-Francisco _Examiner_ and the New York _American_.
-
-Edward G. Riggs, who left the _Sun_ on February 1, 1913, to become
-a railroad executive, had been a _Sun_ reporter and political
-correspondent for twenty-eight years. He joined the staff in 1885 as
-a Wall Street reporter. Though he never lost interest in the world of
-finance and its remarkable men, he soon gravitated toward politics. He
-became, indeed, the best-known writer of political news in America. He
-wrote at every national convention from 1888--when Ambrose W. Lyman,
-then the Washington correspondent of the _Sun_, was at the head of a
-staff that included Julian Ralph and E. O. Chamberlin--until 1912. In
-1892 Ralph was in charge of the _Sun’s_ national convention work, with
-Riggs as his first lieutenant; but Riggs was the _Sun’s_ top-sawyer at
-the conventions of 1896, 1900, 1904, 1908, and 1912.
-
-Riggs had a closer view of the wheels of the political machines of New
-York State than any other political writer. His intimate acquaintance
-with Senators Platt and Hill, Governors Odell and Flower, and the
-other powers of the State brought to him one hundred per cent of the
-political truths of his time--the ten per cent that can be printed and
-the ninety per cent that can’t.
-
-Riggs never became a regular correspondent at either Washington or
-Albany. He preferred to rove, going where the news was. In Washington
-he knew and was welcomed by Presidents Harrison, Cleveland, McKinley,
-Roosevelt, and Taft; by Senators like Hanna and Quay; by Cabinet
-members like Hay and Knox; by House leaders like Reed and Bland. He
-knew J. P. Morgan and William C. Whitney as well as he knew William J.
-Bryan and Peffer, the Kansas Populist.
-
-Between Presidential elections, when political affairs were quiet in
-New York, Riggs acted as a scout for the _Sun_ with the whole country
-to scan. Mr. Dana had an unflagging interest in politics, and he relied
-on Riggs to bring reports from every field from Maine to California.
-
-“Riggs,” Dana once remarked to a friend, “is my Phil Sheridan.”
-
-It was through Riggs that Thomas C. Platt, then the Republican
-master of New York State, sent word to Dana that he would like to
-have the _Sun’s_ idea of a financial plank for the Republican State
-platform of 1896. The plank was written by Mr. Dana and the _Sun’s_
-publisher--afterward owner--William M. Laffan. It denounced the
-movement for the free coinage of silver and declared in favour of the
-gold standard. The State convention, held in March, adopted Dana’s
-plank, and the national convention in June accepted the same ideas
-in framing the platform upon which Major McKinley was elected to the
-Presidency.
-
-It was Riggs who carried a message from Dana to Platt, in 1897, asking
-the New York Senator to withdraw his opposition to the nomination of
-Theodore Roosevelt as Assistant Secretary of the Navy. Platt complied,
-and Roosevelt got the position.
-
-Some years ago, in response to a question as to the difference between
-a political reporter and a political correspondent, Riggs wrote:
-
- There was a vast difference between the two. The political
- reporter is he who begins at the foot of the ladder when he
- reports the actual facts at a ward meeting. The political
- correspondent is he who has run the gamut of ward meetings,
- primaries, Assembly district, Senate district, and Congress
- district conventions, city conventions, county conventions,
- State conventions, and national conventions, and who builds his
- articles to his newspaper on his information of the situation
- in the State or nation, based upon circumstances and facts
- arising out of all of the aforesaid conventions.
-
- A political reporter and a political correspondent occupy in
- newspaper life the same relative positions as the cellar-digger
- and the architect in the building-trade world. Cellar-digger
- is just as important in his sphere as architect. The most
- superb architects were the most superb cellar-diggers. No man
- can be a successful political correspondent unless he has
- been a successful political reporter. Judges are made out of
- lawyers, generals and admirals out of cadets. Only the most
- ordinary of human virtues are necessary for the equipment of a
- successful political reporter and correspondent--cleanliness,
- sobriety, honesty, and truthfulness.
-
-Writing of Riggs as the dean of American political correspondents,
-Samuel G. Blythe said in the _Saturday Evening Post_:
-
- He has made it his business to know men in all parts of the
- country, and to know them so they will tell him as much of
- the truth as they will tell anybody. He is tenacious of his
- opinions and loyal to his friends. He is jolly, good-natured,
- companionable, and a fine chap to have around when he is in
- repose. Wherever men spoke the English language he was known as
- “Riggs--of the _Sun_.”
-
- Reputation and success in newspaper work demand the highest
- and most unselfish loyalty to one’s paper. It must be the
- paper first and nothing else second. Loyalty is Riggs’s first
- attribute, even better than his courage.
-
- The influence of a man like Riggs cannot be estimated. There is
- no way of computing this, but there is no person who will deny
- that he has been a power. He has not had his head turned by
- flattery. He has been “Riggs--of the _Sun_.”
-
-One of Mr. Riggs’s last great pieces of newspaper work was a
-twenty-thousand-word history of national conventions which appeared
-in the _Sun_ in 1912--the first history of its kind ever written. Mr.
-Riggs was also a frequent contributor to the editorial page.
-
-Arthur Brisbane, when he became a _Sun_ reporter in 1882, was
-almost the youngest reporter the _Sun_ had had; he went to work on
-his eighteenth birthday. He had been intensively educated in America
-and abroad. In his first three or four months he was a puzzle to his
-superiors, his colleagues, and perhaps to himself.
-
-“He sat around,” said one of his contemporary reporters, “like a fellow
-who didn’t understand what it was all about--and then he came out of
-his trance like a shot from a gun and seemed to know everything about
-everything.”
-
-Brisbane was well liked. He was a handsome, athletic youth, interested
-in all lines of life and literature, cheerful, and eager for
-adventurous assignment. After two years of reportorial work he went to
-France to continue certain studies, and while he was there the _Sun_
-offered to him the post of London correspondent, which he accepted.
-
-In March, 1888, when John L. Sullivan and Charley Mitchell went to
-Chantilly, in France, for their celebrated fight, Brisbane went with
-them and wrote a good two-column story about it--a story that contained
-never a word of pugilistic slang but a great deal of interest. He saw
-the human side:
-
- Deeply interested were the handfuls of Frenchmen who gathered
- and watched from such a safe and distant pavilion as we would
- select to look upon a hyena fight.
-
-And, when other reporters were deafened by the battle, Brisbane heard
-the plaintive appeal of Baldock, Mitchell’s tough second:
-
- “Think of the kids, Charley, the dear little kids, a calling
- for you at home and a counting on you for bread! Think what
- their feelings will be if you don’t knock the ear off him, and
- knock it off him again!”
-
-Not but what the correspondent paid conscientious attention to the
-technique of the fray:
-
- A detailed report of each of the thirty-nine rounds taken by
- me shows that out of more than a hundred wild rushes made by
- Sullivan, and of which any one would have been followed by
- a knockout in Madison Square, not half a dozen resulted in
- anything.
-
-A couple of years after the establishment of the _Evening Sun_ Brisbane
-was made its managing editor--a big job for a man of twenty-three
-years. In 1890 he went to the _World_, where he became the editor of
-the Sunday magazine and the most illustrious exponent of that startling
-form of graphic art which demonstrates to the reader, without calling
-upon his brain for undue effort, how much taller than the Washington
-Monument would be New York’s daily consumption of dill pickles, if
-piled monumentwise.
-
-Seven years later Mr. Hearst took Brisbane from Mr. Pulitzer and made
-him editor of the _Evening Journal_--a position eminently suited to
-his talents, for here he was able to write as he wished in that clear,
-simple style which had endeared him to the _Sun_.
-
-Brisbane’s newspaper style goes directly back to the writing of William
-O. Bartlett. It has its terse, cutting qualities, the avoidance of
-all but the simplest words, and the direct drive at the object to be
-attained. Brisbane, too, adopted the Dana principle that nothing was
-more valuable in editorial writing, for the achievement of a purpose,
-than iteration and reiteration. This was the plan that Dana always
-followed in his political battles--incessant drum-fire. Brisbane uses
-it now as proprietor of the Washington _Times_, which he bought from
-Frank A. Munsey, the present owner of the _Sun_, in June, 1917.
-
-John R. Spears was one of the big _Sun_ men for fifteen years. He, like
-Amos Cummings and Julian Ralph, was brought up in the atmosphere of a
-printing-office as a small boy; but in 1866, when he was sixteen years
-old, he entered the Naval Academy at Annapolis and spent a couple of
-years as a naval cadet. His cruise around the world in a training-ship
-filled him with a love of the sea that never left him. His marine
-knowledge helped him and the _Sun_, for which he wrote fine stories of
-the international yacht-races between the Mayflower and the Galatea
-(1886) and the Volunteer and the Thistle (1887).
-
-Spears liked wild life on land, too, and the _Sun_ sent him into the
-mountains of West Virginia and Kentucky to tell of the feuds of the
-Hatfields and the McCoys. He went into the Ozarks to write up the Bald
-Knobbers, and he sent picturesque stories, in the eighties, from No
-Man’s Land, that unappropriated strip between Kansas and Texas which
-knew no law from 1850, when it was taken from Mexico, until 1890, when
-it became a part of the new State of Oklahoma.
-
-Spears was a hard worker. They said of him in the _Sun_ office that he
-never went out on an assignment without bringing in the material for a
-special article for the Sunday paper. He wrote several books, including
-“The Gold Diggings of Cape Horn,” “The Port of Missing Ships,” “The
-History of Our Navy,” “The Story of the American Merchant Marine,” “The
-Story of the New England Whalers,” and “The History of the American
-Slave Trade.” He now lives in retirement near Little Falls, New York.
-His son, Raymond S. Spears, the fiction-writer, was a _Sun_ reporter
-from 1896 to 1900.
-
-Park Row knows Erasmus D. Beach chiefly through the book-reviews he
-wrote for the _Sun_ during many years, but he was a first-class
-reporter, too. The _Sun_ liked specialists, but no man could expect to
-stick to his specialty. When Gustav Kobbé went on the _Sun_ in March,
-1880, it was for the general purpose of assisting William M. Laffan in
-dramatic criticism and Francis C. Bowman in musical criticism; but his
-first assignment was to go to Bellevue Hospital and investigate the
-reported mistreatment of smallpox patients--a job which he accepted
-like the good soldier that every good _Sun_ man is.
-
-Mr. Beach was a clever all-round writer and reporter, with a leaning
-toward the purely literary side of the business, and he had no special
-fondness for sports; but the _Sun_ sent him, with Christopher J.
-Fitzgerald and David Graham Phillips, to report the Yale-Princeton
-football-game at Eastern Park, Brooklyn, on Thanksgiving Day,
-1890--that glorious day for Yale when the score in her favour was
-thirty-two to nothing. It was the time of Heffelfinger and Poe, McClung
-and King. Beach wrote an introduction which Mr. Dana classed as
-Homeric. Here is a bit of it:
-
- Great in the annals of Yale forever must be the name of
- McClung. Twice within a few minutes this man has carried the
- ball over the Princeton goal-line. He runs like a deer, has the
- stability of footing of one of the pyramids, and is absolutely
- cool in the most frightfully exciting circumstances.
-
- A curious figure is McClung. He has just finished a run of
- twenty yards, with all Princeton shoving against him. He
- is steaming like a pot of porridge, and chewing gum. His
- vigorously working profile is clearly outlined against the
- descending sun. How dirty he is! His paddings seem to have
- become loosed and to have accumulated over his knees. He has
- a shield, a sort of splint, bound upon his right shin. His
- long hair is held in a band, a linen fillet, the dirtiest ever
- worn.
-
- He pants as a man who has run fifty miles--who has overthrown a
- house. He droops slightly for a moment’s rest, hands on knees,
- eyes shining with the glare of battle, the gum catching between
- his grinders. A tab on one of his ears signifies a severe
- injury to that organ, an injury received in some previous match
- from an opposition boot-heel, or from a slide over the rough
- earth with half a dozen of the enemy seated upon him. He has a
- little, sharp-featured face, squirrel-like, with a Roman nose
- and eyes set near together. Brief dental gleams illuminate his
- countenance in his moments of great joyfulness.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- EDWARD G. RIGGS
-]
-
-Dana liked Beach’s introduction because the reader need not be a
-football fan to enjoy it. For the technique of the game he who wished
-to follow the plays could find all that he wanted in the stories of
-Fitzgerald and Phillips.
-
-In connection with Beach’s literary accomplishments, there is a
-tradition that another famous _Sun_ reporter of the eighties, Charles
-M. Fairbanks, was assigned to report one of the great games at
-Princeton, and, although entirely unacquainted with punts and tackles,
-came back with a story complete in technical detail, having learned the
-fine points of football in a few hours. Later, in the early nineties,
-Fairbanks was night editor of the paper.
-
-A _Sun_ man who has been a _Sun_ man from a time to which the memory
-of man goeth back only with a long pull, is Samuel A. Wood, who has
-been the _Sun’s_ ship-news man for more than thirty-five years. He is
-a good example, too, of the _Sun_ man’s anonymity, for although he was
-the originator of the rhymed news story and his little run-in lyrics
-have been the admiration of American newspapermen for more than a
-generation, few persons beyond Park Row have known Wood as the author
-of them.
-
-Although a first-class general reporter, Wood has stuck closely to
-his favourite topics, the ships and the weather. He made weather news
-bearable with such bits as this:
-
- The sun has crossed the line, and now the weather may be
- vernal; that is, if no more cyclones come, like yesterday’s, to
- spurn all the efforts of the spring to come as per the classic
- rhymers. (Perhaps there was a spring in those days of the
- good old-timers!) But this spring sprang a fearful leak from
- clouded dome supernal, and weather that should be divine might
- be declared infernal; entirely too much chilliness, nocturnal
- and diurnal, which prompted many citizens to take, for woes
- external, the ancient spring reviver of the old Kentucky
- colonel.
-
- The mercury fell down the tube a point below the freezing, and
- Spring herself might be excused for shivering and sneezing. The
- wind, a brisk northeaster, howled, the sky was dark and solemn,
- and chills chased one another up and down the spinal column.
-
- Oh hail, diphtherial mildness, hail, and rain, and snow--and
- blossom! Perhaps the spring has really come, and may be playing
- possum!
-
-Wood writes rhymeless sea-stories with the grace of a Clark Russell. He
-turns to prose-verse only when the subject particularly suits it, as
-for instance in the story upon which Mr. Clarke, the night city editor,
-wrote the classic head--“Snygless the Seas Are--Wiig Rides the Waves No
-More--Back Come Banana Men--Skaal to the Vikings!” This is the text:
-
- While off the Honduranean coast, not far from Ruatan, the
- famous little fruiter Snyg on dirty weather ran. Her skipper,
- Wiig, was at the helm, the boatswain hove the lead; the air was
- thick; you could not see a half-ship’s length ahead. The mate
- said:
-
- “Reefs of Ruatan, I think, are off our bow.”
-
- The skipper answered:
-
- “You are right; they’re inside of us now.”
-
- The water filled the engine-room and put the fires out, and
- quickly o’er the weather rail the seas began to spout.
-
- When dawn appeared there also came three blacks from off the
- isle. They deftly managed their canoe, each wearing but a
- smile; but, clever as they were, their boat was smashed against
- the Snyg, and they were promptly hauled aboard by gallant
- Captain Wiig.
-
- “We had thirteen aboard this ship,” the fearful cook remarked.
- “I think we stand a chance for life, since three coons have
- embarked. Now let our good retriever, Nig, a life-line take
- ashore, and all hands of the steamship Snyg may see New York
- once more.”
-
- But Nig refused to leave the ship, and so the fearless crew the
- life-boat launched, but breakers stove the stout craft through
- and through. Said Captain Wiig:
-
- “Though foiled by Nig, our jig’s not up, I vow; I’ve still my
- gig, and I don’t care a fig--I’ll make the beach somehow!”
-
- And Mate Charles Christian of the Snyg (who got here yesterday)
- helped launch the stanch gig of the Snyg so the crew could
- get away. The gig was anchored far inshore; with raft and
- trolley-line all hands on the Snyg, including Nig, were hauled
- safe o’er the brine.
-
- Although the Snyg, of schooner rig, will ply the waves no more,
- let us hope that Wiig gets another Snyg for the sake of the
- bards ashore.
-
-The _Sun’s_ handling of the news of the brief war with Spain, in 1898,
-has an interest beyond the mere brilliance of its men’s work and the
-fact that this was the last war in which the newspaper correspondents
-had practically a free hand.
-
-For years “Cuba Libre” had been one of the _Sun’s_ fights. From the
-first days of his control of the paper Mr. Dana had urged the overthrow
-of Spanish dominion in the island. His support of the revolutionists
-went back, as E. P. Mitchell has written, “to the dark remoteness of
-the struggles a quarter of a century before the war--the time of the
-Cespedes uprising, the Virginius affair, and the variegated activities
-of the New York Junta.” Mr. Mitchell adds:
-
- The affection of the _Sun_ and its editor for everything Cuban
- except Spanish domination lasted quite down to and after the
- second advent of Maximo Gomez; it was never livelier than in
- the middle seventies.
-
- Mr. Dana was the warm friend of José Marti. He corresponded
- personally (with the assistance of his Fenian stenographer,
- Williams) with the leading revolutionists actually fighting
- in the island. He was the constant and unwearied intellectual
- resource of a swarm of patriots, adventurers, near-filibusters,
- bondholding financiers, lawyer-diplomats, and grafters
- operating exclusively in Manhattan. A Latin-American accent was
- a sure card of admission to the woven-bottomed chair alongside
- the little round table in the inner corner room of the series
- of four inhabited by the _Sun’s_ entire force of editors and
- reporters.
-
- We were then the foremost if not the only American organ of
- Cuban independence. The executive journalistic headquarters
- of the cause was just outside Mr. Dana’s front door. The Cuba
- Libre editor, as I suppose he would be styled nowadays, was a
- gentleman of Latin-American origin, who bore the aggressive and
- appropriate name of Rebello. The Cuba Libre “desk” was about as
- depressing a seat of literary endeavor as the telegraph-blank
- shelf in a country railroad station, which it resembled in its
- narrowness, its dismal ink-wells, rusty pens, and other details
- of disreputable equipment. From this shelf there issued, by
- Mr. Dana’s direction, many encouraging editorial remarks to
- Rebello’s compatriots in the jungle.
-
-Nor was free Cuba ungrateful to the _Sun_. A few years after the
-war, when Mr. Mitchell was walking about the interior Cuban town of
-Camaguey, formerly Puerto Principe, he came upon a modest little
-public square, the lamp-posts of which were labelled “Plaza Charles A.
-Dana.” At the corner of the church of Las Mercedes was a tablet with
-the following inscription:
-
- TRIBUTO DEL PUEBLO A LA MEMORIA DE
- CHARLES A. DANA
- ILLUSTRE PUBLICISTA AMERICANO
- DEFENSOR INFATIGABLE DE LAS
- LIBERTADES CUBANAS
- ABRIL 10 DE 1899
-
-Dana was dead, without having seen the blooming of the flower he had
-watered, but Cuba had not wholly forgotten.
-
- * * * * *
-
-When the Maine was blown up in February, 1898, the _Sun_ began
-preparations to cover a war. The managing editor, Chester S. Lord,
-assisted by W. J. Chamberlin, worked out the preliminary arrangements.
-John R. Spears, then thirty-eight years old and a reporter of wide
-experience, particularly in matters of the sea--he had already written
-“The History of Our Navy”--was sent to Key West, the headquarters of
-the fleet which was to blockade Havana. He was at Key West some weeks
-before war was declared.
-
-The _Sun_ chartered the steam yacht Kanapaha and sent her at once to
-Key West, under the command of Captain Packard, to take on Spears and
-his staff, which included Harold M. Anderson, Nelson Lloyd, Walstein
-Root, Dana H. Carroll, and others. Besides the men named, who were to
-go with the Kanapaha on her voyage with Sampson’s fleet, the _Sun_ sent
-Oscar King Davis with Schley’s squadron, and Thomas M. Dieuaide on
-board the Texas. Dieuaide got a splendid view of the great sea-fight of
-July 3, when Cervera came out of the harbour of Santiago, and he wrote
-the _Sun’s_ first detailed account of the destruction of the Spanish
-fleet.
-
-The _Sun_ men ashore in Cuba were captained by W. J. Chamberlin, who
-succeeded Mr. Spears some time before the battle of Santiago. His force
-included H. M. Anderson, Carroll and Root of the _Sun_, and Henry M.
-Armstrong and Acton Davies of the _Evening Sun_. Armstrong, who was
-with Shafter, covered much of the attack and investment of Santiago
-and the surrender of that city. It was Chamberlin who sent to the
-United States the first news of the formal surrender of Santiago, but
-the message was not delivered to the _Sun_. The government censorship
-gently commandeered it and gave it out as an official bulletin.
-Chamberlin wrote the story of the battle of San Juan Hill on board a
-tossing boat that carried him from Siboney to the cable station at Port
-Antonio.
-
-The first American flag hoisted over the Morro at Santiago was the
-property of the _Sun_, but in this case there was no government
-peculation. Anderson and Acton Davies gave the flag, which was a boat
-ensign from the Kanapaha, to some sailors of the Texas, and the sailors
-fastened it to the Morro staff.
-
-When Schley’s squadron was united with Sampson’s fleet, some time
-before the battle of Santiago, O. K. Davis was ordered to Manila.
-He had the luck to sail on the cruiser Charleston, which, on June
-21, 1898, made the conquest of the island of Guam. That famous but
-bloodless victory was described by Davis in a two-page article which
-was exclusively the _Sun’s_, and of which the _Sun_ said editorially on
-August 9, 1898:
-
- No such story ever has been written or ever will be written
- of our conquest of the Ladrones as that of the Sun’s
- correspondent, published yesterday morning. It is the picture
- of a historic scene, in which not a single detail is wanting.
- This far-away little isle of Guam, so much out of the world
- that it had not heard of our war with Spain, and mistook the
- Charleston’s shells for an honorary salute, is now a part of
- the United States of America, and destined to share in the
- greatness of a progressive country. The queer Spanish governor,
- who declined to go upon Captain Glass’s ship because it would
- be a breach of Spanish regulations, is now our prisoner at
- Manila.
-
-Dieuaide, who wrote the _Sun’s_ story of the Santiago sea-fight, is
-also distinguished as the author of the first published description
-of St. Pierre--or, rather, of the ashes that covered it--after that
-city and all but two persons of its thirty thousand had been buried by
-the eruption of Mont Pelée. The introductory paragraph of Dieuaide’s
-article gives an idea of his graphic power:
-
- FORT DE FRANCE, MARTINIQUE, May 21--To-day we saw St. Pierre,
- the ghastliest ghost of the modern centuries. But yesterday
- the fairest of the fair of the wondrous cities of the storied
- Antilles, bright, beautiful, glorious, glistening and
- shimmering in her prism of tropical radiance, an opalescent
- city in a setting of towering forest and mountain, now a
- waste of ashen-gray without life, form, color, shape, a drear
- monotone, a dim blur on the landscape--it seems even more than
- the contrast between life and death.
-
- The dead may live. St. Pierre is not alive, and never will
- be. Out of shape has come a void. It is the apotheosis of
- annihilation. To one who sits amid the ruins and gazes the
- long miles upward over the seamed sides of La Pelée, still
- thundering her terrible wrath, may come some conception of the
- future ruin of the worlds.
-
- It has been a day of sharp impressions, one cutting into
- another until the memory-pad of the mind is crossed and
- crisscrossed like the fissured flanks of La Pelée herself;
- but most deeply graven of all, paradoxically, is the memory
- of a dimness, a nothingness, an emptiness, a lack of
- everything--the gray barrenness unrelieved of what was the
- rainbow St. Pierre. Mont Pelée, the most awful evidence of
- natural force to be seen in the world to-day--La Pelée,
- majestic, terrible, overpowering, has been in evidence from
- starlight to starlight, but it is the ashen blank that was once
- the city of the Saint of the Rock that stands out most clearly
- in the kaleidoscopic maze slipping backward and forward before
- our eyes.
-
-And thus on, without losing interest, for seven solid columns.
-
-Will Irwin’s great page story, printed beside the straight news of
-the San Francisco earthquake, is another _Sun_ classic. Irwin had
-the fortune to be familiar with San Francisco, and he was able,
-without reference to book or map, to give to New York, through the
-_Sun_, a most vivid picture of “The City That Was.” It is a literary
-companion-piece of Thomas M. Dieuaide’s gray drawing of St. Pierre, but
-only the introduction must do here:
-
- The old San Francisco is dead. The gayest, lightest-hearted,
- most pleasure-loving city of this continent, and in many ways
- the most interesting and romantic, is a horde of huddled
- refugees living among ruins. It may rebuild; it probably will;
- but those who have known that peculiar city by the Golden Gate,
- and have caught its flavor of the “Arabian Nights” feel that it
- can never be the same.
-
- It is as though a pretty, frivolous woman had passed through a
- great tragedy. She survives, but she is sobered and different.
- If it rises out of the ashes it must be a modern city, much
- like other cities and without its old flavor.
-
-There were less than five columns of the article, but it told the
-whole story of San Francisco; not in dry figures of commerce and paved
-streets, but of the people and places that every Eastern man had
-longed to see, but now never could see.
-
-Writers like Ralph and Chamberlin, Dieuaide and Irwin, are spoken of as
-“star” reporters, yet the saying that the _Sun_ has no star men is not
-entirely fictional. Its best reporters are, and will be, remembered as
-stars, but no men were, or are, treated as stars. Big reporters cover
-little stories and cubs write big ones--if they can. A city editor does
-not send an inexperienced man on an assignment that requires all the
-skill of the trained reporter, yet it is _Sun_ history that many new
-men have turned in big stories from assignments that appeared, at first
-blush, to be inconsequential. There are always two or three so-called
-star men in the office, but the days when there are two or three star
-assignments are comparatively few.
-
-Let us take, arbitrarily, one day twenty-five years ago--February 1,
-1893--and see what some of the _Sun_ reporters did:
-
- Jefferson Market Court S. H. Adams
- Essex Market Court and Meeting of Irish
- Federalists Rudolph E. Block
- With R. Croker at Lakewood George B. Mallon
- Custom-House News E. G. Riggs
- City Hall News W. H. Olmsted
- Police Headquarters Robert S. Yard
- Ship News S. A. Wood
- Coroners and Post-Office W. A. Willis
- Subway Project and Murder at East
- Eighty-Eighth Street W. J. Chamberlin
- Magic Shell Swindle E. W. Townsend
- Condition of Police Lodging-Houses D. G. Phillips
- Carlyle Harris Case F. F. Coleman
- Fire at Koster & Bial’s John Kenny
- Bishop McDonnell’s Trip to Rome Evans
-
-To gain an impression of the variety of work which comes to a _Sun_
-reporter, take the assignments given to David Graham Phillips in the
-last days of his service with the _Sun_ in 1893:
-
- March 1--Joseph Jefferson’s Lecture on the Drama
- ” 2--Bear Hunt at Glen Cove
- ” 3--Special Stories for the Sunday _Sun_
- ” 6--Obituary of W. P. Demarest
- ” 7--Meeting of Russian-Americans
- ” 8--Mystery at New Brunswick, New Jersey
- ” 9--Special Stories for Sunday
- ” 10--Accident in Seventy-First St. Tunnel
- ” 11--More Triplets in Cold Spring
- ” 12--Services in Old Scotch Church
- ” 13--Furniture Sale
- ” 14--Opening of Hotel Waldorf
- ” 15--Married Four Days, Then False
- ” 17--Dinner, Friendly Sons of St. Patrick
- ” 18--Parade and Show, Barnum & Bailey
- ” 19--Church Quarrel, Rutherford, N. J.
-
-Phillips was then one of the _Sun’s_ best reporters; not as large
-a figure in the office as Ralph, or Chamberlin, or Spears, but one
-entitled to assignments of the first class. A list of his assignments
-soon after he joined the staff in the summer of 1890 would be
-monotonous--Jefferson Market police-court day after day; the kind of
-work with which the _Sun_ broke in a new man. Once on space, with eight
-dollars a column instead of fifteen dollars a week, Phillips got what
-he wanted--a peep at every corner of city life. In a little more than
-two years as a space man he picked up much of the material that is seen
-in his novels.
-
-A _Sun_ man takes what comes to his lot. When W. J. Chamberlin returned
-from Cuba, his first assignment was a small police case. But a really
-good reporter finds his opportunity and his “big” stories for himself.
-
-It would take a small book to give a list of the “big” stories that the
-_Sun_ has printed, and a five-foot shelf of tall volumes to reprint
-them all. Some of them were written leisurely, like Spears’s stories
-of the Bad Lands, some in comparative ease, like Ralph’s stories of
-Presidential inaugurations and the Grant funeral, or W. J. Chamberlin’s
-eleven-column report of the Dewey parade in 1899. In these latter the
-ease is only comparative, for the writer’s fingers had no time to rest
-in the achievement of such gigantic tasks. And the comparison is with
-the work done by reporters on occasions when there was no time to
-arrange ideas and choose words; when the facts came in what would be to
-the layman hopeless disorder.
-
-Such an occasion, for instance, was the burning of the excursion
-steamer General Slocum, the description of which--in the end a
-marvellous tale of horror--was taken page by page from Lindsay Denison
-as his typewriter milled it out. Such an occasion was Edwin C. Hill’s
-opportunity to write his notable leads to the stories of the Republic
-wreck in 1909 and the Titanic disaster in 1912. But the _Sun_ and _Sun_
-men never have hysterics. Tragedy seems to tighten them up more than
-other newspapers and newspapermen.
-
-Introductions to big stories tell the pulse of the paper. Read, for
-example, the _Sun_ introduction to the great ocean tragedy of 1898:
-
- HALIFAX, NOVA SCOTIA, July 6--The steamship La Bourgogne of
- the Compagnie Générale Transatlantique, which left New York
- on Saturday last bound for Havre, was sunk at five o’clock
- on Monday morning after a collision with the British ship
- Cromartyshire in a dense fog about sixty miles south of Sable
- Island. The ship had 750 persons aboard. The number of first
- and second cabin passengers was 220 and of the steerage
- passengers 297, a total of 517. The number of officers was 11,
- of the crew 222. Eleven second-cabin and 51 steerage passengers
- and 104 of the crew, a total of 166, were saved. All the
- officers but four, all the first-cabin passengers, and all but
- one of the more than one hundred women on board, were lost. The
- number of lost is believed to be 584.
-
-This was more detailed, but not more calm than the opening of Edwin C.
-Hill’s story on the loss of the Titanic:
-
- The greatest marine disaster in the history of ocean traffic
- occurred last Sunday night, when the Titanic of the White
- Star Line, the greatest steamship that ever sailed the sea,
- shattered herself against an iceberg and sank with, it is
- feared, fifteen hundred of her passengers and crew in less
- than four hours. The monstrous modern ships may defy wind and
- weather, but ice and fog remain unconquered.
-
- Out of nearly twenty-four hundred people that the Titanic
- carried, only eight hundred and sixty-six are known to have
- been saved, and most of these were women and children.
-
-Probably the most restrained lead on a _Sun_ account of a great
-disaster was the introduction to the article on the Brooklyn Theatre
-fire of 1876:
-
- The Brooklyn Theatre was built in September, 1871, opened for
- public entertainment October 2, 1871, and burned to the ground
- with the sacrifice of three hundred lives on the night of
- Tuesday, December 5, 1876.
-
-Of a more literary character, yet void of excitement, was the way
-Julian Ralph began his narrative of the blizzard of March, 1888:
-
- It was as if New York had been a burning candle upon which
- nature had clapped a snuffer, leaving nothing of the city’s
- activities but a struggling ember.
-
-While on this subject, it is as well to say that the _Sun_, in ordinary
-stories, does without introductions. “Begin at the beginning” has been
-one of its unwritten rules; or, as a veteran copy-reader remarked to a
-new reporter who told it all in the first paragraph:
-
-“For the love of Mike, can’t you leave something for the head-writer to
-say?”
-
-Every young newspaper man hears a good deal about “human-interest
-stories.” Some of the professors of journalism tell their pupils what
-human-interest stories are; others advise the best way to know one, or
-to get one. It is not evident, however, that any one has devised an
-infallible formula for taking a trivial or commonplace event and, by
-reason of the humour, pathos, or liveliness thereof, lifting it to a
-higher plane.
-
-Amos Cummings is believed to have been the first newspaperman to see
-the news value of the lost child or the steer loose in the street.
-Amos himself wrote a story about the steer. Ralph wrote another one,
-and got his first job in New York on the strength of it. Frank W.
-O’Malley wrote one recently, and made New York laugh over it. But
-your newspaperman needs something besides a frightened steer and some
-streets; he must have “something in his noddle,” as Mr. Dana used to
-say.
-
-Every reporter gets a chance to write a story about a lost child, but
-there are perhaps only two lost-child stories of the last thirty years
-that are remembered, and both were _Sun_ stories. David Graham Phillips
-found his lost child in the Catskills and wrote an article over which
-women wept. The next time a child was lost, Phillips’s city editor sent
-him on the assignment, and he fell down. The child was there, and the
-woods, and the bloodhounds, but the reporter’s brain would not turn
-backward and go again through the processes that made a great story.
-Hill’s story, which is remembered by its head--“A Little Child in the
-Dark”--will never be repeated--by Hill.
-
-The tear-impelling article is the most difficult thing for a good
-reporter to write or a bad reporter to avoid trying to write. It might
-be added that good reporters write a “sob story” only when it fastens
-itself on them and demands to be written; and then they write the facts
-and let the reader do the weeping. O’Malley’s story of the killing of
-Policeman Gene Sheehan, which has been reprinted from the _Sun_ by
-several text-books for students of journalism, is good proof of this.
-Practically all of it--and it was a column long--was a straightforward
-report of the story told by the policeman’s mother. This is a part:
-
- Mrs. Catherine Sheehan stood in the darkened parlor of her
- home at 361 West Fifteenth Street late yesterday afternoon and
- told her version of the murder of her son Gene, the youthful
- policeman whom a thug named Billy Morley shot in the forehead
- down under the Chatham Square elevated station early yesterday
- morning. Gene’s mother was thankful that her boy hadn’t killed
- Billy Morley before he died, “because,” she said, “I can say
- honestly, even now, that I’d rather have Gene’s dead body
- brought home to me, as it will be to-night, than to have him
- come to me and say, ‘Mother, I had to kill a man this morning.’
-
- “God comfort the poor wretch that killed the boy,” the mother
- went on, “because he is more unhappy to-night than we are here.
- Maybe he was weak-minded through drink. He couldn’t have known
- Gene, or he wouldn’t have killed him. Did they tell you at the
- Oak Street Station that the other policemen called Gene ‘Happy
- Sheehan’? Anything they told you about him is true, because
- no one would lie about him. He was always happy, and he was a
- fine-looking young man. He always had to duck his helmet when
- he walked under the gas-fixture in the hall as he went out the
- door.
-
- “After he went down the street yesterday I found a little book
- on a chair--a little list of the streets or something that Gene
- had forgot. I knew how particular they are about such things,
- and I didn’t want the boy to get in trouble, so I threw on a
- shawl and walked over through Chambers Street toward the river
- to find him. He was standing on a corner some place down there
- near the bridge, clapping time with his hands for a little
- newsy that was dancing; but he stopped clapping--struck, Gene
- did, when he saw me. He laughed when I handed him a little book
- and told him that was why I’d searched for him, patting me on
- the shoulder when he laughed--patting me on the shoulder.
-
- “‘It’s a bad place for you here, Gene,’ I said. ‘Then it must
- be bad for you, too, mammy,’ said he; and as he walked to the
- end of his beat with me--it was dark then--he said, ‘There are
- lots of crooks here, mother, and they know and hate me, and
- they’re afraid of me’--proud, he said it--‘but maybe they’ll
- get me some night.’
-
- “He patted me on the back and turned and walked east toward his
- death. Wasn’t it strange that Gene said that?
-
- “You know how he was killed, of course, and how--now let me
- talk about it, children, if I want to. I promised you, didn’t
- I, that I wouldn’t cry any more or carry on? Well, it was five
- o’clock this morning when a boy rang the bell here at the
- house, and I looked out the window and said:
-
- “‘Is Gene dead?’
-
- “‘No, ma’am,’ answered the lad; ‘but they told me to tell you
- he was hurt in a fire and is in the hospital.’
-
- “Jerry, my other boy, had opened the door for the lad, and
- was talking to him while I dressed a bit. And then I walked
- down-stairs and saw Jerry standing silent under the gaslight;
- and I said again, ‘Jerry, is Gene dead?’ And he said ‘Yes,’ and
- he went out.
-
- “After a while I went down to the Oak Street Station myself,
- because I couldn’t wait for Jerry to come back. The policemen
- all stopped talking when I came in, and then one of them told
- me it was against the rules to show me Gene at that time; but I
- knew the policeman only thought I’d break down. I promised him
- I wouldn’t carry on, and he took me into a room to let me see
- Gene. It was Gene.”
-
-The _Sun_ has been richly fortunate in the humour that has tinged its
-news columns since its very beginning. Even Ben Day, with all the
-worries of a pioneer journalist, made the types exact a smile from his
-readers. With Dana, amusing the people was second only to instructing
-them. Julian Ralph and Wilbur Chamberlin both had the trick of putting
-together the bricks of fact with the mortar of humour. Chamberlin
-had several characters, like his _Insec’ O’Connor_, whose strings he
-pulled and made to dance. Hardly a sea-story of Sam Wood’s--except
-where there is tragedy--does not contain something to be laughed over.
-Samuel Hopkins Adams was an adept at the comic twist. Lindsay Denison
-once wrote a story of a semipublic celebration of an engagement so
-delightfully that the bride’s father, perhaps the only person in New
-York who did not see the humour of the affair, threatened to break the
-pledge of troth, although the groom was a public character who had
-courted publicity all his life.
-
-Charles Selden, as grave a reporter as ever glowered at a poor
-space-bill, had a vein of structural humour perhaps unsurpassed by
-any reporter. His account of a press reception at the home of Miss
-Lillian Russell has been approached in delicacy only by O’Malley’s
-interview with Miss Laura Jean Libbey. Selden’s story of the occasion
-when creditors took away all the furniture of John L. Sullivan’s
-café--except the one chair upon which the champion snoozed--was a model
-of dry, unlaboured humour.
-
-As an example of the drollness with which O’Malley has delighted _Sun_
-readers for ten years, take this extract from his report of the East
-Side Passover parade of 1917, referring to Counselor Levy, the Duke of
-Essex Street, whose title was conferred by the _Sun_ twenty years ago:
-
- It was difficult for a time to get the details of the duke’s
- Passover garb, owing to the fact that the interior of his
- Nile-green limousine has recently been fitted up with
- book-shelves, so that the duke can be surrounded with his law
- library even when motoring to and from his office on the East
- Side. Furthermore, every space not occupied by the duke and
- duchess and the law library yesterday was decorated with floral
- set pieces in honor of Easter, a large pillow of tuberoses
- inscribed with the words “Our Duke” in purple immortelles,
- and presented by the Essex Market Bar Association to their
- dean, being the outstanding piece among the interior floral
- decorations of the duke’s Rolls-Royce. Beside Ittchee, the
- duke’s Jap valet and chauffeur, was a large rubber-plant, which
- shut off the view, the rubber-plant being the Easter gift of
- Solomon, Solomon, Solomon, Solomon, Solomon and Solomon, who
- learned all their law as students in the offices of the duke.
-
- Little or nothing remains to be told about the duke’s Easter
- scenery. He was dressed in the mode, that’s all--high hat,
- morning coat, trousers like Martin Littleton’s, mauve spats,
- corn-colored gloves, patent-leather shoes, Russian-red cravat,
- set off with a cameo showing the face of Lord Chief Justice
- Russell in high relief. His only distinctive mark was the
- absence of a gardenia on his lapel.
-
- He was off then, waving his snakewood cane jauntily, while the
- East Side scrambled after the car to try to feel the Nile-green
- varnish. And with a final direction to Ittchee, “Go around by
- Chauncey Depew’s house on the way home, my good man,” the car
- exploded northward, and the Passover parade on Delancey Street
- officially ended for the day.
-
-There is hardly a man who has lived five years as a _Sun_ reporter but
-could write his own story of the _Sun_ just as he has written stories
-of life. Here but a few of these men and their work have been touched.
-It has been a long parade from Wisner of 1833 to Hill of 1918. Many of
-the great reporters are dead, and of some of these it may be said that
-their lives were shortened by the very fever in which they won their
-glory. Some passed on to other fields of endeavour. Others are waiting
-to write “the best story ever printed in the _Sun_.”
-
-What was the best story ever printed in the _Sun_? It may be that that
-story has been quoted from in these articles; and yet, if a thousand
-years hence some super-scientist should invent a literary measure that
-would answer the question, the crown of that high and now unbestowable
-honour of authorship might fall to some man here unmentioned and
-elsewhere unsung. Perhaps it was an article only two hundred words
-long.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-SOME GENIUS IN AN OLD ROOM
-
- _Lord, Managing Editor for Thirty-Turn Years.--Clarke, Magician of
- the Copy Desk.--Ethics, Fair Play and Democracy.--“The Evening
- Sun” and Those Who Make It._
-
-
-For forty-seven years the city or news room of the _Sun_ was on the
-third floor of the brick building at the south corner of Nassau and
-Frankfort Streets, a five-story house built for Tammany Hall in 1811,
-when that organization found its quarters in Martling’s Tavern--a few
-doors south, on part of the site of the present Tribune Building--too
-small for its robust membership.
-
-In the days of Grand Sachems William Mooney, Matthew L. Davis, Lorenzo
-B. Shepard, Elijah F. Purdy, Isaac V. Fowler, Nelson J. Waterbury, and
-William D. Kennedy, and the big and little bosses, including Tweed,
-this third-floor room had been used as a general meeting-hall. It
-was here, in 1835, that the Locofoco--later the Equal Rights--party
-was born after a conflict in which the regular Tammany men, finding
-themselves in the minority, turned off the gas and left the reformers
-to meet by the light of locofoco matches. It was a room from which many
-a Democrat was hurled because he preferred De Witt Clinton to Tammany’s
-favourite, Martin Van Buren. Two flights of long, straight stairs led
-to the ground floor. They were hard to go up; they must have been
-extremely painful to go down bouncing.
-
-It was a long, wide, barnlike room, lighted by five windows that looked
-upon Park Row and the City Hall. The stout old timbers were bare in
-the ceiling and in them were embedded various hooks and ring-bolts to
-which, once upon a time, was attached gymnasium apparatus used by a
-_turn verein_, which hired the room when the Tammanyites did not need
-it.
-
-It was not a beautiful room. Mr. Dana never did anything to improve
-it except in a utilitarian way, and from the time when he bought the
-building from the Tammany Society, in 1867, until it was torn down
-in 1915, the old place looked very much the same. Of course, new
-gas-jets were added, these to be followed by electric-light wires,
-until the upper air had a jungle-like appearance, and there were rude,
-inexpensive desks and telephone-booths.
-
-The floor was efficient, for it was covered with rubber matting that
-deadened alike the quick footstep of Dana and the thundering stride
-of pugilistic champions who came in to see the sporting editor. But
-the city room’s only ornaments were men and their genius. Here wrote
-Ralph and Chamberlin, Spears and Irwin, and all the rest of the fine
-reporters of the old building’s years.
-
-Near the windows of this shabby room were the desks of the men who
-planned news-hunts, chose the hunters, and mounted their trophies. Six
-desks handled all the news-matter in the old city room of the _Sun_.
-The managing editor sat at a roll-top in the northwest corner, near a
-door that led to Mr. Dana’s room. A little distance to the east was
-the night editor’s desk. At the large flat-top desk near the managing
-editor three men sat--the cable editor, who handled all foreign news;
-the “Albany man,” who edited articles from the State and national
-capitals and all of New York State; and the telegraph editor, who
-took care of all other wire matter.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- CHESTER SANDERS LORD
-]
-
-In the southwest corner of the room was a double desk at which the city
-editor sat from 10 A.M. until 5 P.M., when the night city editor came
-in. Next to the city editor’s desk was the roll-top of the assistant
-city editor, also used by the assistant night city editor. Beyond that
-was the desk of the suburban or “Jersey” editor. Nearest the door, so
-that the noise of ten-thousand-dollar challenges to twenty-round combat
-would not disturb the whole room, was the desk of the sporting editor.
-
-In the fifty years that have passed since Dana bought the _Sun_, the
-changes in the heads of the news departments have been comparatively
-few. True, the news office has not been as fortunate as the editorial
-rooms, where only three men, Charles A. Dana, Paul Dana, and Edward P.
-Mitchell, have been actual editors-in-chief; but the list of managing
-editors and night city editors is not long. Before the day of Chester
-S. Lord, the managing editors were, in order: Isaac W. England, Amos J.
-Cummings, William Young, and Ballard Smith. Since Lord’s retirement the
-managing editors have been James Luby, William Harris, and Keats Speed.
-
-The city editors have been John Williams, Larry Kane, W. M. Rosebault,
-William Young, John B. Bogart (1873–1890), Daniel F. Kellogg
-(1890–1902), George B. Mallon (1902–1914), and Kenneth Lord, the
-present city editor, a son of Chester S. Lord.
-
-The night city editors before the long reign of Selah Merrill
-Clarke--of whom more will be said presently--were Henry W. Odion,
-Elijah M. Rewey, and Ambrose W. Lyman, all of whom had previously been
-_Sun_ reporters, and all of whom remained with the _Sun_, in various
-capacities, for many years. Rewey was the exchange editor from 1887 to
-1903, and was variously employed at other important desk posts until
-his death in 1916. Since Mr. Clarke’s retirement, in 1912, the night
-city editors have been Joseph W. Bishop, J. W. Phoebus, Eugene Doane,
-Marion G. Scheitlin, and M. A. Rose.
-
-The night editors of the _Sun_, whose function it is to make up the
-paper and to “sit in” when the managing editors are absent, have been
-Dr. John B. Wood, the “great American condenser”; Garret P. Serviss,
-now with the _Evening Journal_; Charles M. Fairbanks, Carr V. Van Anda
-(1893–1904), now managing editor of the New York _Times_; George M.
-Smith (1904–1912), the present managing editor of the _Evening Sun_;
-and Joseph W. Bishop.
-
-In the eighties, the nineties, and the first decade of the present
-century the front corners of the city room were occupied, six nights
-a week, by two men closely identified with the _Sun’s_ progress in
-getting and preparing news. These, Chester S. Lord and S. M. Clarke,
-were looked up to by _Sun_ men, and by Park Row generally, as essential
-parts of the _Sun_.
-
-Lord, through his city editors, reporters, and correspondents, got the
-news. If it was metropolitan news--and until the latter days of July,
-1914, New York was the news-centre of the world, so far as American
-papers were concerned--Clarke helped to get it and then to present it
-after the unapproachably artistic manner of the _Sun_. In the years
-of Lord and Clarke more than a billion copies of the _Sun_ went out
-containing news stories written by men whom Lord had hired and whose
-work had passed beneath the hand of Clarke.
-
-Chester Sanders Lord, who was managing editor of the _Sun_ from 1880
-to 1913, was born in Romulus, New York, in 1850, the son of the Rev.
-Edward Lord, a Presbyterian clergyman who was chaplain of the One
-Hundred and Tenth Regiment of New York Volunteer Infantry in the Civil
-War. Chester Lord studied at Hamilton College in 1869 and 1870, and
-went from college to be associate editor of the Oswego _Advertiser_.
-In 1872 he came to the _Sun_ as a reporter, and covered part of Horace
-Greeley’s campaign for the Presidency in that year. After nine months
-as a reporter he was assigned by the managing editor, Cummings, to the
-suburban desk, where he remained for four years.
-
-In the fall of 1877 he bought the Syracuse _Standard_, but in six weeks
-he returned to the _Sun_ and became assistant night city editor under
-Ambrose W. Lyman, the predecessor of S. M. Clarke. Ballard Smith, who
-succeeded William Young as managing editor in 1878, named Lord as his
-assistant, and Lord succeeded Ballard Smith as managing editor on
-December 3, 1880.
-
-For thirty-three years Lord inspected applicants for places in the news
-departments of the _Sun_, and decided whether they would fit into the
-human structure that Dana had built. Edward G. Riggs, who knew him as
-well as any one, has written thus of him:
-
- Like Dana, he has been a great judge of men. His discernment
- has been little short of miraculous. Calm, dispassionate,
- without the slightest atom of impulse, as wise as a serpent and
- as gentle as a dove, Lord got about him a staff that has been
- regarded by newspapermen as the most brilliant in the country.
- Independent of thought, with a placid idea of the dignity of
- his place, ever ready to concede the other fellow’s point of
- view even though maintaining his own, Lord was never known in
- all the years of his managing editorship of the _Sun_ to utter
- an unkind word to any man on the paper, no matter how humble
- his station.
-
-One of Lord’s notable performances as managing editor was the
-perfecting of the _Sun’s_ system of collecting election returns.
-Before 1880 the correspondents had sent in the election figures in
-a conscientious but rather inefficient manner--by towns, or cities.
-Lord picked out a reliable correspondent in each county of New York
-State and gave to the chosen man the responsibility of sending to the
-_Sun_, at nine o’clock on election night, an estimate of the result in
-his particular county. This was to be followed at eleven o’clock, if
-necessary, with the corrected figures.
-
-“Don’t tell us how your city, or township, or village went,” he said
-to the correspondents. “Let us have your best estimate on the county.
-Don’t spare the telephone or the telegraph, either to collect the
-returns or to get them into the _Sun_ office.”
-
-The telephone was just coming into general use for the transmission of
-news, and Lord saw its possibilities on an election night.
-
-As a result of the new system, improved from year to year, the
-_Sun_ became what it is--the election-night authority on what has
-happened. So confident was the _Sun_ of its figures on the night of
-the Presidential election of 1884 that it, alone of all the New York
-papers, declared the next morning that Mr. Cleveland had defeated Mr.
-Blaine, although the _Sun_ had been one of the most strenuous opponents
-of the Democratic candidate. Blaine, who had wired to the _Sun_ for
-its estimates, got the first news of his defeat from Lord. Eight years
-later, when Mr. Cleveland defeated President Harrison, the winner’s
-political chief of staff, Daniel S. Lamont, received the first tidings
-of the great and unexpected victory from Mr. Lord.
-
-In the late eighties the _Sun_ was supplementing its Associated Press
-news service with a valuable corps of special correspondents scattered
-all over America and Europe. The news received from these _Sun_ men
-led to the establishment, by William M. Laffan, then publisher of the
-_Sun_, of a _Sun_ news agency which was called the Laffan Bureau. This
-service, originated for the purpose of covering special events in the
-live way of the _Sun_, was suddenly called upon to cover the whole news
-field of the world in a more comprehensive way.
-
-Lord’s part in this work, when Dana decided to break with the
-Associated Press, has been graphically described by Mr. Riggs:
-
- “Chester,” said Mr. Dana one afternoon early in the nineties,
- leaning over Lord’s desk, “I have just torn up my Associated
- Press franchise. We’ve got to have the news of the world
- to-morrow morning, and we’ve got to get it ourselves.”
-
- “Don’t let that fret you, Mr. Dana,” replied Lord. “You’ve got
- a Dante class on hand to-night. You just go home and enjoy
- yourself. I’ll have the news for you all right.”
-
- Dana always said that he didn’t enjoy his Dante class a single
- bit that night; but he didn’t go near the _Sun_ office, neither
- did he communicate with the office. He banked on Lord, and
- the next morning and ever afterward Lord made good on the
- independent service. He built up the Laffan Bureau, which more
- recently has become the Sun News Service, and the special
- correspondents of the paper in all parts of the world see to it
- that the _Sun_ gets the news.
-
- A task like that which Dana thrust on Lord might have paralyzed
- the average managing editor of a great metropolitan newspaper
- confronted by keen and powerful competitors. It was unheard of
- in journalism. It had never been attempted before. Lord, with
- calm courage and confidence, sent off thousands of telegrams
- and cable despatches that night. Many were shots in the air,
- but the majority were bull’s-eyes, as the next morning’s issue
- of the _Sun_ proved.
-
- Was Dana delighted? If you had seen him hop, skip, and jump
- into the office that morning, you’d have received your answer.
- When Lord turned up at his desk in the afternoon, Dana rushed
- out from his chief editor’s office, grasped him about the
- shoulders, and chuckled:
-
- “Chester, you’re a brick, you’re a trump. You’re the John L.
- Sullivan of newspaperdom!”
-
-The Laffan Bureau, which assimilated the old United Press, became a
-news syndicate the service of which was sought by dozens of American
-papers whose editors admired the _Sun’s_ manner of handling news. The
-Laffan Bureau lasted until 1916, when the _Sun_, through its purchase
-by Frank A. Munsey, absorbed Mr. Munsey’s New York _Press_, which had
-the Associated Press service.
-
-Among Mr. Lord’s fortunate traits as managing editor were his ability
-to choose good correspondents all over the world and his entire
-confidence in them after they were selected. No matter what other
-correspondents wrote, the _Sun_ stood by its own men. They were on the
-spot; they should know the truth as well as any one else could.
-
-Months before Aguinaldo’s insurrection the _Sun_ man at Manila, P. G.
-McDonnell, kept insisting that the Filipino chieftain would revolt. The
-other New York newspapers laughed at the _Sun_ for seeing ghosts, but
-McDonnell was right.
-
-Newspaper readers will remember that in 1904 the fall of Port Arthur
-was announced three or four times in about as many months, and each
-time the _Sun_ appeared to be beaten on the news until the next day,
-when it was discovered that the Russians were still holding out. All
-the _Sun_ did about the matter was to notify its Tokyo correspondent,
-John T. Swift, that when Port Arthur really fell it would expect to
-hear from him by cable at “double urgent” rates. At midnight of
-January 1, 1905, four months after these instructions were given to
-Swift, the _Sun_ got a “double urgent” message:
-
- Port Arthur fallen--SWIFT.
-
-No other paper in New York had the news. The _Sun_ rubbed it in
-editorially on January 3:
-
- Deeply conscious as we are of the deplorable lack of modern
- enterprise which has hitherto deprived the _Sun_ of the
- distinction of repeatedly announcing the fall of Port Arthur,
- we have to content ourselves with the reflection that when
- finally the _Sun_ did print the fall of Port Arthur, it was so.
-
-Soon after the election of Woodrow Wilson, in 1912, the head of the
-_Sun_ bureau in Washington, the late Elting A. Fowler, made the
-prediction that William Jennings Bryan would be named as Secretary of
-State. Nearly every other metropolitan newspaper either ignored the
-story, or ridiculed it as absurd and impossible. The _Sun_ never made
-inquiry of Fowler as to the source of his information. He had been
-a _Sun_ man for ten years, and that was enough. Fowler repeated and
-reiterated that Bryan would be the head of the new Cabinet, and sure
-enough, he was.
-
-The _Sun_ correspondent in a city five hundred miles from New York was
-covering a great murder mystery. Every other New York newspaper of
-importance had sent from two to five men to handle the story; the _Sun_
-sent none. The correspondent saw that the New York men were getting
-sheaves of telegrams from their newspapers, directing them in detail
-how to tell the story, and to what length; so he sent a message to the
-_Sun_ advising it of the large numbers of New York reporters engaged on
-the mystery, and of the amount of matter they were preparing to send.
-Had the _Sun_ any instructions for him? Yes, it had. The reply came
-swiftly:
-
- Use your own judgment--CHESTER S. LORD.
-
-That was the _Sun_ way, and the _Sun_ printed the correspondent’s
-stories, whether they were one column long, or six. The _Sun_ could not
-see how an editor in New York could know more about a distant murder
-than a correspondent on the spot.
-
-It was the _Sun’s_ way, once a man was taken on, to keep him as long
-as it could. One day Mr. Lord sent for Samuel Hopkins Adams, then a
-reporter, and asked him whether he would like to go away fishing.
-
-“A Sunday story?” inquired Adams.
-
-“No, not exactly,” said Mr. Lord. “A vacation, rather. You’ve been
-fired. Go away, but come back, say, next Tuesday, and go to work, and
-it’ll be all right. Don’t worry!”
-
-Adams learned that a suit for libel had been brought against the paper
-by an individual who had been made an unpleasant figure in a police
-story which Adams had written.
-
-A few days after Adams returned to his duties Mr. Dana came out of his
-room and asked the city editor, Mr. Kellogg, the name of the reporter
-who had written an article to which he pointed. Kellogg told Dana that
-Adams was the author, and Dana strode across the room and bestowed upon
-the reporter one of his brief and much prized commentaries of approval.
-Then he looked at Adams more closely, and, with raised eyebrows, walked
-to the managing editor’s desk.
-
-“Who is that young man?” he asked Mr. Lord, indicating Adams with a
-movement of the head.
-
-Mr. Lord murmured something.
-
-“Didn’t I order him discharged a few days ago?” said Mr. Dana.
-
-Another but more prolonged murmur from Mr. Lord. Adams got up from his
-desk to efface himself, but as he left the room he caught the voice of
-Mr. Dana, a trifle higher and a bit plaintive:
-
-“Why is it, Mr. Lord, that I never succeed in discharging any of your
-bright young men?”
-
-Adams did not wait for the answer.
-
-This story, while typical of Lord, is not typical of Dana. For
-every word of censure he had a hundred words of praise. He read the
-paper--every line of it--for virtues to be commended rather than for
-faults to be condemned.
-
-“Who wrote the two sticks about the lame girl? A good touch; that’s the
-_Sun_ idea!”
-
-If a new man had written something he liked--even a ten-line
-paragraph--the editor of the _Sun_ would cross the room to shake the
-man’s hand and say:
-
-“Good work!”
-
-The spirit he radiated was contagious. The men, encouraged by Dana,
-spread faith to one another. The “_Sun_” spirit--the envious of other
-newspapers were wont to refer to those who had it as “the _Sun’s_
-Mutual Admiration Society”--did and does much to make the _Sun_. The
-men lived the socialism of art. If a new reporter received a difficult
-assignment, ten older men were ready to tell him, in a kindly and not
-at all didactic way, how to find the short cut.
-
-Perhaps some part of the democracy of the _Sun_ office has come from
-the fact that men have rarely been taken in at the top. It was Dana’s
-plan to catch young men with unformed ideas of journalism and make
-_Sun_ men of them. They went on the paper as cubs at fifteen dollars a
-week--or even as office-boys--and worked their way to be “space men,”
-if they had it in their noddles.
-
-All space men were free and equal in the Jeffersonian sense. Their pay
-was eight dollars a column. That one man made one hundred and fifty
-dollars in a week when his neighbour made only fifty was usually the
-result, not of the system, but of the difference between the men. Some
-were harder workers than others, or better fitted by experience for
-more important stories; and some were born money-makers. If a diligent
-reporter, through no fault of his own, was making small “bills,”
-the city editor would see to it that something profitable fell to
-him--perhaps a long and easily written Sunday article.
-
-Through changed conditions in newspaper make-up and policies, the space
-system in the payment of reporters is now practically extinct. It had
-good points and bad ones. Undoubtedly it developed a large number of
-men to whom a salary would not have been attractive. Some, to whose
-style and activities the space system lent itself, remained in the
-profession longer than they would otherwise have stayed. On the other
-hand, it was not always fair to reporters with whom a condensed style
-was natural. The dynamics of a two-inch article, the very value of
-which lies in its brevity, cannot be measured with a space-rule.
-
-The _Sun’s_ ideas of fairness do not end with itself and its men.
-It has always had a proper consideration for the feelings of the
-innocent bystander. It never harms the weak, or stoops to get news in
-a dishonourable or unbecoming way. It would be hard to devise a set of
-rules of newspaper ethics, but a few examples of things that the _Sun_
-doesn’t do may illuminate.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- SELAH MERRILL CLARKE
-]
-
-Soon after one of the _Sun’s_ most brilliant reporters had come on the
-paper, he was sent to report the wedding of a noted sporting man and
-a famous stage beauty, the marriage ceremony being performed by a
-picturesque Tammany alderman. The reporter returned to the office with
-a lot of amusing detail, which he recited in brief to the night city
-editor.
-
-“Just the facts of the marriage, please,” said Mr. Clarke. “The two
-most important events in the life of a woman are her marriage and her
-death. Neither should be treated flippantly.”
-
-Another reporter wrote an amusing story about a fat policeman posted
-at the Battery, who chased a tramp through a pool of rain-water. The
-policeman fell into the water, and the tramp got away. No report of the
-occurrence was made at police headquarters, but a _Sun_ man saw the
-incident and wrote it.
-
-“It’s an amusing story,” said Clarke to the reporter, “but they read
-the papers at police headquarters, and this policeman may be put on
-trial for not reporting the escape of the hobo. Suppose we drop this
-classic on the floor?”
-
-A telegraph messenger-boy once wrote a letter to the police
-commissioner, telling him how to break up the cadets (panders) of the
-East Side. A _Sun_ man found the lad and got an interesting interview
-with him.
-
-“Leave my name out, won’t you?” the messenger said to the reporter. “If
-you print it, I may lose my job.”
-
-He was told that his name was known in the _Sun_ office, but that the
-reporter would present his appeal.
-
-“Did you find the messenger?” Clarke asked the reporter on his arrival.
-
-The _Sun_ man replied that he had found him, and that the interview was
-interesting and exclusive. Before he had an opportunity to repeat the
-boy’s plea for anonymity, Clarke said:
-
-“Is it going to hurt the boy if we print his name? If it is, leave it
-out, and refer to him by a fictitious number.”
-
-Two reporters, one from the _Sun_ and one from another big daily, went
-one night to interview a famous man on an important subject. The _Sun_
-man returned and wrote a brief story containing none of the big news
-which it had been hoped he might get. The other newspaper came out with
-some startling revelations, gleaned from the same interview. Mr. Lord
-showed the rival paper’s article to the _Sun_ reporter, with a mild
-inquiry as to the reason for the _Sun’s_ failure to get the news.
-
-“We both gave our word,” said the reporter, “that we would keep back
-that piece of news for three days, even from our offices.”
-
-“Son,” said Mr. Lord, “you are a great man!”
-
-That was the Lord phrase of acquittal.
-
-One of the big occurrences in the investigation of the life-insurance
-companies in 1905 was a report which was read to the investigating
-committee in executive session. Every newspaper yearned for the
-contents of the document. After the committee adjourned, a member of it
-whispered to a _Sun_ reporter:
-
-“There is a bundle of those reports just inside the door of the
-committee room. I should think that five dollars given to a scrub-woman
-would probably get a copy for you.”
-
-The _Sun_ man, knowing the value of the report, and not content to act
-on his own estimate of _Sun_ ethics, telephoned the temptation to the
-city editor, Mr. Mallon.
-
-“A _Sun_ man who would do that would lose his job,” was the instant
-decision.
-
-A couple of days after Stephen Tyng Mather, recently First Assistant
-Secretary of the Interior, went on the _Sun_ as a reporter, the city
-editor, Mr. Bogart, called him to his desk.
-
-“Mr. Mather,” said Bogart, “an admirer of the _Sun_ has sent me a
-turkey. Of course, I cannot accept it. Please take it to his house in
-Harlem and explain why; but don’t hurt his feelings.”
-
-Mather had just come from college, where he had never learned that the
-ethics of journalism might require a reporter to become a deliverer of
-poultry, but he took the turkey. It does not detract from the moral of
-the story to say that Mather and another young reporter, neither quite
-understanding the _Sun’s_ stern code, took the bird to the Fellowcraft
-Club and had it roasted--a fact of which Mr. Bogart may have been
-unaware until now.
-
-The best news-handler that journalism has seen, Selah Merrill Clarke,
-was night city editor of the _Sun_ for thirty-one years. He came to the
-paper in 1881 from the New York _World_, where he had been employed
-as a reporter, and later as a desk man. In the early seventies he
-wrote for the _World_ a story of a suicide, and one of the newspapers
-of that day said of it that neither Dickens nor Wilkie Collins, with
-all the time they could ask, could have surpassed it. His story of
-the milkman’s ride down the valley of the Mill River, warning the
-inhabitants that the dam had broken at the Ashfield reservoir, near
-Northampton, Massachusetts (May 16, 1874), was another classic that
-attracted the attention of editors, including Dana.
-
-Clarke never thought well of himself as a reporter, and often said that
-in that capacity he was a failure. As a judge of news values, or news
-presentation, or as a giver of the fine literary touch which lent to
-the _Sun’s_ articles that indescribable tone not found in other papers,
-Clarke stood almost alone.
-
-The city editor of a New York newspaper sows seeds; the night city
-editor re-seeds barren spots, waters wilting items, and cuts and
-bags the harvest. The city editor sends men out all day for news; the
-night city editor judges what they bring in, and decides what space it
-shall have. In the handling of a big story, on which five or fifteen
-reporters may be engaged, the night city editor has to put together as
-many different writings in such a way that the reader may go smoothly
-from beginning to end. Chance may decree that the poorest writer has
-brought in the biggest news, and the man on the desk must supply
-quality as well as judgment.
-
-At such work Clarke was a master. It has been said of him that by the
-eliding stroke of his pencil and the insertion of perhaps a single word
-he could change the commonplace to literature. No reporter ever worked
-on the _Sun_ but wished, at one time or another, to thank Clarke for
-saving him from himself. Clarke had the faculty of seeing instantly the
-opportunity for improvement that the reporter might have seen an hour
-or a day later.
-
-Clarke got about New York very little, but he knew the city from Arthur
-Kill to Pelham Bay; knew it just as a general at headquarters knows
-the terrain on which his troops are fighting, but which he himself has
-never seen. He had the map of New York in his brain. When an alarm
-of fire came in from an obscure corner, he knew what lumber-yards or
-oil-refineries were near the blaze, and whether that was a point where
-the water pressure was likely to fail.
-
-Clarke’s memory was uncanny; it seemed to have photographed every issue
-of the _Sun_ for years. It was a saying that while Clarke stayed the
-_Sun_ needed neither an index nor a “morgue”--that biographical cabinet
-in which newspapers keep records of men and affairs.
-
-Twenty-five years after the Beecher-Tilton trial a three-line
-death-notice came to Clarke’s desk. He read the dead man’s name and
-summoned a reporter.
-
-“This man was a juror in the Beecher case,” said Clarke. “Look in the
-file of February 6 or 7, 1875, and I think you’ll find that this man
-stood up and made an interruption. Write a little piece about it.”
-
-A _Sun_ man who reported the funeral of Russell Sage at Lawrence, Long
-Island, in July, 1906, returned to the office and told Mr. Clarke that
-an acquaintance of the Sage family had told him, on the train coming
-back, the contents of the old man’s will--a document for which the
-reading public eagerly waited. The reporter laid his informant’s card
-before the night city editor. Clarke studied the name on it for a
-minute, and then said:
-
-“We won’t print the story. Dig out the file for June, 1899, and
-somewhere on the front page--I think it will be in the third or fourth
-column--on the 1st or 2nd of June you’ll find a story telling that this
-man was sent to Sing Sing for forgery.”
-
-Clarke’s memory was right. Although it is anti-climactic to relate
-it, the ex-convict’s description of what the will contained was also
-correct.
-
-Will Irwin, while reporting a small war between two Chinese societies,
-wrote an article one night about the arrest of two Hip Sing tong
-men who were wearing chain armour under their blouses. Clarke, much
-interested, asked Irwin all about the armour.
-
-“It reminds me of ‘King Solomon’s Mines,’” remarked Irwin, “and the
-chain armour that the heroes had made in Sheffield to wear in Africa.”
-
-“Yes,” replied Clarke, who had not read the Haggard novel in fifteen
-years; “but it wasn’t Sheffield--it was Birmingham.”
-
-Clarke had a sense of responsibility that showed itself in nervousness.
-On a night when news was breaking, that nervousness was exhibited in
-his trips, every ten minutes, to the ice-water tank; in the constant
-lighting and relighting of his pipe; in the quick turn of his head at
-the approach of a reporter. Yet his nervousness was not contagious. So
-long as Clarke was nervous, the men under him felt that they need not
-be. He did all the worrying, and, unlike most worriers, got results
-from it.
-
-Let him know that something had happened in the city, and his drag-net
-system was started. No matter how remote the happening, how apparently
-hopeless the clue, he let neither man nor telephone rest until every
-possible corner had been searched for the guilty news item. Once the
-situation was in hand he would return to the adornment of a head-line
-or the working out of some abstruse problem in mathematics--perhaps the
-angles of a sun-dial, for Clarke’s hobby was gnomonics, and he knew
-dials from Ptolemy’s time down. As a rest from mathematics he might
-write a limerick in Greek, and then carefully tear it up.
-
-Almost every newspaper in New York tried, at one time or another, to
-take Clarke from the _Sun_. One night an emissary from one of the
-apostles of the then new journalism entered the _Sun_ office and
-sent his card to Mr. Clarke. When the night city editor appeared, he
-whispered:
-
-“Mr. ---- says that if you’ll ascertain the highest salary the _Sun_
-will pay you to stay, he’ll double it.”
-
-Clarke uttered the strange sound that was his indulgence when
-disagreeably disturbed--a cross between a growl and a grunt--and turned
-back toward his desk.
-
-“He’ll triple it!” cried the tempter.
-
-Although Clarke heard the words, he kept on to his desk, and not only
-never mentioned the matter, but probably never thought of it again.
-
-On another occasion he made a notable trip to the gate at the entrance
-to the big room. A drunken visitor was making the place ring with
-yells, and the office-boys could not stop him. Clarke bore the noise
-for ten minutes, and then, remarking, “This is unendurable!” went and
-threw the man down the stairs.
-
-Clarke was the hero of a dozen newspaper stories, which he scorned to
-read.
-
-“Do you know, Mr. Clarke,” said a reporter who did not know how shy
-“the boss” was, “that Blank has put you into a short story in _Space’s
-Magazine_?”
-
-“Who is Blank?” said Clarke shortly.
-
-“Why,” said his informant, “he worked here for several weeks.”
-
-“Oh, Lord!” said Clarke. “I can’t be expected, can I, to remember all
-the geniuses that come and go?”
-
-There was a mild ferocity about him that caused more than one cub to
-think that the night boss was unfriendly, but this attitude had a good
-effect. No young reporter ever made the same mistake twice.
-
-“If you mean ‘child,’ write it so,” he would say. “Don’t write it
-‘tot.’ And please have more variety in your motor cars. I have seen
-several that were not large and red and high-powered.”
-
-The head-lines of the _Sun_ have been well written since the first days
-of Dana, and Clarke, for thirty years, was the best of the head-line
-writers. He wrote rhyming heads for Sam Wood’s prose verse, satirical
-heads for satires, humorous heads for the funny men’s articles. A
-_Sun_ reader could gauge almost exactly the worth of an article by the
-quality of the heading. A _Sun_ reporter could tell just what Clarke
-thought of his story by the cleverness of the lines that the night
-city editor wrote above it.
-
-Clarke would put the obvious heading on a long, matter-of-fact yarn
-in two minutes, but he might spend half an hour--if he had it to
-spare--polishing a head for a short and sparkling piece of work. Two
-architects who did city work pleaded poverty, but admitted having
-turned over property to their wives. Clarke headed the story:
-
- “We’re Broke,” Says Horgan.--“Sure,” Says Slattery, “But Our
- Wives Are Doing Fine.”
-
-A brief item about the arrest of some boys for stealing five copies of
-“The Simple Life” he headed “Tempted Beyond Their Strength.” Over a
-paragraph telling of the killing of a Park Row newsboy by a truck he
-wrote: “A Sparrow Falls.”
-
-Clarke had a besetting fear that Russell Sage would die suddenly late
-at night, and that the _Sun_ would not learn of it in time. Again and
-again false “hunches” caused him to send men to the Sage home on Fifth
-Avenue to discover the state of the old millionaire’s health. When Mr.
-Sage became seriously ill, reporters were sent in relays to watch the
-house. One man who had such an assignment turned up at the _Sun_ office
-at one o’clock in the morning.
-
-“I left Mr. Sage’s house,” he explained to Clarke, “because Dr. Blank
-just came out and I had a little talk with him. He asked me if S. M.
-Clarke was still night city editor of the _Sun_; and when I told him
-that you were, he said:
-
-“‘Tell Selah for me that I will call him personally on the ’phone if
-there is the least change in Mr. Sage’s condition. Selah and I are old
-friends; we used to be room-mates in college.’”
-
-“Blank always was a darn liar!” said Mr. Clarke. “Go back to the house
-and sit on the door-step.”
-
-On February 28, 1917, five years after Clarke retired, the Sun Alumni
-Association gave a dinner in his honour, with Mr. Lord presiding. Men
-came five hundred miles for the event, and the speeches were entirely
-about Clarke and his work. Mr. Clarke himself, who was only five miles
-away, sent a kindly letter to say that he was pleased, but that he
-could not imagine anything more absurd than a man’s attending a dinner
-given in his own honour.
-
-Clarke was a factor in that nebulous institution so frequently referred
-to as the “_Sun_ school of journalism,” a college in which the teaching
-was by example rather than precept. Clarke occasionally told the young
-reporters how not to do it, but his real lessons were given in the
-columns of the _Sun_. There, in cold type, the man could see that
-Clarke had thrown his beautiful introduction on the floor, had lifted a
-word or a phrase from the middle of the article and put it to the fore,
-or had, by one of the touches which marked the great copy-reader’s
-genius, breathed life into the narrative. Clarke had no rules for
-improving a story, but he had a faculty, not uncommon among the finest
-copy-readers, of seeing an event more clearly than it had appeared to
-the reporter who described it, even when the desk man’s information
-came entirely from the reporter’s screed.
-
-If a reporter found his story in the paper almost untouched by Clarke’s
-pencil and adorned with a typical Clarkean head, it was a signal to
-him that he had done well. He was sure not to get verbal approbation
-from Clarke. There is a legend that Clarke once cried “Fine!” after
-skimming over a sheet of well-written copy, but it is only a legend.
-With a reporter who never wrote introductions and never padded his
-articles Clarke would sometimes crack a joke. _Sun_ traditions have it
-that once, after a reporter had turned New York inside out to dig out
-a particularly difficult piece of news, the night city editor remarked
-to his assistant that that reporter “was a handy man to have around the
-office.” Although Clarke has been referred to by an excellent judge,
-Will Irwin, as “the greatest living schoolmaster of newspapermen,” his
-methods could never be adapted to the academies of journalism.
-
-As a schoolmaster of a more positive type, _Sun_ men remember the late
-Francis T. Patton, who edited suburban news for twenty years. Staff
-men on assignments in New Jersey, Westchester, Long Island, and other
-places just beyond the city turned in their copy to “Boss” Patton,
-a cultured man who spent his spare hours reading old Latin works in
-the original or working out chess problems. It was to him that the
-bewildered cub turned in his hour of torment, and Patton would tell him
-how long his story ought to run, how he might begin it, how end it.
-
-“I know it isn’t right to fake, Mr. Patton,” said a new reporter; “but
-is exaggeration never permissible?”
-
-“It is,” said Patton. “You may use exaggeration whenever it is needed
-to convey to the reader an adequate but not exaggerated picture of the
-event you are describing. For instance, if you are reporting a storm at
-Seabright, and the waves are eight and one-half feet high by the tape
-which you surely carry in your hip-pocket for such emergencies, it will
-hardly do to inform the reader that the waves are eight and one-half
-feet high; his visualization of the scene would not be perfect. Yet, if
-you write that the waves ran mountain-high, I shall change your copy
-if it comes to me. The expression would be too stale. Hyperbole is one
-of the gifts.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- SAMUEL A. WOOD
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- OSCAR KING DAVIS
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- THOMAS M. DIEUAIDE
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- SAMUEL HOPKINS ADAMS
-]
-
-Patton’s droll humour was one of the delights of the _Sun_ office. One
-night Charles M. Fairbanks was writing, for the _Herald_, a story about
-“The Men Who Make the _Sun_ Shine.” He asked Patton for something about
-himself.
-
-“You may say,” replied the boss of the suburban desk, “that my
-characteristics are brilliancy, trustworthiness, accuracy, and poetic
-fervour.”
-
-“Boss,” said a young reporter to Mr. Patton, “I often think you and I
-could run this paper better than the men who are running it.”
-
-“How strange!” said Mr. Patton, looking surprised. “I know that I
-could, but it has never occurred to me that you would not do worse than
-they do.”
-
-The sports department has been one of the _Sun’s_ strongholds since
-Mr. Dana’s first years. Dana would let Amos Cummings give half a page
-to a race at Saratoga or Monmouth Park, and would encourage Amos to
-neglect his executive duties so that the paper might have a good report
-of a boxing-match. When William I lay dead in Berlin, the _Sun’s_
-principal European correspondent, Arthur Brisbane, was concerned,
-not with the future of the continent, but with the aftermath of the
-Sullivan-Mitchell fight at Chantilly.
-
-The stories of the international yacht-races have always been told best
-in the _Sun_, whether the reporter was John R. Spears or William J.
-Henderson. Mr. Henderson, who is the ablest musical critic in America,
-is probably the best yachting reporter, too. While the world of music
-knows him through his distinguished critiques, particularly of opera,
-the _Sun_ knows him as a great reporter--one who would rank high among
-the best it has ever had. Another _Sun_ man who wrote yachting well is
-Duncan Curry, later of the _American_.
-
-In turf matters the _Sun_ has long been looked upon as an authority.
-In the heyday of racing the paper enjoyed the services of Christopher
-J. Fitzgerald, since then familiar as a starter on many race-tracks,
-and of Joseph Vila, now sporting editor of the _Evening Sun_.
-Fitzgerald, although a specialist in sports, was also a first-class
-general reporter. He is the hero of a story of the proverbial “_Sun_
-luck,” which in this case might better be called _Sun_ persistence and
-activity.
-
-In the latter part of December, 1892, the steamship Umbria, the
-fastest transatlantic boat of her day, was two weeks overdue at New
-York. Every newspaper had tugs out to watch for her first appearance.
-On the night of December 28 Fitzgerald was assigned to tug duty. The
-first tug he took down the moonlit bay broke her propeller in the ice;
-with the second tug he ran twenty miles beyond Sandy Hook. Presently
-an inward-bound liner appeared in the dark, and the other newspaper
-boats followed her; but this was not the Umbria, but the Britannic. An
-hour later a tank steamer came along, and Fitzgerald hailed her on the
-chance that she knew something about the missing ship.
-
-“The Umbria,” came back the answer, “is about five miles astern, coming
-in slowly.”
-
-The _Sun’s_ tug raced to sea and soon came alongside the overdue
-steamer. On board was Frank Marshall White, the _Sun’s_ London
-correspondent, and he had, all ready written, a story telling how the
-Umbria broke her machinery, and how the chief engineer lay on his back
-for five days trying to mend the break. Fitzgerald took White’s story
-and raced to Quarantine, where there was a telegraph-station, but, at
-that hour, no operator. Fitzgerald, himself an expert telegrapher,
-pounded the _Sun’s_ call, “SX,” for ten minutes, but the _Sun_ operator
-had gone home.
-
-Fitzgerald returned to the tug and went under full speed to the
-Battery, landing at 3.35 A.M. Running to Park Row, he found an
-assistant foreman of the _Sun_ composing-room enjoying his lemonade in
-Andy Horn’s restaurant. This man rounded up four or five printers, and
-they began setting up the story at 4 A.M. The _Sun_ had a complete and
-exclusive story, and twenty thousand copies were sold of Fitzgerald’s
-extra.
-
-Vila, like Fitzgerald a man of large physique and a former athlete,
-wrote the descriptions of a dozen Suburban Handicaps and Futurities,
-of a score of great college rowing-matches, of a thousand baseball
-and football games. Damon Runyon, the poet and sporting editor, once
-remarked that “Vila is the only sporting writer I have ever seen who
-knows exactly, at the end of a sporting event, just what he is going to
-write, when he is going to write it, and how much he is going to write.”
-
-When John W. Gates and John A. Drake came to the New York race-tracks
-and made bets of sensational magnitude, Vila was the only turf reporter
-able to give the exact figures of the amounts bet by the Western
-plungers. The printing of these in the _Sun_ so aroused the Jockey Club
-that a curb was put on big betting.
-
-The present sports staff includes some of the writers, like Nat
-Fleischer, “Daniel,” Frederick G. Lieb, and George B. Underwood, who
-were on the big sports staff of the New York _Press_ when that paper
-was amalgamated with the _Sun_.
-
-Returning to the big, bare room in the old Sun Building, cast the eye
-of memory through the thin forest of chandeliers entwined with lianas
-of electric wiring, and across the dull desks. Boss Lord has come in
-from dinner and is reading telegraphic bulletins from out-of-town
-correspondents or glancing at a growing pile of proofs. At the Albany
-desk Deacon Stillman is editing a batch of Congress news from Walter
-Clarke or Richard V. Oulahan in Washington, or of legislative news from
-Joseph L. McEntee in Albany, or is trying to think out an apt head for
-a double murder in Herkimer County. At the cable desk Cyrus C. Adams,
-long secretary of the American Geographical Society, is looking in
-a guide-book to discover whether the name of a street in Naples has
-not been distorted by the operators while in transit between the Rome
-correspondent and New York. The telegraph editor is telling the night
-editor, Van Anda or Smith, that he has “nothing much but yellow fever,”
-and the night editor is replying that “three-quarters of a column of
-yellow fever will be plenty.”
-
-At the city desk Clarke, who has half finished the heading on a bit
-about a green heron seen in Bronx Park, picks up the telephone to
-tell an East Side police-station reporter to investigate the report
-of an excursion boat gone aground on Hart’s Island, and then turns
-away to tell Ralph, or Chamberlin, or Joseph Fox, or Irwin, or Hill,
-or O’Malley, that a column and a half lead will do for the police
-investigation, or the great public dinner, or whatever his task may
-have been. As he finishes, a reporter lays on his desk a long story,
-and Clarke, reading the substance of the first page of it in an
-instant, hands it over to his assistant to edit.
-
-At the Jersey desk Boss Patton has polished the disquisitions of a
-suburban correspondent on the antics of a shark in Barnegat Bay, and is
-explaining to a space man, almost with tears, why it was necessary to
-cut down his article about the picnic of the Smith family at Peapack.
-
-The sporting editor, John Mandigo, has just bade good night to some
-distinguished visitor--say Mr. Fitzsimmons--and is bending over some
-copy from Fitzgerald or Vila. Perhaps Henry of Navarre and Domino are
-nose-and-nose in the stretch at Gravesend, or Amos Rusie has struck out
-seventeen opposing batters, or Kid Lavigne has lambasted Joe Walcott
-quite properly at Maspeth.
-
-At a side desk a copy-reader on local news is struggling with a mass
-of writing from various youthful reporters. “At seven ten o’clock last
-evening, as Policeman McGuffin was patrolling his beat, his attention
-was attracted by a cry of fire,” etc. The copy-reader knows that smoke
-will presently issue from the upper windows; knows, too, that he
-presently will boil the seven pages down to three lines and gently tell
-the reporter why he did it.
-
-The chess expert is turning a cabalistic cablegram from St. Petersburg
-into a detailed story of the contest between a couple of the masters of
-the game. The bowling man is writing a description, which may never see
-the light, of a desperate struggle between the Harlem Pin Kings and the
-Bensonhurst Alley Scorchers. H. L. Fitzpatrick is writing a golf story
-with such magnificent technique that Mandigo will not dare to cut a
-line out of it.
-
-A dozen reporters, great and small, are at the desks in the middle
-of the room, busy with pencils. In a side room three or four others,
-converts to the typewriter, are pounding out copy. In another room
-Riggs is dictating to a stenographer the day’s doings in political
-life.
-
-Four or five “rewrite men,” the “long wait” and his helpers, the
-“short waits,” are slipping in and out of the telephone-booths, taking
-and writing news articles from twenty points in the city where the
-Mulberry Street reporter, the police-station reporters, the Tenderloin
-man--who covers the West Thirtieth Street police-station, the Broadway
-hotels, and the theatrical district--and the Harlem man are still busy
-gathering news.
-
-From a room wisely distant comes the rattle of the telegraph. Half a
-dozen wires are bringing in the continent’s news. Half a dozen boys,
-spurred by their chief, Dan O’Leary, carry the typed sheets to the
-proper desks.
-
-The dramatic critic comes in and sits down at his desk to write
-two-thirds of a column about a first performance. The music critic has
-sent down a brief notice of the night’s opera.
-
-Most of the reporters finish their work and go out. One or two remain
-to write special articles for the Sunday papers. A sporting reporter is
-spinning a semi-fictional yarn of life in Chinatown. A police reporter
-is composing little classics of life in Dolan’s Park Row restaurant.
-
-At one o’clock there is a rumbling of the presses in the basement, and
-soon copies of the first edition come to the desks of the news-masters.
-Lord suggests to the night editor a shift of front-page articles.
-Clarke, his pencil flashing, marks in additions to the story of a late
-accident. A cub waits patiently for a discarded paper, to see whether
-his piece has got in. An older reporter, who wrote the story in the
-first column of the first page, does not look at his own work, but
-turns to the sporting page to read the racing entries for the next
-day--his day off.
-
-At 1.27 A.M. Clarke rises and goes home. At two o’clock Lord closes
-his desk. Most of the desk men disappear; the work is done. The night
-editor--Van Anda or the imperturbable Smith--remains at his desk, with
-the “long wait” reporter to bear him company. At half past three they
-also go, and the watchman begins to turn out the lights. Down below,
-the presses are tossing forth the product of a night’s work in the big,
-bare, old room.
-
-A story of the _Sun_ would be incomplete without a sketch of its little
-sister. The _Evening Sun_ was established by Mr. Dana nearly twenty
-years after he bought the _Sun_. He saw a place for a one-cent evening
-newspaper, for the only journal of that description then published in
-New York was the _Daily News_, which was largely a class publication.
-The leading evening newspapers were the _Evening Post_, the _Commercial
-Advertiser_, and the _Mail and Express_, selling for three cents and
-catering to a highbrow or a partisan clientele.
-
-The first _Evening Sun_ was issued on March 17, 1887, at an hour when
-the St. Patrick’s Day parade was being reviewed by Mayor Hewitt. With
-its four pages of six columns each, its brief, lively presentation
-of general news, and its low price, the paper was an immediate
-success--though not the success that it is to-day, with its sixteen
-pages, its wealth of special articles, and the many features that make
-it one of America’s best evening newspapers.
-
-The new paper had no titular editor-in-chief. Mr. Dana was the editor
-of the _Sun_ and had the general guidance of the evening paper. Dana’s
-associate, the publisher of the _Sun_, William M. Laffan, took a deep
-interest in the welfare of the new venture, and the _Evening Sun_ was
-often referred to as his “baby.”
-
-The first managing editor of the paper was Amos J. Cummings, with
-Allan Kelly as city editor and John McCormick as sporting editor. When
-Cummings went to Congress, E. J. Edwards took his place and remained
-as managing editor until August, 1889, when Arthur Brisbane returned
-from the post of London correspondent of the _Sun_ to manage the
-evening paper.
-
-It was Brisbane who induced Richard Harding Davis, then a young
-reporter in Philadelphia, to come to New York. As Davis was walking
-up from the ferry one morning in October, 1889, on his way to take
-up his new duties, he was taken in hand, in City Hall Park, by a
-bunco-steerer. Davis listened to the man’s wiles, turned him over to
-the police of the City Hall station, and then hurried to the _Evening
-Sun_ office to write a story about it for the paper. Davis’s _Van
-Bibber_ stories, the first of his fiction to attract wide attention,
-were originally printed in the _Evening Sun_, in 1890. As a reporter
-under Brisbane, Davis picked up much of the information and experiences
-that coloured his fiction.
-
-When Brisbane went to the Pulitzer forces, he was succeeded as managing
-editor by W. C. McCloy, who had been city editor, and who remained at
-the head of the news department for more than twenty years.
-
-Jacob A. Riis, who had been the police-headquarters reporter of the
-_Tribune_ since 1877, went to the _Evening Sun_ in 1890, coincident
-with the publication of his first popular work, “How the Other Half
-Lives.” Other of his works, including “The Children of the Poor” and
-“Out of Mulberry Street,” were written while he was the chief police
-reporter of the _Evening Sun_. Riis’s work was valuable, not only to
-the paper, but to the city itself. His writings attracted the attention
-of Theodore Roosevelt when the future President was head of the police
-board of New York (1895–1897), and the men became close friends.
-Together they worked to improve conditions in the tenement districts,
-and Roosevelt called Riis “New York’s most useful citizen.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- WILL IRWIN
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- FRANK WARD O’MALLEY
-]
-
-[Illustration:
-
- EDWIN C. HILL
-]
-
-Thomas M. Dieuaide, whose work for the _Sun_ in the Spanish War has
-been referred to in this volume, and who became city editor of the
-_Evening Sun_, was one of Riis’s colleagues. Dieuaide was the author of
-the _Evening Sun’s_ broadside against the black vice of the East Side.
-Printed in 1901, shortly before the beginning of a mayoralty campaign,
-it was a prime factor in the election of a reforming administration.
-
-Richard Harding Davis was not the only fiction-writer to graduate
-from the _Evening Sun’s_ school. Irvin S. Cobb got his start in the
-North as an _Evening Sun_ reporter. He came to New York from Paducah,
-Kentucky, rented a hall room, and sat down and wrote to the managing
-editor of the _Evening Sun_ a letter of application so humorous that
-he was employed immediately. His report of the peace conference at
-Portsmouth, New Hampshire, following the Russo-Japanese War, attracted
-wide attention. Stephen French Whitman and Algernon Blackwood, the
-novelists, were also _Evening Sun_ men.
-
-The _Evening Sun’s_ list of former dramatic critics includes Acton
-Davies and Edward Fales Coward, both playwrights, and Charles
-B. Dillingham, the theatrical manager. Arthur Woods, recently
-police commissioner of New York, and Robert Adamson, recently fire
-commissioner, were old _Evening Sun_ men. Frederick Palmer, Associated
-Press correspondent with the British forces in the great war, and
-Arthur Ruhl, a special correspondent at the front, are _Evening Sun_
-alumni.
-
-In the early years of the _Evening Sun_ the chief editorial writer was
-James T. Watkins, whom Mr. Laffan had known in California as a man of
-wide scholarship and an economic expert. He was so prolific that it
-was a common saying in the office that, with Watkins at his desk, the
-_Evening Sun_ needed no other writers of editorial articles. Frank H.
-Simonds, who had been an editorial writer for the _Sun_ since 1908,
-became chief editorial writer for the _Evening Sun_ in 1913. In 1914
-his war articles attracted wide attention. He was afterward editor of
-the _Tribune_.
-
-Other writers for the editorial page were Edward H. Mullin, an Irishman
-from Dublin, and Frederic J. Gregg. The chief editorial writer is now
-James Luby, who is assisted by an _Evening Sun_ veteran, Winfield S.
-Moody.
-
-The managing editors since W. C. McCloy have been Charles P. Cooper,
-James Luby, and the present incumbent, George M. Smith, for many years
-night editor of the _Sun_, and its managing editor in the absence of
-Mr. Lord.
-
-After Allan Kelly, the city editors were W. C. McCloy, Charles P.
-Cooper, Ervin Hawkins, Nelson Lloyd, and T. M. Dieuaide. Mr. Lloyd, who
-left the paper to write fiction, had served as city editor from 1897 to
-1904.
-
-The _Evening Sun_ has always had a particular appeal to the woman
-reader. Its first woman reporter, Miss Helen Watterson, of Cleveland,
-Ohio, was induced to come East in Brisbane’s régime to write a column
-called “The Woman About Town,” and ever since 1890 the staff of women
-writers on the paper has been increasing. The _Evening Sun_ has a page
-or two a day of feature articles written for women, by women, about
-women.
-
-The financial and sports departments of the _Evening Sun_ make it a
-man’s paper, too. No home-going broker would dare to board the subway
-without a copy of the Wall Street edition of the _Evening Sun_. A large
-staff of sporting writers, captained by Joseph Vila, provides each day
-a page or two of authoritative athletic news.
-
-The _Sun_ and the _Evening Sun_ are run as separate publications, each
-with a complete staff, but their presses and purposes are one.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-THE FINEST SIDE OF “THE SUN”
-
- _Literary Associations of an Editorial Department That
- Has Encouraged and Attracted Men of Imagination and
- Talent.--Mitchell, Hazeltine, Church, and Their Colleagues._
-
-
-The _Sun’s_ association with literature, particularly with fiction, has
-been more intimate than that of any other daily American newspaper. Ben
-Day had a taste for fiction, else the moon hoax, a bit of good writing
-as well as the greatest of fakes, would not have appeared. In the time
-of Moses Y. Beach the balloon hoax and other writings of Poe were in
-the _Sun_. Moses S. Beach, who owned or controlled the paper for twenty
-years, brought popularity and profit to it through stories written
-exclusively for the _Sun_ by Mary J. Holmes, Horatio Alger, Jr., and a
-dozen other authors whose tales compelled readers to burn the midnight
-gas.
-
-Under Dana the _Sun’s_ interest in literature became broader, more
-intense. Dana’s knowledge that the most avid appetite of the public
-was for the short story and the novel, led him to encourage his men
-to adopt, when feasible, the fiction form in news writing. In his
-four-page daily there was not much room for romance proper, but when
-the Sunday _Sun_ was under way, its eight pages afforded space for
-tales of fancy.
-
-In the first few years of Dana’s ownership the walks of American
-literature were not crowded. As late as 1875 the _Sun_ lamented:
-
- For younger rising men we look almost in vain. Bret Harte gives
- no promise of lasting fecundity. Howells does charming work,
- and will probably long remain in position as a dainty but not
- suggestive or formative writer. Aldrich is very slight. John
- Hay easily won whatever name he has, and it will easily pass
- away. Henry James the younger is one of the rising men, the
- youth of literature.
-
- But of all these there is not one who has yet discovered the
- stuff out of which the kings and princes, or even the barons,
- of literature are made.
-
-Harte, having written his most famous short stories, had come East.
-Howells, then thirty-eight, had published three or four novels, but
-“The Rise of Silas Lapham” was ten years ahead. John Hay, then on the
-_Tribune_ editorial staff, had written his “Pike County Ballads” and
-“Castilian Days.” Henry James had put forth only “Watch and Ward.” To
-these budding geniuses the general public was rather inclined to prefer
-Augusta Evans’s “St. Elmo,” E. P. Roe’s “Barriers Burned Away,” and
-Edward Eggleston’s “Hoosier Schoolmaster.”
-
-Notwithstanding the expressed doubt as to Harte’s fecundity, Dana
-admired his work and printed his stories in the _Sun_ for years
-afterward. Late in the seventies he bought Harte’s output and
-syndicated it--probably the first successful application of the
-newspaper syndicate system to fiction. About the same period Robert
-Louis Stevenson’s earlier successes, such as “The Treasure of
-Franchard” and “The Sire de Maletroit’s Door,” were having their first
-American printing in the _Sun_, their original appearance having been
-in _Temple Bar_ and other English magazines.
-
-The files of the _Sun_ for 1891 contain writings of Stevenson that are
-omitted from most, if not from all of the collections of his works.
-These are parts of his articles on the South Seas, an ambitious series
-which he was unable to finish. Some of them were printed in the
-London _Black and White_. All of them appeared in the _Sun_. Through
-the _Sun’s_ literary syndicate the American public gained some of its
-earliest acquaintance with Harte and Henry James. Kipling’s “Light That
-Failed” had its first American appearance in the _Sun_ in the autumn
-of 1890. It may interest Mr. James’s admirers to know that one of the
-Middle Western newspapers, having bought a James novel from the _Sun_,
-played it up with a gingery head-line:
-
- GEORGINA’S REASONS!
-
- HENRY JAMES’S LATEST STORY!
-
- A Woman Who Commits Bigamy and Enforces Silence on
- Her Husband!
-
- Two Other Lives Made Miserable by Her Heartless Action!
-
-Among the literary men given less to fiction and more to history,
-sociology, and philosophy who have yielded to the _Sun’s_ columns
-from their treasure, sometimes anonymously, were Jeremiah Curtin, the
-translator of Sienkiewicz and Tolstoy and an authority on folk-lore;
-George Ticknor Curtis, jurist and writer on the Constitution; Goldwin
-Smith, whose views on the subject of the destiny of Canada coincided
-with Dana’s, and who contributed to the _Sun_ hundreds of articles
-from his store of philosophical and political wisdom; Charles Francis
-Adams, Jr., who wrote on railway management; General Adam Badeau, one
-of Grant’s biographers; William Elliot Griffis, probably the most
-authoritative of all American writers upon Japanese affairs; and
-Francis Lynde Stetson, the distinguished authority on corporation and
-railway law.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- PAUL DANA
-]
-
-Of the more strictly journalistic writers who, although not attached
-permanently to the _Sun’s_ staff, contributed to its news and editorial
-columns, the names rise of James S. Pike, of Joseph Pulitzer and
-his predecessor as editor of the _World_, William Henry Hurlbut; of
-James F. Shunk and his brother-in-law, Chauncey F. Black, both of
-Pennsylvania and both humorists; of Edward Spencer, a writer of fiction
-who displayed splendid imaginative qualities, and of Oliver Dyer, whose
-range of ability was so great that while one day he wrote for Bonner’s
-_Ledger_ advice to distressed lovers, the next day would find him
-penning for the _Sun_ an exhaustive article on the methods employed in
-building a railroad across the Andes!
-
-Dana encouraged the men who wrote exclusively, or almost entirely,
-for the _Sun_, to write fiction. Edward P. Mitchell, whom Mr. Dana
-attracted to the _Sun_ from the Lewiston (Maine) _Journal_ in 1875,
-when Mr. Mitchell was twenty-three years old, wrote for the _Sun_
-at least a score of short stories of between two thousand and six
-thousand words. Two of his tales--“The Ablest Man in the World” and
-“The Tachypomp,” both scientific fantasies of remarkably ingenious
-construction, were included in the Scribner collection of “Short
-Stories by American Authors,” Mr. Mitchell being the only writer doubly
-represented in those volumes. “The Ablest Man in the World” also
-has its place in Stedman and Hutchinson’s distinguished “Library of
-American Literature.”
-
-Other short stories of Mr. Mitchell’s, like “The Man Without a Body”
-and “The Balloon Tree,” are remembered by older _Sun_ readers for
-their ingenious form and delightful narrative. Mr. Mitchell’s smaller
-sketches, numbering perhaps three hundred, included not only fancy but
-humour, and particularly little burlesques delicately picturing the
-weaknesses of the great or quasi-great men of the day. As a change
-from his strictly editorial work he might write a description of Mark
-Twain in his observatory, armed with a boat-hook and preparing to
-fend off a comet; or, becoming Mr. Dana’s reporter, he would expose a
-spiritualistic séance of the Eddy Brothers somewhere up in Vermont, or
-go to Madison Square to record the progress of George Francis Train
-toward world dictatorship by self-evolution on a diet of peanuts; or he
-would write a dramatic criticism of the appearance of the _Sun’s_ droll
-friend, George, the Count Joannes, as _Hamlet_.
-
-These few instances, a dozen out of twenty thousand articles that Mr.
-Mitchell wrote for the _Sun_, are not mentioned as a key to the general
-tenor of his work--which has covered everything from the definition
-of a mugwump to the interpretation of a President’s Constitutional
-powers--but rather as an indication of the _Sun’s_ catholicity in
-subjects. If incidentally they serve to counteract the impression that
-the editorship of a great newspaper is gained through mere erudition,
-as opposed to a fine understanding of the very human reader, so much
-the better.
-
-From his first day with the _Sun_ Mr. Mitchell absorbed his chief’s
-lifelong belief that the range of public interest was infinite. As he
-said in 1916, in an address to the students of the Pulitzer School of
-Journalism on “The Newspaper Value of Non-Essentials”:
-
- Sometimes people are as much interested in queer names, like
- Poke Stogis, for example, or in the discussion of a question
- such as “What Is the Best Ghost in Fiction?” or “How Should
- Engaged Couples Act at the Circus?” or “What Is a Dodunk?”
- or “Do the Angels Play Football?” as some other people are
- interested in the conference of the great powers.
-
- It is well to remember always this psychological factor.
- Both the range of the newspaper and the attractive power of
- the writer for the newspaper in any department depend upon
- the breadth of sympathy with human affairs and the diversity
- of things in which he, the writer, takes a genuine personal
- interest.
-
-In that speech the _Sun’s_ judgment of what the people want, whether
-it be in news, editorial, or fiction, is restated exactly as it might
-have been stated at any time within the last fifty years. And Dana
-and Mitchell are found in agreement not only upon the subject of
-what the reader wishes, but upon the necessity for the preservation
-in newspapers, as well as in books, of the ideals of the language.
-Speaking at a conference held at Princeton University in 1917, Mr.
-Mitchell said:
-
- The most serious practical evil that will result from the
- elimination of the classics will fall upon the English
- language itself. The racial memory begins to decay, the racial
- imagination, the begetter of memory, begins to weaken, the
- sense of precise meanings begins to lose its edge, and the
- English language ceases to be a vital thing and becomes a mere
- code of arbitrary signals wigwagged from mouth to ear. Were
- I the emergency autocrat of this language, I should proclaim
- in drastic regulations and enforce by severe penalties the
- American duty of adherence to the old habits of speech, the old
- scrupulous respect for the finer shades of meaning, the old
- rigid observance of the morality of word relations; and this, I
- believe, can be done only by maintaining the classical culture
- at high potency.
-
-Mr. Mitchell was born in Maine in 1852, and was graduated from Bowdoin
-in 1871. It is curious to note, scanning the names of the editors and
-proprietors, how the _Sun_ has drawn upon New England.
-
-Benjamin H. Day was born in West Springfield, Massachusetts, April 10,
-1810.
-
-Moses Yale Beach was born in Wallingford, Connecticut, January 7, 1800.
-
-Moses Sperry Beach was born in Springfield, Massachusetts, October 5,
-1822.
-
-Charles A. Dana was born in Hinsdale, New Hampshire, August 8, 1819.
-
-Edward P. Mitchell was born in Bath, Maine, March 24, 1852.
-
-Frank A. Munsey was born in Mercer, Maine, August 21, 1854.
-
-Any grouping of _Sun_ men on the purely literary side brings the name
-of Hazeltine to stand with those of Dana and Mitchell. Mayo Williamson
-Hazeltine was a fine example of the scholar in newspaper work; an
-example of the way in which Dana, with his intellectual magnificence,
-found the best for his papers.
-
-Educated at Harvard and Oxford and in continental Europe, Hazeltine
-came to the _Sun_ in 1878, and was its literary critic until his
-death in 1909. During the same period he was also one of its
-principal writers of articles on foreign politics and sociology.
-His book-reviews, published in the _Sun_ on Sundays, which made the
-initials “M. W. H.” familiar to the whole English-reading world, were
-marvels of comprehension. Many a publisher of a three-volume historical
-work lamented when it attracted Hazeltine’s attention, for his review,
-whether two columns or seven, usually compressed into that space all
-that the average student cared to know about the book, reducing the
-high cost of reading from six or eight dollars to a nickel.
-
-Hazeltine enjoyed, under both Dana and Mitchell, practically his own
-choice of subjects, a free hand with them, and a generous income; and
-in return, for more than thirty years, he poured into the columns
-of the _Sun_ a wealth of the erudition which was his by right of
-education, travel, an intense interest in all things intellectual, and
-a wonderful memory.
-
-In the list of writers of editorial articles which includes Dana,
-Mitchell, William O. Bartlett, and Hazeltine, are found also the names
-of Frank P. Church, E. M. Kingsbury, Napoleon L. Thiéblin, James Henry
-Wilson, John Swinton, Henry B. Stanton, Fitz-Henry Warren, William T.
-Washburn, Harold M. Anderson, Frank H. Simonds, and Henry M. Armstrong.
-Of these Church stands alone as the writer in whose case the _Sun_
-broke its rule that the anonymity of editorial writers is absolute.
-After Mr. Church’s death on April 11, 1906, it was announced in the
-_Sun_ that he was the author of what for more than twenty years has
-been regarded as the most popular editorial article ever written. It
-appeared on September 21, 1897:
-
-
- IS THERE A SANTA CLAUS?
-
- We take pleasure in answering at once and thus prominently the
- communication below, expressing at the same time our great
- gratification that its faithful author is numbered among the
- friends of the _Sun_:
-
- DEAR EDITOR:
-
- I am eight years old. Some of my little friends say there is no
- Santa Claus. Papa says “If you see it in the _Sun_ it’s so.”
- Please tell me the truth, is there a Santa Claus?
-
- VIRGINIA O’HANLON.
-
- 115 West Ninety-Fifth Street.
-
-Virginia, your little friends are wrong. They have been affected by the
-skepticism of a skeptical age. They do not believe except they see.
-They think that nothing can be which is not comprehensible by their
-little minds. All minds, Virginia, whether they be men’s or children’s,
-are little. In this great universe of ours man is a mere insect, an
-ant, in his intellect, as compared with the boundless world about him,
-as measured by the intelligence capable of grasping the whole of truth
-and knowledge.
-
-Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus. He exists as certainly as love
-and generosity and devotion exist, and you know that they abound and
-give to your life its highest beauty and joy. Alas, how dreary would
-be the world if there were no Santa Claus! It would be as dreary as if
-there were no Virginias. There would be no childlike faith then, no
-poetry, no romance, to make tolerable this existence. We should have
-no enjoyment except in sense and sight. The eternal light with which
-childhood fills the world would be extinguished.
-
-Not believe in Santa Claus! You might as well not believe in fairies!
-You might get your papa to hire men to watch in all the chimneys on
-Christmas Eve to catch Santa Claus, but even if they did not see Santa
-Claus coming down, what would that prove? Nobody sees Santa Claus, but
-that is no sign that there is no Santa Claus. The most real things in
-the world are those that neither children nor men can see. Did you ever
-see fairies dancing on the lawn? Of course not, but that’s no proof
-that they are not there. Nobody can conceive or imagine all the wonders
-there are unseen and unseeable in the world.
-
-You tear apart the baby’s rattle and see what makes the noise inside,
-but there is a veil covering the unseen world which not the strongest
-man, nor even the united strength of all the strongest men that ever
-lived, could tear apart. Only faith, fancy, poetry, love, romance, can
-push aside that curtain and view and picture the supernal beauty and
-glory beyond. Is it all real? Ah, Virginia, in all this world there is
-nothing else real and abiding.
-
-No Santa Claus! Thank God, he lives, and he lives forever. A thousand
-years from now, Virginia, nay, ten times ten thousand years from now,
-he will continue to make glad the heart of childhood.
-
-Church, as one intimate wrote upon his death, after more than thirty
-years with the _Sun_, had all the literary gifts, “the tender fancy,
-the sympathetic understanding of human nature, the humour, now wistful,
-now joyous, the unsurpassed delicacy of touch.”
-
-[Illustration:
-
- WILLIAM M. LAFFAN
-]
-
-In dramatic criticism, where the _Sun_ has required from its writers
-somewhat more than the mere ability to praise or blame, its roster
-bears such names as Frank Bowman, Willard Bartlett, Elihu Root, William
-Stewart (“Walsingham”), who was the first of the dramatic critics to
-adopt an intimate style; Andrew Carpenter Wheeler, better known to
-the public under his pen-name of “Nym Crinkle,” whose reviews were a
-feature of the Sunday issue of the _Sun_; William M. Laffan, the always
-brilliant and sometimes caustic; Franklin Fyles, who wrote plays as
-well as reviews of plays; John Corbin, the scholarly analyst; Walter
-Prichard Eaton, author of “The American Stage of To-day,” and Lawrence
-Reamer, who has been with the _Sun_, as reporter or critic, for a
-quarter of a century.
-
-In criticism of opera and other musical events the _Sun_, through the
-writings of William J. Henderson, has pleased the general public as
-well as the musicians, and has added many sound and scholarly chapters
-to newspaper literature.
-
-In book-reviewing a hundred pens have served the _Sun_. Hazeltine, E.
-P. Mitchell, Willard Bartlett, Erasmus D. Beach, George Bendelari, Miss
-Dana Gatlin, H. M. Anderson, and Grant M. Overton are but a few of the
-men and women who have told _Sun_ readers what’s worth while.
-
-For _Sun_ reporters the Sunday paper has been a favourable field for
-an excursion into fiction-writing. In its columns a man with a tale
-to tell has every chance. There William Norr gave, in his “Pearl of
-Chinatown,” the real atmosphere of a little part of New York that once
-held romance. It was for the Sunday _Sun_ that Edward W. Townsend
-created his celebrated characters, _Chimmie Fadden_, _Miss Fanny_,
-_Mr. Paul_, and the rest of that happy, if slangy, family. Clarence
-L. Cullen laid bare the soul of alcoholic adventurers in his “Tales
-of the Ex-Tanks.” Ed Mott made famous the bears of Pike County,
-Pennsylvania. David A. Curtis related the gambling ways of _Old Man
-Greenlaw_ and his associates. Charles Lynch conferred the title of the
-Duke of Essex Street upon an obscure lawyer, and made him the talk of
-the East Side. Joseph Goodwin brought to the notice of an ignorant
-world the ways of _Sarsaparilla Reilly_ and other Park Row restaurant
-heroes. David Graham Phillips, Samuel Hopkins Adams, and other men
-destined to be known through their books, ground out, for glory and
-eight dollars a column, the yarns--sometimes fact turned into fiction,
-sometimes fiction masked as fact--that kept the readers of the Sunday
-_Sun_ from getting out into the open air.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-“THE SUN” AND YELLOW JOURNALISM
-
- _The Coming and Going of a Newspaper Disease.--Dana’s Attitude
- Toward President Cleveland.--Dana’s Death.--Ownerships of Paul
- Dana, Laffan, Reich, and Munsey._
-
-
-Of such things as we have mentioned here, putting into the necessary
-news, attractively written, a proper seasoning of regional colour and
-atmosphere, humour and pathos, the _Sun_ has been made since Dana came
-to it. He created a new journalism, but it was a decent and distinct
-kind, appealing to the intellect rather than to the passions. It gave
-room for the honest expression of everybody’s opinion, from Herbert
-Spencer to _Chimmie Fadden_. Because of this, because he had lifted
-American newspaper work out of the dust of tradition, Dana had a holy
-anger when a newer journalism tried to throw it into the mud.
-
-When Henry Watterson was called as an expert witness in proceedings to
-appraise the estate of Joseph Pulitzer, in 1914, the veteran editor of
-the Louisville _Courier-Journal_ made an interesting statement on this
-subject:
-
- There is much confusion in the public mind about what is known
- as “yellow journalism.” There have been several periods of
- it in New York. James Gordon Bennett was the first yellow
- journalist, and Charles A. Dana was the second. Mr. Pulitzer
- was the third. Finally, when Mr. Hearst came along, he was
- the fourth, and I think he quite filled the field of yellow
- journalism.
-
- As Mr. Bennett became more respectable and Mr. Dana more fixed
- in his efforts, they were raised in the public estimation. So
- was Mr. Pulitzer. I think the field of yellow journalism is so
- filled by the Hearst newspapers that they no more compete with
- the _World_ than with the _Herald_ or the _Sun_.
-
-Mr. Watterson did not define yellow journalism. Perhaps he considered
-it broadly as sensational journalism. The elder Bennett was sensational
-to the extent that he printed things which the sixpenny papers of his
-time did not print. He made the interview popular, and he was the first
-editor to see the value of paying attention to financial news.
-
-So far as printing human news is concerned, Benjamin H. Day worked that
-field before Bennett started the _Herald_. If Mr. Watterson considered
-Dana a yellow journalist, what else was Day, with his stories about the
-sodden things of the police-courts, or his description of Miss Susan
-Allen smoking a cigar and dancing in Broadway?
-
-Printing a diagram of the scene of a murder, with a big black X to mark
-the spot where the victim was found, did not make the _World_ a yellow
-newspaper, for Amos Cummings began to print murder charts as soon as
-he became managing editor of the _Sun_. Putting black-faced type over
-a story on the front page did not make the _World_ or the _Journal_
-yellow, for Cummings, when he was on the _Tribune_, was the first to
-use big type in head-lines, and the _Tribune_ was never accused of
-yellowness.
-
-If pictures made a paper yellow, Dana was not yellow, for he used few
-illustrations in the news pages of the paper. Again, if head-lines
-indicate yellowness, Dana must be acquitted of being a yellow
-journalist; for the head-lines of the _Sun_, from the first year of
-Dana’s control until after his death, remained practically unchanged,
-and were conservative to the last degree.
-
-Head-lines and pictures, so far as their sensational attraction was
-concerned, meant nothing to Dana. He was not yellow, but white and
-alive. The distinction was clearly explained by Mr. Mitchell:
-
- Remember the difference between white and yellow. The essential
- difference is not of method or quality of product, but of
- purpose and of moral responsibility or moral debasement.
- Yellow will tell you that it means force, originality, and
- independence in the presentation of ideas. This is consolatory
- to yellow, but not accurate. Yellow will print an interesting
- exaggeration or misstatement, knowing it to be such. If in
- doubt about the truth of alleged news, but in no doubt whatever
- as to its immediate value as a sensation, yellow will give the
- benefit of the doubt to the sensation every time, and print it
- with head-lines tall enough to reach to Saturn. White won’t;
- that is the only real color test. I hope you are all going to
- be white, and not only white, but red, white, and blue.
-
-No yellow journalist he, Dana! To paraphrase Webster, he smote the
-rock of humanity, and abundant streams of literature rushed forth.
-If he startled, he startled the intellect, not the eye. His appeals
-were to the intelligence, the soul, the risibilities of man, and not
-to his primitive passions. He believed that all the information, the
-philosophy, and the humour of the world could be conveyed through the
-type of a daily newspaper as surely as and much more broadly than they
-had been conveyed through the various mediums of the old newspapers,
-the encyclopedias, the novels, the pulpit, and the lecture platform.
-
-When Dana attacked yellow journalism--the expressive phrase was
-fastened in the language by Ervin Wardman, in the _Press_--it was in
-the firm belief that this new journalism, the “journalism that did
-things,” was doing the wrong thing; that it was breaking down the
-magnificent structure that had been reared by himself and Greeley and
-Raymond and Bennett and Hurlbut. This group had been possessed of
-all the newspaper faculties and facilities. If yellow journalism had
-been right, they would have raised it to its highest peak. Dana, who
-knew better than any editor of his time what the public wanted, could
-have produced a perfect yellow _Sun_; but he chose to print a golden
-one. He wrought more genuine journalistic advance than any other man
-in history. As Mr. Mitchell wrote of him in _McClure’s Magazine_ in
-October, 1894, three years before Mr. Dana’s death:
-
- The revolution which his genius and invention have wrought in
- the methods of practical journalism in America during the past
- twenty-five years can be estimated only by newspaper-makers.
- His mind, always original, and unblunted and unwearied at
- seventy-five, has been a prolific source of new ideas in the
- art of gathering, presenting, and discussing attractively the
- news of the world.
-
- He is a radical and unterrified innovator, caring not a copper
- for tradition or precedent when a change of method promises a
- real improvement. Restlessness like his, without his genius,
- discrimination, and honesty of purpose, scatters and loses
- itself in mere whimsicalities or pettinesses; or else it
- deliberately degrades the newspaper upon which it is exercised.
-
- To Mr. Dana’s personal invention are due many, if not most,
- of the broad changes which within a quarter of a century have
- transformed journalism in this country. From his individual
- perception of the true philosophy of human interest, more
- than from any other single source, have come the now general
- repudiation of the old conventional standards of news
- importance; the modern newspaper’s appreciation of the news
- value of the sentiment and humor of the daily life around
- us; the recognition of the principle that a small incident,
- interesting in itself and well told, may be worth a column’s
- space, when a large, dull fact is hardly worth a stickful’s;
- the surprising extension of the daily newspaper’s province so
- as to cover every department of general literature, and to take
- in the world’s fancies and imaginings as well as its actual
- events.
-
- The word “news” has an entirely different significance from
- what it possessed twenty-five or thirty years ago under the
- ancient common law of journalism as derived from England;
- and in the production of this immense change, greatly in
- the interest of mankind and of the cheerfulness of daily
- life, it would be difficult to exaggerate the direct and
- indirect influence of Mr. Dana’s alert, scholarly, and widely
- sympathetic perceptions.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- WILLIAM C. REICK
-]
-
-The assaults which Dana made upon yellow journalism were not actuated
-by the jealous envy of one who has himself overlooked an opportunity.
-Everything that the _Sun_ attacked in yellow newspapers was something
-to which the _Sun_ itself never would have stooped--the faked or
-distorted interview, the product of the thief or the eavesdropper,
-the collection of back-stairs gossip, the pilfered photograph, the
-revelation of personal affairs beyond the public’s business, the
-arrogation of official authority, the maudlin plea for sympathy in a
-factitious cause, the gross exaggeration for sensation’s sake of a
-trifling occurrence, the appeal to sensualism, and the demagogic attack
-upon the rich.
-
-Right endures, and where is yellow journalism? Gone where the woodbine
-twineth. Its prototype, the wild ass, stamps o’er its head and cannot
-break its sleep. The “journalism that does things” doesn’t do anything
-any more except to try and teach its men to write articles the way the
-_Sun_ has been printing them since 1868. In a chart of new journalism
-the largest, blackest X-mark would show where the body of new
-journalism, slain by public taste, lies buried forever.
-
-The New York _World_, once the most ingenious exponent of yellow
-journalism, has become as conservative as the _Sun_ was in the days
-when Joseph Pulitzer worked for Dana. Mr. Hearst’s papers, once the
-deepest of all yellows, now hold up their hands in horror when they
-see, beside them on the news-stands, the bold, black head-lines of the
-_Evening Post_!
-
-Yellow journalism said to its readers:
-
-“This way to the big show! We have a mutilated corpse, a scandal
-in high life, divorce details that weren’t brought out in court, a
-personal attack on the mayor, lifelike pictures of dead rats, the
-memoirs of a demented dressmaker, some neatly invented prison horrors,
-and a general denunciation of everybody who owns more than five hundred
-dollars. Don’t miss it!”
-
-Dana said to his readers:
-
-“Come, let me show you the clean stream of life; the newsboy with the
-trained dog, the new painting at the Metropolitan Museum, an Arabian
-restaurant on the East Side, the new Governor at Albany, the latest
-theory of planetary control, one book by Old Sleuth and another by
-Henry James, a ghost in a Berkshire tavern and an authentic recipe
-for strawberry shortcake, a clown who reads Molière and a king who
-plays pinochle, a digest of ten volumes of history and the shortest
-complete poem (“This bliz knocks biz”) ever written, a dark tragedy in
-the Jersey pines and a plan for a new subway, a talk with the Grand
-Lama and a home-run by Roger Connor, a panic in Wall Street and a poor
-little girl who finds a quarter.”
-
-In the long run--and it did not have to be very long--the more
-attractive offering was permanently chosen by newspaper-readers.
-
-The curious effect on American journalism of the conflict between _Sun_
-methods and the so-called new journalism was referred to, in an address
-delivered at Yale University on January 12, 1903, by Frank A. Munsey,
-then owner of the New York _Daily News_ and now proprietor of the _Sun_:
-
- The newspaperman of to-day is a composite type, the product
- of the _Sun_ and the New York _World_ of fifteen or eighteen
- years ago. These two newspapers represented two distinct and
- widely different styles of journalism. The _World_ was alert,
- daring, aggressive, and sensational. It was about the liveliest
- thing that ever swung into New York from the West.... No man
- has ever stamped himself more thoroughly upon his generation
- than has Joseph Pulitzer on the journalism of America. He was
- the originator and the founder of our present type of overgrown
- newspaper, with its illustrations and its merits and its
- defects.
-
- The part the _Sun_ played in this recreating and rejuvenating
- of the American press was purely literary. It was the first
- newspaper to make fiction out of facts--that is, to handle
- facts with the skill and manner of the novelist, so that they
- read like fiction and possessed all its charm and fascination.
- The _Sun_ at that time consisted of but four pages, and I am
- convinced that it was the best example of newspaper-making ever
- produced anywhere. With the exception of one or two of these
- fiction-fact stories so charmingly told, it was the perfection
- of condensation, accuracy, brilliancy.
-
-Mr. Munsey did not say, because it was not germane to his subject,
-that for fourteen years before the advent of Pulitzer, Dana had been
-demonstrating the news value of the human-interest story, and that
-it was almost entirely upon the human-interest story, twisted and
-exaggerated, that yellow journalism was founded. Mr. Munsey did not
-say, for he could not know, that fifteen years after his address at
-Yale the new journalism would be extinct and the _Sun_ would be still
-the _Sun_. The editors of to-day do not ask a reporter whether he can
-climb a porch or photograph an unwilling person, but whether he can see
-news and write it.
-
-An adequate history of the _Sun’s_ political activities during Dana’s
-time would fill volumes. Rather than the editor of an organ of the
-opposition, Dana was usually an opposition party in himself; not merely
-for the sake of opposition, but because the parties in power from 1869
-to 1897 usually happened to have practices or principles with which
-he, as the editor of the _Sun_, was in disagreement. His attacks on
-the Grant administration for the thievery that spotted it, and on the
-Hayes administration because of the circumstances under which Mr. Hayes
-came to the Presidential chair, were bitter and without relent. His
-opposition to Grover Cleveland, an intellectual rather than a personal
-war, began before Mr. Cleveland was a national figure. In September,
-1882, when the hitherto obscure Buffalonian was nominated for Governor
-of New York, the _Sun_ said:
-
- It is usually not a wise thing in politics, any more than in
- war, to take a private from the ranks and at one bound to
- promote him to be commander-in-chief; yet that is what has been
- done in the case of Grover Cleveland.
-
-In the Presidential campaign of 1884 the _Sun_ would not support
-Cleveland and could not support Blaine, whose conduct in Congress
-the _Sun_ had frequently condemned; so it advocated the hopeless
-cause of General Benjamin F. Butler, who had been elected Governor of
-Massachusetts in 1882, the year when Cleveland was chosen Governor of
-New York. Dana was not an admirer of Butler’s spectacular army career,
-or of his general political leanings, but he admired him for his
-attitude in the Hayes-Tilden scandal, and he believed that Butler,
-if elected President, would shake things up in Washington. The _Sun_
-supported him “as a man to be immensely preferred to either of the
-others and as a protest against such nominations.” Dana personally
-announced that sooner than support Blaine he would quit work and burn
-his pen.
-
-In 1885, opposing Cleveland’s free-trade policy, the _Sun_ vigorously
-supported Samuel J. Randall, of Pennsylvania, a protectionist Democrat,
-for speaker of the House, as against John G. Carlisle, of Kentucky, a
-free-trader; but Randall was beaten.
-
-The _Sun_ ridiculed Cleveland’s theories of civil-service reform,
-although it believed that real reforms were needed. On this point Dana
-wrote, in a letter:
-
- I do not believe in the establishment in this country of
- the German bureaucratic system, with its permanent staff of
- office-holders who are not responsible to the people, and whose
- tenure of place knows no variation and no end except the end of
- life. In my judgment a genuine reform of the evils complained
- of is reached by the vigorous simplification of the machinery
- of government, by the repeal of all superfluous laws, the
- abolition of every needless office, and the dismissal of every
- needless officer. The true American doctrine on this subject
- consists in the diminution of government, not in its increase.
-
-For all of its opposition to Cleveland, whom it dubbed the “stuffed
-prophet,” the _Sun_ preferred him to General Harrison in the campaign
-of 1888. It feared a return to power of the influences which it had
-combated during the administrations of Grant and Hayes. Four years
-afterward, however, the _Sun_ was strongly against the third nomination
-of Cleveland.
-
-In Mr. Cleveland’s second term the _Sun_ supported his course when Dana
-believed it to be American. While at first it considered the President
-too mild and conciliatory in matters of foreign policy, it praised him
-and his Secretary of State, Richard Olney, for their stand against
-Great Britain in the Venezuela boundary dispute; praised them just as
-heartily as it had condemned Mr. Cleveland’s earlier action in the
-Hawaiian matter, when the President withdrew the treaty of annexation
-which his predecessor had sent to the Senate.
-
-The _Sun’s_ most deadly weapon, ridicule, was constantly in play in
-the years of the Hawaiian complications. It found vulnerable spots in
-Mr. Cleveland’s re-establishment of the deposed Queen Liliuokalani and
-in the President’s sending of a commissioner--“Paramount” Blount, as
-the _Sun_ called him--without the advice and consent of the Senate.
-As jealous then as it is to-day of any raid by the Executive upon the
-Constitution or the powers of Congress, the _Sun_ had the satisfaction
-of a complete victory in the Hawaiian matter.
-
-On the other hand, the _Sun_ applauded Mr. Cleveland’s attitude on
-the money question and his brave stand against the mob in the Chicago
-railway strikes of 1894, when the President used troops to prevent the
-obstruction of the mails by Eugene V. Debs and his followers.
-
-Dana was seventy-seven years old when William J. Bryan--whom the _Sun_
-had already immortalized as the Boy Orator of the Platte--was nominated
-for the Presidency in 1896, but the veteran editor went at the task of
-exposing the free-silver fallacy with the same blithe vigour that he
-had shown twenty years before. His opinion, printed in the _Sun_ of
-August 6, 1896, is a good example of Dana’s clear style:
-
- The Chicago platform invites us to establish a currency which
- will enable a man to pay his debts with half as much
- property as he would have to use in order to pay them now. This
- proposition is dishonest. I do not say that all the advocates
- of the free coinage of silver are dishonest. Thousands of
- them--millions, if there be so many--are doubtless honest in
- intention. But I am unable to reconcile with any ideal of
- integrity a change in the law which will permit a man who has
- borrowed a hundred dollars to pay his debt with a hundred
- dollars each one of which is worth only half as much as each
- dollar he received from the lender.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- FRANK A. MUNSEY
-]
-
-Dana’s opinions on political questions were more eagerly sought than
-those of any other editor after Greeley’s death, and the _Sun’s_
-political news was complete; yet with Dana, and with the _Sun_,
-politics was, after all, only one small part of life. The whole
-world, with its facts and fancies, not the political problems of one
-continent, was the real field to be covered.
-
-Dana’s curiosity was all-embracing. After the _Sun’s_ financial success
-was assured he went abroad frequently, and saw not only western Europe,
-but Russia and the Levant. Of these he wrote in his “Eastern Journeys.”
-He knew a dozen languages. He conversed with the Pope about Dante and
-with Russian peasants about Tolstoy. His knowledge of Spanish, acquired
-early in life, made easy his travels in Mexico and Cuba. Everywhere he
-went he talked of freedom with its friends, and encouraged them. He
-knew Kossuth, Mazzini, Garibaldi, Clémenceau, Marti, and Parnell.
-
-At home, Dana’s amusements were chiefly literary and artistic--the
-study of languages, history, and _belles-lettres_, the collection of
-pottery and pictures. His Chinese porcelains were perhaps the best, in
-point of quality, in the Occident.
-
-“I am persuaded,” one critic said of them, “that Mr. Dana must have had
-a most profound instinct in relation to the whole subject.”
-
-After Mr. Dana’s death these porcelains, about four hundred in number,
-were sold at auction for nearly two hundred thousand dollars.
-
-In winter Dana lived in a large house which he built in 1880 at the
-corner of Madison Avenue and Sixtieth Street, and which held the art
-treasures that he began to gather in the first days of his prosperity.
-Here he kept his pictures, notably some fine specimens of the Barbizon
-school, and his books, which included some rare volumes, but which in
-the main were chosen for their usefulness.
-
-Dana’s happiest days were spent at his country place, Dosoris, an
-island near Glen Cove, on the north shore of Long Island. There,
-around a large, old-fashioned, square frame house, he made roads and
-flower-beds and planted trees from many parts of the world. He grew an
-oak from an acorn that was brought from the tomb of Confucius. He knew
-Gray’s “Botany” almost by heart, and could give an intimate description
-of every flower in the Dosoris gardens. His interest in plants was so
-deep that once, while travelling in Cuba with an eminent painter, he
-led his companion for hours through the hot hills of Vuelta Abajo in
-order to satisfy himself that a certain variety of pine did _not_ grow
-in that region.
-
-Dana’s was a normal, healthy life. He was a good horseman and swimmer
-and a great walker. When he was seventy-five years old he climbed to
-the top of Croyden Mountain, in New Hampshire, with a party of younger
-men puffing behind him. He found pleasure in all of life, whether it
-was at the office, where he worked steadily but not feverishly, or
-with his family among the rural delights of Dosoris, or surrounded by
-congenial literary spirits at the dinner-table.
-
-He knew no illness until his last summer. Up to June, 1897, the sturdy
-figure and the kindly face framed in a white beard were as familiar to
-the _Sun_ office as they were in the seventies. With Dana there was no
-slow decay of body or mind. He died at Dosoris on October 17, 1897, in
-the thirtieth year of his reign over the _Sun_.
-
-A few years before, on observing an obituary paragraph which Mr. Dana
-had written about some noted man, John Swinton asked his chief how much
-space he (Swinton) would get when his time came.
-
-“For you, John, two sticks,” said Mr. Dana. Turning to Mr. Mitchell,
-then his chief editorial writer, he added: “For me, two lines.”
-
-On the morning after Mr. Dana’s death every newspaper but one in
-New York printed columns about the career of the dean of American
-journalism. The _Sun_ printed only ten words, and these were carried at
-the head of the first editorial column, without a heading:
-
- CHARLES ANDERSON DANA, editor of the _Sun_, died yesterday
- afternoon.
-
-Mr. Swinton perhaps believed that Mr. Dana was joking when he said “two
-lines,” but Mr. Mitchell knew that his chief was in earnest. The order
-was characteristic of Dana. It was not false modesty. Perhaps it was a
-certain fine vanity that told him what was true--that he and his work
-were known throughout the land; that the _Sun_, in its perfection the
-product of his genius and vigour, would continue to rise as regularly
-as its celestial namesake; that all he had done would live on. He had
-made the paper so great that the withdrawal from it of one man’s hand
-was negligible.
-
-Dana was gone, but his son remained as principal owner, and his chief
-writer and most intimate intellectual associate for twenty years was
-left to form the _Sun’s_ policies as he had moulded them in Dana’s
-absences and as he shapes them to-day. His publisher, the astute
-Laffan, was still in charge of the _Sun’s_ financial affairs. Other men
-whom he had found and trained, like Frank P. Church, Mayo W. Hazeltine,
-and Edward M. Kingsbury in the editorial department, and Chester S.
-Lord and Daniel F. Kellogg in the news department, continued their work
-as if Dana still lived.
-
-With their grief doubt was not mingled. The _Sun’s_ success resulted
-from no secret formula that died with the discoverer. Half of Dana’s
-victory came by his attraction to himself of men who saw life and
-literature as he saw them; and so, in a magnificent way, he had made
-his work dispensable.
-
-And Dana’s was always the magnificent way. To him journalism was not a
-means of making money, but of interesting, elevating, and making happy
-every one who read the _Sun_ or wrote for it. He raised his profession
-to new heights. As Hazeltine wrote in the _North American Review_:
-
- One of Mr. Dana’s special titles to the remembrance of his
- fellow workers in the newspaper calling is the fact that,
- more than any other man on either side of the Atlantic, he
- raised their vocation to a level with the legal and medical
- professions as regards the scale of remuneration. He honored
- his fellow craftsmen of the pen, and he compelled the world to
- honor them.
-
-Shortly after the death of his father, Paul Dana, who was then
-forty-five years old, and who had been on the _Sun_ editorial staff for
-seventeen years, was made editor by vote of the trustees of the Sun
-Printing and Publishing Association. In the following year (1898) the
-younger Dana bought from Thomas Hitchcock, who was one of Charles A.
-Dana’s associates both in a financial and in a literary way, enough
-shares to give him the control of the paper.
-
-Paul Dana continued in control of the property for several years and
-held with credit his father’s title of editor until 1903. William
-Mackay Laffan, who had been associated with the elder Dana since 1877,
-next obtained the business control. His proprietorship was announced on
-February 22, 1902, and it continued until his death in 1909.[A]
-
- [A] The following editorial article appeared in the _Sun_ on
- July 26, 1918:
-
- “Mr. Paul Dana calls the _Sun’s_ attention to what he
- claims was an error in ‘The Story of the _Sun_’ as it
- originally appeared in the _Munsey Magazine_: the statement
- that ‘he [Mr. Dana] continued in control of the property
- until 1900.’ Mr. Dana states that he did not dispose of
- his controlling interest until 1902. The statement in the
- _Munsey Magazine_ publication of ‘The Story of the _Sun_’
- was founded upon the International Encyclopædia’s biography
- of William M. Laffan and also upon a statement published in
- the _Sun_ at the time of Mr. Laffan’s death in 1909, that
- Mr. Laffan obtained the control of the _Sun_ in 1900. When
- the _Munsey Magazine_ articles were reprinted in the Sunday
- _Sun_ the paragraph referred to by Mr. Dana was changed to
- read as follows:
-
- “‘Paul Dana continued in control of the property for
- several years and held with credit his father’s title of
- editor until 1903. William Mackay Laffan, who had been
- associated with the elder Dana since 1877, obtained the
- business control. His proprietorship was announced on
- February 22, 1902, and it continued until his death in
- 1909.’
-
- “We will let Mr. Dana’s version of this matter stand in
- ‘The Story of the _Sun_’ unless some further evidence
- appears on the disputed point.”
-
-Among the makers of the _Sun_ who best knew the paper and the
-intellectual demands of its readers, Laffan must be included with Dana
-and Mitchell. At the time when he came to be master of the paper, his
-career had covered the entire journalistic field, and he was, moreover,
-a thorough _Sun_ man, sympathetic with all the ideals of his old friend
-Dana.
-
-Laffan, who was born in Dublin, Ireland, and had a light and delightful
-brogue, was educated at Trinity College and at St. Cecilia’s School
-of Medicine. When he was twenty he went to San Francisco, where,
-beginning as a reporter, he became city editor of the _Chronicle_ and
-managing editor of the _Bulletin_. In 1870 he went to Baltimore, to
-be a reporter on the _Daily Bulletin_, and of this newspaper he became
-editor and part owner. Eventually he became the full owner of both
-the _Daily Bulletin_ and the _Sunday Bulletin_, and in this capacity
-he endeared himself to the citizens of Baltimore by his fight against
-political rings.
-
-He left newspaper work for a short time to become general
-passenger-agent of the Long Island Railroad; but in 1877, on Mr. Dana’s
-invitation, he went on the _Sun_ as a general writer. Himself an artist
-who modelled in clay, painted in oils and water-colours, and etched,
-his judgment made him valuable to the paper as an art critic.
-
-Like Mr. Dana, he was interested in Chinese porcelains, and he made a
-deeper study of them than did his employer. When a catalogue was needed
-for the Chinese porcelains in the Morgan collection in the Metropolitan
-Museum of Art, Mr. Laffan, who was an active trustee of the museum,
-was called upon to edit the work. He also edited a book on “Oriental
-Porcelain.” He was the author of “American Wood Engravers,” published
-in 1883. For these things he is remembered in the world of art. The men
-of the stage remember him as one of the most distinguished dramatic
-critics that New York has seen. Even to-day, in the comparison of the
-styles of critics old and new, Laffan’s incisive reviews are recalled
-as standards.
-
-In the business world of journalism Laffan is thought of chiefly as
-the publisher of the _Sun_ from 1884 on, and as the live spirit of the
-_Evening Sun_ for many of its years. As the actual director of the
-_Sun_--although his editorial powers were almost entirely delegated to
-Mr. Mitchell--Mr. Laffan was a picturesque and powerful figure. Beneath
-an inscrutable exterior he was distinctly a likable person.
-
-One day Laffan wrote a ten-line item, a bit about an exhibition of a
-friend’s painting, and asked the city editor to print it. He never
-commanded, even when he controlled the paper; he asked. The item was
-lost in the shuffle that night. The next day he rewrote it and again
-asked a place for it. It was printed in the first edition and left out
-of the city edition. For the third time he carried the article to the
-city editor, and without a sign of anger.
-
-“It seems to me,” he said, “that anybody can get anything printed in
-this paper--except the owner.”
-
-A millionaire advertiser asked Laffan to print an article about his pet
-charity.
-
-“Take it to Clarke,” said Laffan. “If he’ll print it for you, he’ll do
-more for you than he’ll do for me.”
-
-A New York newspaper once remarked of Laffan that “he never drove any
-man to drink, but he drove many a man to the dictionary.” That was a
-commentary on the unusual words which Laffan, whose vocabulary was
-wide, would occasionally use in an editorial article. His articles were
-never involved, however. They were not frequent, they were generally
-short, never without important purpose, and they drove home.
-
-Patient as Laffan was with lost items of his own, he was a man of fine
-human temper. One morning, on arriving at the office, he found that a
-Wall Street group of rich scoundrels had sued the _Sun_ for several
-hundred thousand dollars for its exposure of their methods. He called
-the city editor.
-
-“Mr. Mallon,” he said, “tell your young man who wrote the articles to
-go ahead and give these men better cause for libel suits!”
-
-The _Sun_ was making a vigorous war on a great railroad magnate. One
-day an attaché of the office informed Laffan that a man was waiting
-to see him who bore a contract which would bring to the _Sun_ four
-hundred thousand dollars’ worth of advertising from the magnate’s
-railroads.
-
-“Tell him to see the advertising manager,” said Laffan.
-
-“He insists on seeing you,” said the clerk.
-
-“Tell him to go to hell,” said Laffan.
-
-There was a keen humour in the big Irish head. Laffan was opposed to
-the amendment to the New York State constitution which provided for
-an expenditure of more than a hundred millions in improving the Erie
-Canal. Under his direction a _Sun_ reporter, John H. O’Brien, wrote
-a series of articles intended to shatter public faith in the huge
-investment. The amendment, however, was approved by a great majority.
-
-“Mr. O’Brien,” said Mr. Laffan to the reporter, a few days after the
-election, “I think it would be a very graceful thing on your part to
-give a little dinner to all those gentlemen who voted against the canal
-project.”
-
-Upon Mr. Laffan’s death, in November, 1909, the trustees of the
-Sun Printing and Publishing Association asked Mr. Mitchell, who
-had been made editor of the _Sun_ on July 20, 1903, to take up the
-administrative burden as well as the editorial. This Mr. Mitchell did
-for a little more than two years, although his personal inclinations
-were toward the literary construction and supervision of the paper
-rather than toward the business detail incident to the presidency of so
-large a corporation. The double load was lightened in December, 1911,
-when control of the _Sun_ was gained through stock purchase by William
-C. Reick, who became the president of the company, Mr. Mitchell being
-permitted to return to the editorial functions which have now engrossed
-him, either as Mr. Dana’s aid or as editor-in-chief, for more than
-forty years.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- EDWARD PAGE MITCHELL
- Editor of “The Sun”
-]
-
-Mr. Reick, who was born in Philadelphia in 1864, entered newspaper
-work in that city when he was nineteen years old. A few years later he
-removed to Newark, New Jersey, where he became the correspondent of
-the New York _Herald_. He attracted the attention of Mr. Bennett, the
-owner of the _Herald_, and in 1888 he was made editor of the _Herald’s_
-London and Paris editions. A year later he returned to America to
-become city editor of the _Herald_, the highest title then given on a
-newspaper which refuses to have a titular managing editor. In 1903 he
-was elected president of the New York Herald Company, and he remained
-in that position until 1906, when he left the _Herald_ to become
-associated with Adolph Ochs in the publication of the New York _Times_
-and with George W. Ochs in the publication of the Philadelphia _Public
-Ledger_.
-
-When Mr. Reick assumed the control of the _Sun_ properties, he devoted
-much care to the improvement of the _Evening Sun_, putting it under the
-managing editorship of George M. Smith, who had served for many years
-as news editor of the _Sun_ under Chester S. Lord. As Mr. Munsey said
-when he acquired the _Sun_ and the _Evening Sun_ from Mr. Reick:
-
- Very great credit is due Mr. Reick for the fine development of
- the _Evening Sun_ since it came under his control. I know of no
- man who has done a better and sounder piece of newspaper work
- at any time, in New York or elsewhere, than Mr. Reick has done
- on the _Evening Sun_.
-
-Among the events of the Reick régime were the retirement of Chester
-S. Lord from the managing editorship and of George B. Mallon from the
-city editorship, and the removal of the newspaper from its old home at
-Nassau and Frankfort Streets to the American Tract Society Building,
-one block farther south, at Nassau and Spruce Streets.
-
-It was during Mr. Reick’s control of the _Sun_ that Mr. Munsey, in the
-autumn of 1912, bought the New York _Press_, a one-cent Republican
-morning daily holding an Associated Press membership. The _Sun_ had
-lacked the Associated Press service since the fateful night when Mr.
-Dana bolted from that organization and started the Laffan News Bureau.
-
-Mr. Munsey bought the _Sun_ from Mr. Reick on June 30, 1916, and four
-days later, on July 3, the _Press_, with its Associated Press service,
-its best men, and some of its popular features, was absorbed by the
-_Sun_. As the _Press_ had been a penny paper, the price of the _Sun_
-was reduced to one cent, after having stood at two cents since the
-Civil War. It remained a penny paper until January 26, 1918, when the
-pressure of production-costs forced the price of all the big New York
-dailies to two cents.
-
-The amalgamation of the _Sun_ and the _Press_ wrought no change in the
-editorial department of the _Sun_, Mr. Mitchell remaining as its chief.
-Ervin Wardman, long the editor of the _Press_, became the publisher
-of the Sun and vice-president of the Sun Printing and Publishing
-Association. Mr. Reick remained with the organization in an advisory
-capacity. Keats Speed, the managing editor of the _Press_, became
-managing editor of the _Sun_, Kenneth Lord remaining as city editor.
-
-The _Sun_ has had five homes--at 222 William Street, where Benjamin H.
-Day struck off the first tiny number; at 156 Nassau Street, rented by
-Day in August, 1835, when the paper began to pay well; at the southwest
-corner of Nassau and Fulton Streets, to which Moses Y. Beach moved
-the _Sun_ in 1842; at Nassau and Frankfort Streets, the old Tammany
-Hall, which Dana and his associates bought; and at 150 Nassau Street,
-whither the _Sun_ moved in July, 1915. It is expected that the _Sun_
-will presently move to another and a fine home, for in September,
-1917, Mr. Munsey bought the Stewart Building, at the northeast corner
-of Broadway and Chambers Street, just north of City Hall Park. The
-site is generally admitted to be the most desirable building site
-downtown, so large is the ground space, so fine is the outlook over
-the spacious park, and so close is it to three subways, three or four
-elevated-railroad lines, and the Brooklyn Bridge.
-
-Should the criticism be made that this book is not all-inclusive,
-let it be remembered that there can be no really complete history of
-the _Sun_ except itself--the tons of files in which for eighty-five
-years _Sun_ men have drawn their pictures of life’s procession. In a
-narrative like this only the outlines of the _Sun’s_ course, margined
-with incidents of the men who made it great by making it as human as
-themselves, can find room.
-
-It is easy to begin a story of the _Sun_, because Ben Day and that
-uncertain morning in 1833, the very dawn of popular journalism, make a
-very real picture. Try to end it, and the roar of the presses in the
-basement is remindful of the fact that there is no end, except the
-arbitrary closing. This _Sun_, like _Richmond’s_--
-
- By the bright track of his fiery car
- Gives token of a goodly day to-morrow.
-
-
-
-
-BIBLIOGRAPHY
-
-
-The files of the _Sun_, 1833–1918.
-
-“The Life of Charles A. Dana,” by James Harrison Wilson, LL.D., late
-Major General, U. S. V. Harper & Bros., 1907.
-
-“Journalism in the United States from 1690 to 1872,” by Frederic
-Hudson. Harper & Bros., 1873.
-
-“The Art of Newspaper Making,” by Charles A. Dana. D. Appleton & Co.,
-1895.
-
-“Henry J. Raymond and the New York Press for Thirty Years,” by Augustus
-Maverick. A. S. Hale & Co., Hartford, Conn., 1870.
-
-“First Blows of the Civil War,” by James S. Pike. American News Co.,
-1879.
-
-“Ordered to China; Letters of Wilbur J. Chamberlin.” Frederick A.
-Stokes Co., 1903.
-
-“The Making of a Journalist,” by Julian Ralph. Harper & Bros., 1903.
-
-“Mr. Dana of the _Sun_,” by Edward P. Mitchell. _McClure’s Magazine_,
-October, 1894.
-
-“The New York _Sun_,” by Will Irwin. _American Magazine_, January, 1909.
-
-“The Men Who Make the New York _Sun_,” by E. J. Edwards. _Munsey’s
-Magazine_, October, 1893.
-
-
-
-
-CHRONOLOGY
-
-
- 1833.--The _Sun_ is founded by Benjamin H. Day, September 3.
-
- 1835.--Its home is changed from 222 William street to 156 Nassau
- street, August 3.
-
- 1835.--The Moon Hoax appears, August 25.
-
- 1838.--Moses Yale Beach becomes proprietor, June 28.
-
- 1842.--The _Sun_ moves to the southwest corner of Fulton and Nassau
- streets, July.
-
- 1844.--Poe’s Balloon Hoax appears, April 3.
-
- 1845.--M. Y. Beach takes his sons, Moses S. and Alfred E., as
- partners, October 22.
-
- 1848.--Moses Yale Beach retires, December 4.
-
- 1852.--Alfred Ely Beach retires, April 6.
-
- 1860.--Moses S. Beach lets the _Sun_ to a religious group, August 6.
-
- 1861.--The _Sun_ returns to the management of M. S. Beach, January 1.
-
- 1864.--The price is raised to two cents, August 1.
-
- 1868.--Charles A. Dana becomes the editor and manager of the _Sun_,
- January 25.
-
- 1868.--The _Sun_ moves to 170 Nassau street, January 25.
-
- 1875.--Edward P. Mitchell joins the editorial staff, October 1.
-
- 1897.--Death of Charles A. Dana, October 17.
-
- 1902.--William M. Laffan’s proprietorship is announced, February 22.
-
- 1903.--Edward P. Mitchell becomes the editor of the _Sun_, July 20.
-
- 1909.--Death of William M. Laffan, November 19.
-
- 1911.--William C. Reick becomes proprietor, December 17.
-
- 1915.--The _Sun_ moves to 150 Nassau street, July 11.
-
- 1916.--Frank A. Munsey becomes proprietor, June 30.
-
- 1916.--With the _Sun_ is amalgamated the New York _Press_, July 3.
-
- 1916.--The price is reduced to one cent, July 3.
-
- 1918.--The price again becomes two cents, January 26.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- Abell, Arunah S., associate of Day, 23
- establishes Baltimore _Sun_, 136
- buys Guilford estate, 136
- helps S. F. B. Morse, 136
- death of, in 1888, 136
-
- Abolition of slavery, article on, 54
- Wisner’s editorial on, 42
-
- Actors of the early 30’s, 121
-
- Adams, Cyrus C., cable editor, 394
-
- Adamson, Robert, _Evening Sun_ reporter, 399
-
- Adams, Samuel Hopkins, Dana finds it hard to discharge, 378, 379
- writes Sunday _Sun_ fiction, 412
-
- Adams, Samuel, murdered by John C. Colt, 154
-
- “Addition, Division, and Silence,” 305, 306
-
- Advertising, fashions of, in 1833, 26
- specimens of early “liners,” 125
- the _Sun_ takes off the first page in 1862, 189
- the _Sun_, under Morrison, refuses advertisements on Sunday, 190
-
- Alamo massacre, 113
-
- Alexander, Columbus, escape of, in the Safe Burglary Conspiracy, 308,
- 309
-
- Alger, Horatio, Jr., writes fiction for the _Sun_, 195
-
- Allen, Miss Susan, smokes a cigar on Broadway, 45
-
- Alumni, of the _Sun_, 328
-
- Anderson, Harold M., Spanish war correspondent, 355, 356
-
- Arago, D. F., alleged deception of, by the Moon Hoax, 97–99
-
- Armstrong, Henry M., Spanish war correspondent, 356
-
- Associated Press, Dana’s break with, 374
- formed in _Sun_ office, 167
-
- Astor House, 49
-
- Astor, William B., New York’s richest man, 234
-
- Attree, William H., 61–62
- reporter on the _Transcript_, 133, 134
-
- Aviation, prophetic editorial comment on, 46
-
- “Azamet Batuk.” See Thiéblin, N. L.
-
-
- Badeau, General Adam, a _Sun_ contributor, 404
-
- Ballard, Anna, reporter, 286
-
- Balloon Hoax, Poe’s, referred to by De Morgan, 98
-
- Bartlett, Willard, dramatic critic, counsel for Dana, editorial
- contributor, 286
- invents the _Sun_ Cat, 287
-
- Bartlett, William O., writes “No king, no clown, to rule this town!”,
- 255
- style of, compared with Dana’s and Mitchell’s, 256
- reference of, to General Hancock’s weight, 256
- counsel for Tweed, 275
-
- Battey, Emily Verdery, first real woman reporter, 285, 286
- appears in the _Sun_ on April 13, 1844, 149–153
-
- Beach, Alfred Ely, becomes partner in the _Sun_, 161, 162
- invents first typewriter for the blind, 162
- builds first New York subway, 162, 163
- withdraws from the _Sun_ April 6, 1852, 171
- dies in 1896, 163
-
- Beach Brothers, name of ownership, 170, 171
- issue _Evening Sun_, 171
-
- Beach, Erasmus D., book reviewer, 349
- writes classic football story, 350
-
- Beach, Frederick Converse, 163
-
- Beach, Joseph, son of Moses Y. Beach, 173
-
- Beach, Moses Sperry, becomes a partner in the _Sun_, 161, 162
- part owner Boston _Daily Times_, 162
- invents printing devices, 162
- becomes sole owner of the _Sun_, 171
- brings wood from the Mount of Olives for Beecher’s pulpit, 177
- absence of, from the _Sun_ in the early months of the Civil War, 189
- takes the _Sun_ back, 191
- sells the _Sun_ to Dana, 198, 199
- bids readers farewell, 200
-
- Beach, Moses Yale, enters _Sun_ office as bookkeeper, 111
- buys the _Sun_, 127
- youth and marriage of, 139
- inventions of, 140
- joins Benjamin H. Day, 140
- owns two buildings where the _Sun_ had its home, 157
- takes sons as partners, 161
- enterprise of, in Mexican War, 164, 165
- starts for Mexico as President Polk’s special agent, 166
- retires from the _Sun_, 167
- dinner in his honour, 167
- issues various editions of the _Sun_, 169
- publishes “The Wealth of New York,” 169
- father of the newspaper syndicate, 169
- Dana’s estimate of, 169, 170
- amasses a fortune and retires, 170
- writes European articles for the _Sun_, 173
-
- Beach, Stanley Yale, 163
-
- Becker, Charles, conviction of, reported by E. C. Hill, 320, 321
-
- Beckwith, Arthur, telegraph editor, 280
-
- Beecher, Henry Ward, John Brown speech of, in the _Sun_, 177
- tribute to H. B. Stanton, 259
- trial of, 278
- “I don’t read the _Sun_,” 310
- denounced by the _Sun_, 311
-
- Belknap, William W., accused by the _Sun_ in Post-trader scandal and
- impeached, 306, 307
-
- Bell, Jared D., part owner, _New Era_, 134
-
- Bendelari, George, book-reviewer, 411
-
- Bennett, James Gordon, thrashed by Col. Webb, 36
- work of, for the _Courier and Enquirer_, 37
- editor Philadelphia _Courier_, 53
- the _Sun_ replies to charge of, that Day is an infidel, 108
- early career of, 109
- treats Helen Jewett’s murder sensationally, 114
- second assault on, by Webb described, 114
- early failures of, 131
- debt of, to Day’s example, 132
- announcement of coming marriage of, 132
- establishes the no-credit system, 133
- works harder than other proprietors, 174
- dies in 1872, 293
- “the first yellow journalist,” 413
-
- Bennett, J. G., Jr., takes his father’s place, 298
- death of, 132
-
- Bigelow, John, associate of Bryant, 174
-
- Bishop, Joseph W., night city editor, 372
- night editor, 372
-
- Black, Chauncey F., a _Sun_ contributor, 405
-
- Blackwood, Algernon, _Evening Sun_ reporter, 399
-
- Blatchford, Judge Samuel, historic decision of, in the Shepherd case,
- 307, 308
-
- Blizzard of March, 1888, 362, 363
-
- Blythe, Samuel G., describes E. G. Riggs, 346
-
- Bogart, John B., “If a man bites a dog, that is news,” 241
- “a whole school of journalism,” 281
- possesses “sixth sense,” 335, 336
- persistence of, 336
-
- Bonner, Robert, pays $30,000 for “Norwood,” 235
- sagacity of, commented on by Dana, 300
-
- Book-reviewers, _Sun’s_, list of, 411
-
- Borden, Lizzie, acquittal of, reported by Julian Ralph, 318, 319
-
- Bowery Theatre Fire, ruins Hamblin, 118
- first American playhouse lighted with gas, 121
-
- Bowles, Samuel, employs B. H. Day, 22–23
-
- Bowman, Frank, dramatic critic, 411
-
- Bread riots, the _Sun’s_ part in, 118, 119
-
- Brewster, Sir David, appears in Moon Hoax, 71
-
- Brisbane, Albert, association of, with Greeley, 161
-
- Brisbane, Arthur, son of Albert Brisbane, 161
- style of, like W. O. Bartlett’s, 256
- becomes reporter at 18, 346, 347
- becomes London correspondent, 347
- reports Sullivan-Mitchell fight, 347
- is managing editor _Evening Sun_, 348
- becomes editor Sunday _World_ magazine, 348
- becomes editor _Evening Journal_, 348
- becomes proprietor Washington _Times_, 348
- takes Richard Harding Davis on _Evening Sun_, 398
-
- Brook Farm, Dana enters, 206
-
- Brooklyn Theatre fire, 362
-
- Brooks brothers, James and Erastus, establish New York _Express_,
- 134, 135
-
- Brown, John, the _Sun’s_ attitude toward, 177
-
- Bryant, William Cullen, editor and poet in 1833, 34
- conflict of, with W. L. Stone, 34
-
- Buchanan, James, supported by the _Sun_, 176
-
- Burdell, Dr. Harvey, murder of, 196
-
- Burnett, Wm., 60
-
- Burr, Aaron, 51
-
- Butler, Stephen B., 60
-
-
- Cady, Elizabeth, marries Henry B. Stanton, 259
-
- Caroline case, the _Sun’s_ enterprise in reporting, 144, 145
-
- Carroll, Dana H., Spanish war correspondent, 355
-
- Cat, the _Sun’s_, his invention and reputation, 287–289
-
- Chadwick, George W., in business with Dana, 216
-
- Chamberlains and Chamberlins, 341–343
-
- Chamberlain, Henry Richardson, covers Europe for the _Sun_, 342
- visions by, of a great war, 342
-
- Chamberlin, Wilbur J., takes charge of the _Sun_ staff in Cuba, 356
- eleven-column report by, 361
- known as “Jersey,” 338;
- cable hoodoo of, 339, 340
- describes German soldiers’ brutality in China, 340
- describes the Deacon’s broken suspenders, 341
-
- Chamberlin, E. O., reporter, 342
-
- Chamberlin, Henry B., reporter, 343
-
- Childs, George W., tells of W. M. Swain’s industry, 135
- buys _Public Ledger_, 135
-
- Cholera, in New York, 1832, 22
-
- Church, Francis P., a _Sun_ editorial writer for forty years, 191
- “Is There a Santa Claus?,” 409
-
- Church, William C., publisher of the _Sun_, 190
- war correspondent, 190, 191
- owns _Army and Navy Journal_, 191
-
- Circulation in November, 1833, 2,000, 50
- in December, 1833, 52
- April, 1834, 54
- in November, 1834, 57
- Day offers to bet on it, 62–63
- in August, 1835, it becomes the largest in the world, 78
- in August, 1836, 27,000, 116
- in September, 1843, 38,000, 157
- in December, 1848, 50,000, 168
- in September, 1860, 59,000, 194
- Dana’s estimate of 50,000 to 60,000 in 1868, 228
- in 1871, 100,000, 269
- in March, 1875, 120,000, 300
- day after Tilden-Hayes election, 220, 390, 323, 325
- after other interesting events, 323–325
- high-tide marks, 325
-
- Civil War, the _Sun_ in the, 172 _et seq._
- the _Sun_ declares “the Union cannot be dissolved,” 179
- the _Sun_ charges the _Herald_, the _Daily News_, and the
- _Staats-Zeitung_ with disloyalty, 180, 181
- the _Sun_, the _Tribune_, and the _Times_ entirely loyal, 185
- the _Sun’s_ news from Bull Run, 187;
- from Gettysburg, 188
- the _Sun_ protests against Sunday battles, 190
- attitude of Greeley and Dana, 211
-
- Clarke, Selah Merrill, night city editor, 1881–1912, 383
- story of the Northampton disaster by, 383
- remarkable memory of, 384, 385
- head-lines written by, 387, 388
- gifts of, as copy reader, 389
-
- Cleveland, Grover, Dana’s opposition to, 421, 422
-
- Clubs: Bread and Cheese, Hone, Union, 122, 123
-
- Cobb, Irvin S., reports Portsmouth peace conference for _Evening
- Sun_, 399
-
- Coffey, Titian J., recipient of the “addition, division, and silence”
- letter, 305
-
- Collins, E. K., an advertiser in the first _Sun_, 27
-
- Colt, John C., murders Samuel Adams, 154
-
- Conkling, Roscoe, in business with Dana, 216
-
- Connolly, James, reporter, 284
-
- Conventions, national, _Sun_ men reporting, 344
- history of, written by E. G. Riggs, 346
-
- Cook, Tom, reporter, 284
-
- Cooper, Charles P., city editor, _Evening Sun_, 400
-
- Cooper, James Fenimore, 50
-
- Corbin, John, dramatic critic, 411
-
- Coward, Edward Fales, _Evening Sun_ dramatic critic, 399
-
- Crédit Mobilier scandal, 304
-
- Crockett, David, memoirs of, in the _Sun_, 51
-
- Cronyn, Thoreau, Dewey’s funeral, report by, 333
-
- Cuba, Dana’s interest in struggle of, 353–355
-
- Cullen, Clarence L., writes “Tales of the Ex-Tanks,” 411
-
- Cummings, Alexander, writes for the _World_, 182
-
- Cummings, Amos Jay, secretly learns typesetting, 264
- goes with Filibuster Walker, 265
- wins Medal of Honor at Fredericksburg, 265
- holds _Tribune_ office against rioters, 266
- conflicts with John Russell Young, 266
- “They say I swear too much,” 267
- “To hell with my own copy,” 267
- best news man of his day, 268
- is first human interest reporter, 268
- reports prize fights, 285
- Nicara-goo Song of, 289, 290
- “Ziska” letters of, 290
- is managing editor of the _Express_, 290
- returns to the _Sun_, 290
- is elected to House of Representatives, 290
- becomes editor _Evening Sun_, 290
- returns to Congress, 290, 291
- death and funeral of, 291
- prints murder charts, 414
-
- Curtin, Jeremiah, a _Sun_ contributor, 404
-
- Curtis, David A., Sunday _Sun_ writer, 412
-
- Curtis, George Ticknor, a _Sun_ contributor, 404
-
- Curtis, George William, writes for the _Tribune_, 161
-
-
- Daly, Augustin, tries to have Dana dismiss Laffan, 252
-
- Damrosch, Leopold, music critic, 314
-
- Dana, Charles A., a boy in Buffalo when Day founded the _Sun_, 35
- reading “Oliver Twist” weakens eyes of, 123
- draws $50 a week on _Tribune_, 174
- named by the _Sun_ as a possible postmaster, 179
- buys the _Sun_ and announces its policy, 198, 199
- absolute master of the _Sun_, 202
- birth and ancestry, 202
- brothers and sisters of, 203
- boyhood and life of, in Buffalo, 203, 204
- goes to Harvard, 204
- teaches school at Scituate, 205
- religious indecision of, 205
- sight of, impaired, 206
- joins Brook Farm, 206
- milks cows and waits on table, 207
- meets Horace Greeley, 207
- writes for the _Harbinger_ and the _Dial_, 207
- writes poetry, 208
- marries, 208
- goes to Boston _Daily Chronotype_, 208
- comes out “strong against hell,” 209
- becomes city editor of the New York _Tribune_, 209
- goes to Europe, 209
- returns to be managing editor of the _Tribune_, 210
- his pay and income, 210
- literary works of, before Civil War, 213
- leaves the _Tribune_, 214, 215
- induces Grant to stop the cotton speculation, 216
- convinces Lincoln of needed reforms, 216
- is chosen to report on complaints against Grant, 216, 217
- writes of his “new insight into slavery,” 218
- is with Grant at Vicksburg, 218
- brings Grant full authority, 218
- sees much of war, 219
- estimate of Grant by, 219
- estimate of Rawlins by, 219, 220
- reports on Rosecrans, 220
- poetry contest of, with General Lawler, 221
- describes the storming of Missionary Ridge, 221, 222
- reports Grant’s Virginia campaign, 222, 223
- goes to Richmond to gather Confederate archives, 224
- talks with Lincoln about Jacob Thompson, 224
- authorizes Miles to manacle Jefferson Davis, 224
- quoted on Davis’s imprisonment, 225
- becomes editor of Chicago _Republican_, 225
- assails President Johnson, 226
- quits Chicago _Republican_, 226
- determines to have a New York newspaper, 226
- his backers, 226
- decides to buy the _Sun_, 228, 229
- changes its appearance, 230
- moves “It Shines for All,” 230, 231
- “Dana was the _Sun_ and the _Sun_ Dana,” 231
- makes no rules for the _Sun_, 238
- editorial principles of, 238, 239
- lectures at Cornell, 239
- defines news, 241
- on college education, 242
- on reporting, 242
- “The invariable law is to be interesting,” 243
- “Do not take any model,” 243, 244
- not impressed by names of writers, 246
- “This is too damned wicked,” 246
- refuses to expose a silly literary thief, 246
- methods and surroundings of, 246–251
- interest of, in everything and everybody, 251
- “Take the partition down,” 251
- love of, for variety of topics, 253
- delight of, in other men’s work, 254
- tact of, in handling men, 263
- death of great rivals of, 293
- quoted on “personal journalism,” 296
- quoted on Greeley, Raymond, and Bennett, 297
- “We pass the _Tribune_ by”, 298
- advises _World_ reporters to read the Bible, 299
- kindly feeling of, toward the younger Bennett, 299
- belief of, in a newspaper without advertising, 299–301
- objects to “heavy chunks of news,” 302
- “our contemporaries exhaust their young men,” 302
- is a witness against Secretary Robeson, 305
- defeats Shepherd’s attempt to railroad him, 307
- denies wishing to be collector of the port, 309, 310
- loses friends because of attacks on Grantism, 310
- refuses to be turned, 310
- retains opinion of Grant’s military ability, 310
- “First find the man,” plans of, 326
- frames gold plank for New York convention of 1896, 345
- asks Platt not to oppose Roosevelt, 345
- affection of, for Cuba, 353–354
- memorial to, in Camaguey, 354, 355
- breaks with Associated Press, 374
- encouraged _Sun_ men to write fiction, 405
- “The second yellow journalist,” 413
- not a yellow journalist, 415
- attacks yellow journalism, 413, 415, 416, 417
- revolutionizes journalism, 416
- “An opposition party in himself,” 420
- attacks Hayes, 420
- opposition of, to Cleveland, 420
- supports B. F. Butler, 420
- would burn his pen rather than support Blaine, 421
- opinion of, on civil service reform, 421
- opposes Bryan, 422
- continental travels, 423
- knowledge of languages, 423
- porcelain collection of, 423
- country home of, 424
- death of, 425
- the _Sun’s_ announcement of death of, 425
- elevation of journalism by, 426
-
- Dana, Paul, succeeds his father as editor, 426
- chief owner, 427
-
- Davids, David, reporter, 283
-
- Davies, Acton, Spanish war correspondent, 356
- _Evening Sun_ dramatic critic, 399
-
- Davis, Oscar King, goes with Schley’s squadron, 355
- describes capture of Guam, 356, 357
-
- Davis, Richard Harding, experiences and work of, on _Evening Sun_, 398
- writes _Van Bibber_ stories for _Evening Sun_, 398
-
- Day, Benjamin H., decides to publish the _Sun_, 22
- birth and ancestry of, 22
- issues the first _Sun_, 25
- issues a _True Sun_, 60
- is indicted for attacking Attree, 61
- welcomes an attack by Col. Webb, 111
- quarrels with Bennett, 110
- attacks the service at the Astor House, 117
- name of, taken from the _Sun’s_ masthead, 125
- sells the _Sun_ to Moses Y. Beach, 127
- period of ownership by, of the _Sun_, 127
- profits from the _Sun_, 127, 128
- influence of, upon journalism, 129
- influence of, on Bennett’s success, 131, 132
- success of, responsible for the founding of many one-cent papers,
- 133
- says the _Sun’s_ success was “more by accident than design,” 137
- establishes _True Sun_, 137
- starts the _Tatler_, 137, 138
- founds _Brother Jonathan_, 138
- retirement and death of, 138
- remarks on Dana’s purchase of the _Sun_, 138
- son of Benjamin H. Day, 138
- contrasted with Dana, 202
- was he a yellow journalist?, 414
-
- Delane, John T., pictured by Kinglake, 247
-
- De Morgan, Augustus, notes of, on the Moon Hoax, 96–99
-
- Denison, Lindsay, covers Slocum disaster, 361
-
- Dick, Dr. Thomas, 66
-
- Dickens, Charles, “Nicholas Nickleby” criticized, 123
- The _Sun’s_ comments on American visit of, 155, 156, 157
-
- Dieuaide, Thomas M., writes story of the Santiago sea fight, 355, 356
- describes the destruction of St. Pierre, 357, 358
-
- Dillingham, Charles B., _Evening Sun_ dramatic critic, 399
-
- Dix, John A., an advertiser in the first _Sun_, 28
-
- Dix, John A., Governor, seizes three New York newspapers in 1864, 183
-
- Douglas, Stephen A., the _Sun’s_ attitude toward, 175, 177, 178
-
- Draper, Dr. John W., 35
-
- Dyer, Oliver, versatility of, 405
-
-
- Eaton, Walter P., dramatic critic, 411
-
- Edison, Thomas A., thanks the _Sun_ for chewing tobacco, 322
-
- Editorial writers, list of, 326
-
- England, Isaac W., first managing editor of the _Sun_, 263, 264
- Dana’s tribute to, 264
-
- Evans, George O., “He understands addition, division, and silence,”
- 305
-
- _Evening Sun_, first issued by Beach Brothers, 171
- issued by Dana, March 17, 1887, 397
- “Laffan’s baby,” 397
- Cummings first managing editor of, 397
- later managing editors of, 398, 400
- list of editorial writers, managing editors, and city editors of,
- 399, 400
-
- Express service, usefulness to the _Sun_, 140, 141
-
-
- Fairbanks, Charles M., reporter and night editor, 351
-
- Fernandez, the murderer, 103–104
-
- Field, Eugene, obtains Dana’s shears, 249
-
- Fire, New York conflagration of 1835, 105–106
-
- Fisk, James, Jr., pays $800,000 for a theatre, 236
- tells of _Sun_ enterprise, 269, 270
-
- Fitzgerald, Christopher J., finds the lost Umbria, 392, 393
-
- Flaherty, Bernard. See Williams, Barney.
-
- Flint, Dr. Austin, youthful friend of Dana, 204
-
- Florence, William J., subscriber to the Tweed statue fund, 273
-
- Foord, John, editor of the _Times_, 298
-
- Football, Ralph’s story without a score, 334, 335
- Beach’s Homeric introduction, 350, 351
-
- Forks, the _Sun’s_ conservative attitude toward, 55
-
- Forrest, Edwin, 55–56
-
- Fowler, Elting A., predicts Bryan’s appointment as Secretary of
- State, 377
-
- Fuller, Andrew S., agricultural editor, 199, 200
-
- Fyles, Franklin, reports Beecher trial, 278
- reporter, dramatic critic, and playwright, 283
-
-
- Garr, Andrew S., sues Day for libel, 126
-
- Gibson, A. M., Washington correspondent, 312
-
- Godwin, Parke, edits _Daily News_, 181
-
- Goodwin, Joseph, creates _Sarsaparilla Reilly_, 412
-
- Gould, Jay, is blackballed in the Blossom Club, 270
-
- Grant, Ulysses S., the _Sun’s_ support of, in 1868, announced, 199
- imposed upon, 304
- opposed by the _Sun_, 304
-
- Grant scandals, 304–310
-
- Greeley, Horace, founds _Morning Post_, 23
- fails with _Morning Post_, 37
- Albany correspondent _Daily Whig_, 134
- starts the _Tribune_, 159
- is scorned by the _Sun_, 159
- hires Henry J. Raymond, 160
- attacks the _Sun_, 161
- tells British legislators the _Sun_ was cheap at $250,000, 171
- mentioned for the collectorship, 179
- hires Dana, 209
- timidity of, toward slavery, 211
- writes pleas to Dana, 212
- denies writing “Forward to Richmond!”, 213
- hires Cummings on the state of his breeches, 266
-
- Gregg, Frederic J., editorial writer, _Evening Sun_, 400
-
- Griffis, William Elliot, a _Sun_ contributor, 404
-
- Gurowski, Count, writes for the _Tribune_, 161
-
-
- Hackett, James H., 39
-
- Hallock, Gerard, sympathy of, with slavery forces him to retire from
- the _Journal of Commerce_, 181, 182
-
- Hamblin, Thomas S., ruined by fire of 1836, 118
- beats Bennett, 118
-
- Hamilton, Captain, aspersions of, relative to tooth brushes, 45
-
- Harbour Association, formed by six newspapers, 167
-
- Harnden, William F., starts express service, New York to Boston, 141
-
- Harte, Bret, stories by, syndicated by the _Sun_, 403
-
- Hawkins, Ervin, city editor, _Evening Sun_, 400
-
- Hayward, Billings, part owner of the _Transcript_, 133, 134
-
- Hazeltine, Mayo W., writes on Dana’s elevation of journalism, 426
- “M. W. H.,” 408
- literary critic for thirty-one years, 408
-
- Head-lines, the _Sun’s_ second, 44
- examples of (1833), 52
- example of, in Dana’s time, 314
-
- Hearst, William R., “the fourth yellow journalist,” 413
-
- Henderson, William J., musical critic and yachting writer, 391
-
- Hendrix, Joseph C., “Cut out the damn,” 279
-
- “Hermit,” writes Washington letters for the _Sun_, 176
-
- Herschel, Sir John F. W., 66
-
- Hill, Edwin C., reports Becker trial, 321
- style of, in disaster stories, 361, 362
-
- Hitchcock, Thomas, author of “Matthew Marshall” financial articles,
- 228
-
- Hoaxes. See Moon Hoax, Balloon Hoax, Mungo Park.
-
- Hoe, Robert, Day’s remark at dinner to, 137
-
- Holmes, Mary J., writes novels for the _Sun_, 195
-
- Hone, Philip, as a writer, 37
-
- Horse expresses: the six-cent papers combine to use, 110
-
- Hotels, huge noon dinners in the thirties, 122
-
- Howard, Joseph, Jr., issues a false Presidential proclamation, 183
-
- Hudson, Frederic, opposes managing editorships, 262
-
- “Human interest,” 244, 245, 313, 363
-
- Humour, 366, 367
-
- Hurlbut, William Henry, a _Sun_ contributor, 405
-
-
- Illustrations, the _Sun’s_ first, 43
-
- Interviews, invented by Bennett, 316
-
- Introductions, the _Sun’s_ objection to, 363
-
- Irving, Washington, 34–35
-
- Irwin, Will, “The City That Was,” 358
-
- “It Shines for All,” 58
-
-
- Jackson, Andrew, message of, printed in full, 51
-
- James, Henry, flashy head-lines on a novel by, 404
-
- Jennings, Louis J., chief editorial writer of the _Times_, 274
- becomes editor of the _Times_, 298
- returns to England, 298
-
- Jewett, Helen, murder of, 113, 114
- trial of Robinson for murder of, 115, 116
-
- Jones, Alexander, becomes first agent of Associated Press, 167
- invents telegraph cipher, 167
-
- Jones, George, partner of H. J. Raymond, 274
-
- Journalism, the earliest dailies, 29
- advance of, between 1830 and 1840, 136, 137
- great editors of 1868, 233
- managing editors, 262, 263
- first women reporters, 285, 286
- Watterson’s review in 1873, 293–295
- “Personal journalism,” 295, 296
- Dana’s dream of a paper without advertisements, 299–301
- interviewing, 316
- What do people read?, 323
- “Sixth sense,” 335, 336
-
- _Journal of Commerce_, the _Sun’s_ only surviving morning
- contemporary of 1833, 25
-
- Josephs, Joseph, reporter, 283
-
-
- Kane, Lawrence S., city editor, 279
- reporter, 280
-
- Kellogg, Daniel F., city editor 1890–1902, 371
-
- Kelly, John, marriage of, reported, 321, 322
-
- Kemble, Fanny, 44, 59
-
- Kemble, W. H., author of the “addition, division, and silence”
- letter, 305
- causes Dana’s arrest, 306
- is sent to prison, 306
-
- Kendall, George W., despatches of, to the New Orleans _Picayune_ used
- by the _Sun_, 165
-
- King, Charles, editor of the _American_, 130, 131
-
- Know-Nothing Party, uses Maria Monk’s “Disclosures” as political
- capital, 112
-
- Kobbé, Gustav, dramatic and musical critic, 350
-
-
- Laffan Bureau, established, 375
- growth, 376
-
- Laffan, William M., becomes proprietor of the _Sun_, 427
- thorough newspaper training of, 427
- art expert, 427, 428
- dramatic critic, 428
- “Anybody can get anything printed, except the owner,” 428
- death of, in 1909, 430
-
- Landon, M. D. See Eli Perkins.
-
- Leggett, William, fights duel with Blake, 130
-
- Levermore, Charles H., describes victory of the _Sun_ and the
- _Herald_ over old-fashioned journalism, 137
-
- Lincoln, Abraham, “No match for the Little Giant,” 177
- “A man of the people,” 178
- is elected, “and yet the country is safe,” 179
- _Sun_ comments on re-election of, 182;
- on death of, 182
- New York newspapers’ comment on emancipation proclamation, 184
- assigns Dana to Virginia campaign, 222
-
- Literature, in the fifties, 173
- serial novels contracted for by M. S. Beach, 196
- “The finest side of the _Sun_,” 402, _et seq._
-
- Literary men, list of, in 1833, 34–35
-
- Lloyd, Nelson, Spanish war correspondent, 355
- city editor, _Evening Sun_, 400
-
- Locke, Richard Adams, goes on _Sun_ as a reporter, 64
- Poe’s sketch of, 65, 66
- early life of, 66
- confesses the Moon Hoax, 86–87
- life of the murderer, Fernandez, by, 103–104
- starts the _New Era_, 116–117
- writes “The Lost Manuscript of Mungo Park,” 117
- becomes editor of the Brooklyn _Eagle_, 117, 118
- death of, 118
- attends dinner to Moses Y. Beach, 167
-
- Lord, Chester S., Whisky Ring story by, 284, 285
- long service of, 326, 327
- first staff of, 327
- “Ten thousand battles of,” 327
- managing editor, 1880–1913, 372
- studies at Hamilton College, 373
- goes on the _Sun_ as a reporter, 373
- buys Syracuse _Standard_, 373
- returns to the _Sun_, 373
- assistant managing editor, 373
- managing editor, 373
- described by E. G. Riggs, 373
- perfects collection of election returns, 374
- sends Blaine first news of his defeat, 374
- establishes a news service in a night, 375
- selection of correspondents by, 376
- “Use your own judgment,” 377, 378
- “You’ve been fired, but come back,” 378
-
- Lord, Kenneth, city editor, 371, 432
-
- Lotteries, list of numbers drawn, in the _Sun_, 40
-
- Lottery advertising, 37
-
- Luby, James, chief editorial writer, _Evening Sun_, 400
-
- Lyman, Ambrose W., night city editor, 371
-
- Lynch, Charles, Sunday _Sun_ writer, 412
-
- Lynde, Willoughby, part owner of the _Transcript_, 133, 134
-
-
- Magazines, New York periodicals in 1833, 34
-
- Maguire, Mark, newsboy and sports writer, 285
- invents boxing chart, 285
-
- Mallon, George Barry, city editor, 1902–1914, 371
-
- Mandigo, John, sporting editor, 395
-
- Mann, Henry, reporter, exchange editor and author, 284
- reports Stokes trial, 321
-
- Mansfield, Josephine, 236, 270
-
- Marble, Manton, joins the _World_, 182
- controls it, 182
- protests to Lincoln when the _World_ is suppressed, 183
-
- Maria Monk, the _Sun_ prints “Disclosures” of, 111, 112
- exposed by W. L. Stone in the _Commercial Advertiser_, 112, 113
-
- Martineau, Harriet, comments of, on the Moon Hoax, 86
-
- “Matthew Marshall.” See Hitchcock, Thomas.
-
- Matthias the Prophet, trial of, for murder, 63
-
- McAlpin, Robert, reporter, 284
-
- McAlpin, Tod, reporter, 284
-
- McClellan, George B., supported by the _Sun_ in 1864, 185
-
- McCloy, W. C., city editor and managing editor, _Evening Sun_, 398,
- 400
-
- McDonnell, P. G., predicts Aguinaldo’s revolt, 376
-
- McEntee, Joseph, Albany correspondent, 394
-
- Mexican War, _Sun’s_ news of, 164, 165
- costly to newspapers, 166
-
- Mitchell, Edward P., owns a copy of the first _Sun_, 26
- is quoted on Dana’s freedom from ancient journalistic rules, 240
- describes Dana’s methods and surroundings, 247–251
- describes Dana’s encouragement of Cuba Libre, 354
- finds “Plaza Charles A. Dana” in Camaguey, 355
- writes short stories of distinction, 405
- breadth of his fancy and humour, 405, 406
- address on “The Newspaper Value of Non-essentials,” 406
- champions the classics, 407
- defines yellow journalism and white, 415
- describes Dana’s revolution of journalism, 416
- receives Dana’s instructions as to length of death notice, 425
- becomes editor-in-chief, 430
- president of the Sun Printing and Publishing Association,
- 1909–1911, 430
- remains as editor, 432
-
- “Monsieur X.” See Thiéblin, Napoleon L.
-
- Moon Hoax, 64–101
- reacts on the _Sun’s_ big fire story, 106
-
- Morris, George P., 37
-
- Morrissey, John, pugilist, is supported for the Senate by the _Sun_,
- 323
-
- Morrison, Archibald M., gains control of the _Sun_ to use it for
- evangelical purposes, 189
-
- Morse, Samuel F. B., assisted by W. M. Swain and A. S. Abell to
- finance the telegraph, 136
-
- Motto, “It Shines for All” appears, origin of, 58
-
- Mullin, Edward H., editorial writer, _Evening Sun_, 400
-
- Munn, Orson D., buys _Scientific American_ with Alfred E. Beach, 162
-
- Munsey, Frank A., sells Washington _Times_ to Brisbane, 348
- remarks of, at Yale on the influence of the _Sun_ and the _World_,
- 419
- buys New York _Press_, 431
- buys the _Sun_, 431
- consolidates the _Sun_ and the _Press_, 431
- buys Stewart Building, 432
-
- “M. W. H.” See Hazeltine, M. W.
-
- “Mystery of Marie Roget.” See Rogers, Mary.
-
-
- Navy Department scandals, 304, 305
-
- “Nemo,” a _Sun_ correspondent in the Civil War, 188
-
- News boats, 166
-
- Newsboys, Day originates street sales by, 39–40
- Sam Messenger, 40
-
- Newspapers, _Courrant_, the first English daily, 29
- London _Times_ the first English paper to use a steam press, 29
- _Pennsylvania Packet_, the first American daily, 29
- the _Globe_, oldest New York paper, 29
- the _Evening Post_, second oldest New York paper, 29
- the _Courier_ and the _Enquirer_ amalgamated, 35
- New York _Tribune_, founding of, 37
- New York _Times_ is started, 57
- the _Transcript_ is started, 57
- the _True Sun_, 59–60
- _Courier and Enquirer_, its huge size, 62
- attitude of the _Sun’s_ contemporaries toward the Moon Hoax, 75,
- 76, 82, 87
- the _Sun’s_ penny imitators, editorial reference to, 107
- New York _Herald_ prints the first report of Stock Exchange sales,
- 109
- _Herald’s_ circulation in 1836, 116
- the _Journal of Commerce_ denounces the _Sun_ as an inciter of
- riots, 119
- paper rolls, a new invention, described, 123, 124
- _Courier and Enquirer’s_ writers under Webb, 130
- _Journal of Commerce_, enterprise under Gerard Hallock’s
- editorship, 130
- the _Transcript’s_ early success, 133, 134
- list of penny papers started in New York, 1833–1838, 134
- New York _Express_ established, 134, 135
- New York _Daily News_ established, 134, 135
- the _Daily Transcript_, the first Philadelphia penny paper, 135
- Philadelphia _Public Ledger_, office mobbed, 135
- list of great dailies founded, 1833–1843, 136
- the _Herald_ called “a very bad paper,” by Greeley, 174
- New York _World_, appearance of, as a highly moral sheet, 182
- the New York _Times_ and the Tweed exposure, 274, 275
- Orange _Postman_, the first penny paper, 29
-
- Newspaper feuds, Day and Webb, 54
- _Sun_ and _Journal of Commerce_, 54
-
- New York, size and life of, in 1833, 32–34
- life in the thirties, 121–123
- rich and powerful figures of Dana’s first _Sun_ year, 234, 235
- clubs, hotels, and theatres of the sixties, 236, 237
-
- New York _Press_, sports staff of, transferred to the _Sun_, 393
-
- Nicollet, Jean Nicolas, supposed connection of, with the Moon Hoax,
- 94–101
-
- Noah, Mordecai M., 61
- establishes _Morning Star_, 134
-
- “No king, no clown, to rule this town,” 255
-
- Norr, William, writes “The Pearl of Chinatown,” 411
-
- North, S. N. D., describes the influence of the penny press, 137
-
- North, Walter Savage, writes fiction for the _Sun_, 196
- circulation of New York dailies in 1833, 31
-
- “Nym Crinkle.” See Andrew C. Wheeler.
-
-
- O’Brien, John H., Laffan’s jest with, 429, 430
-
- Odion, Henry W., night city editor, 371
-
- O’Hanlon, Virginia, asks the _Sun_ if there is a Santa Claus, 409
-
- O’Malley, Frank W., story by, on Policeman Sheehan’s death, 364
- describes Passover parade, 367
-
- Overton, Grant M., book-reviewer, 411
-
-
- Palmer, Frederick, _Evening Sun_ reporter, 399
-
- Paragraphs, quotations from, in 1834, 52–53
-
- Park, Mungo, Locke writes the “Lost Manuscript” of, 117
-
- Patton, Francis T., rules for exaggeration by, 390, 391
-
- Penny newspapers, failure of, before the _Sun_ was established, 23
-
- Perkins, Eli (Melville De Lancey Landon), _Sun_ correspondent, 314
-
- Philip Hone, the _Sun_ suggests that he incited a riot, 119
-
- Phillips, David Graham, last assignments of, 360
- finds material for novels, 360
-
- Pigs in City Hall Park, the _Sun_ objects to, 55
-
- Pigeons, the _Sun_ uses, to carry ship news, 146, 147
- editorial explaining presence of, on the _Sun’s_ roof, 147, 148
-
- Pike, James S., Dana advises, to get “Black Dan drunk,” 211
- career of, as journalist and diplomat, 256, 257
-
- Poe, Edgar Allan, describes R. A. Locke, 65, 66
- his “Hans Pfaall” spoiled by the Moon Hoax, 90–93
- belief of, that the Moon Hoax firmly established penny newspapers,
- 102
- returns to New York, 148
- writes the Balloon Hoax for the _Sun_, 149
- inspiration of, for “The Mystery of Marie Roget,” 153, 155
-
- Post-Trader scandal, 306
-
- Prall, William M., 104
-
- Press, the _Sun’s_ first, 24
- the _Sun’s_ second, 52
- the _Sun’s_ third, 58
-
- Presses, Day buys two Napiers, 118
-
- Price, Joseph, partner of R. A. Locke in _New Era_, 116
- part owner _New Era_, 134
-
- Price of the _Sun_ changed from “one penny” to “one cent,” 51
-
- Printers, union, in 1833, 48
-
- Prize-fighting denounced, 59
-
- Pulitzer, Joseph, is assigned by Dana to report the electoral
- controversy, 240
- correspondent of the _Sun_, 312
- “The third yellow journalist,” 413
- influence of, on journalism, 419
-
-
- Railroads, extent of, in 1833, 30
-
- Ralph, Julian, reports Borden trial, 321
- long service of, on _Sun_, 331
- Grant’s funeral, report by, 332
- books written by, 334
- a football classic by, with the score left out, 334, 335
- Molly Maguires, reported by, 335
- is gifted with “sixth sense,” 335
- describes reporting an inauguration, 337
-
- Ramsey, Dave, originates the idea of a penny _Sun_, 21
-
- Rawlins, General John A., part of, in Dana’s assignment to report on
- Grant, 218
-
- Raymond, Henry J., goes to the _Tribune_, 160
- performs a great reporting feat, 160
- leaves Greeley, 160
- becomes the first editor of the New York _Times_, 161
- calls Webb’s paper “the Austrian organ in Wall Street,” 174
-
- Reamer, Lawrence, dramatic critic, 411
-
- Reick, William C., becomes proprietor, 430
- early career of, 430, 431
- improves _Evening Sun_, 431
- sells the _Sun_ to Frank A. Munsey, 431
-
- Reid, Whitelaw, succeeds Greeley, 298
-
- Reporters, comparison of styles, 315–322
- _Sun_ staff in 1893, 330
- _Sun_, anonymity of, almost complete, 330
- “The _Sun_ has no ‘stars,’” 359
- a typical assignment list in 1893, 359
-
- Rewey, Elijah M., night city editor, 371
- exchange editor, 372
-
- Riggs, Edward G., reports seven national conventions, 343, 344
- wide acquaintance of, 344
- Dana’s reliance on, 344
- “Riggs is my Phil Sheridan,” 345
- defines political correspondents, 345, 346
- described by Samuel G. Blythe, 346
- writes history of national conventions, 346
- describes Lord’s discernment, 373
- tells how Lord built up the Laffan bureau, 375, 376
- “One story you [Chamberlin] can’t write,” 341
-
- “Rigolo.” See Thiéblin, N. L.
-
- Riis, Jacob A., chief police reporter, _Evening Sun_, 398
- writings of, attract Roosevelt, 398, 399
-
- Riots, the Bowery Theatre, 55–56
-
- Ripley, George, lectures, 205
- helps Dana to enter Brook Farm, 206
- is chief of the cow-milking group, 207
- editor of the _Harbinger_, 207
- prepares, with Dana, the “New American Encyclopedia,” 213
-
- Robeson, George M., accused by the _Sun_ in the Navy scandal, 304, 305
-
- Robinson, Lucius, _Sun_ reporter and governor, 104–105
-
- Rogers, Mary, disappearance of, announced in the _Sun_, 153
- editorial comment on murder of, 154
- Poe’s uses case of, in fiction, 153, 155
-
- Root, Walstein, Spanish war correspondent, 355
-
- Rosebault, Walter M., city editor and reporter, 280
-
- Rosenfeld, Sidney, _Sun_ reporter in 1870, 280
-
- Ruhl, Arthur, _Evening Sun_ reporter, 399
-
- Rum, the _Sun’s_ aversion to, 43
-
-
- Safe Burglary Conspiracy, 308
-
- Salary Grab, 307
-
- Sam Patch, the _Sun’s_ pigeon, 147, 149
-
- Santa Claus editorial article, 409, 410
-
- _Scientific American_, interest in, bought by Alfred E. Beach, 162
-
- Secession, the _Sun’s_ plan to emasculate, 179, 180
-
- Serviss, Garret P., night editor, 372
-
- Shaw, Henry Grenville, telegraph editor, 280
-
- Shepherd, Alexander, accused by the _Sun_ in the Washington paving
- scandal, 307
- tries to hale Dana to Washington, 307
-
- Short, Wm. F., 60
-
- Shunk, James F., a _Sun_ contributor, 405
-
- Siamese Twins, arrest of, 51
-
- Simonds, Frank H., editorial writer, the _Sun_ and the _Evening Sun_,
- 400
-
- Simonton, James W., associate of Raymond, 174
-
- “Six-penny respectables,” 110
-
- “Sixth sense,” examples of, 335, 336
-
- Slavery, Missouri Compromise and Dred Scott decision rejected by the
- _Sun_, 175, 176
-
- Smith, George M., night editor, 1904–1912, 372
- managing editor _Evening Sun_, 400
-
- Smith, Goldwin, a _Sun_ contributor, 404
-
- Space rates, 380
-
- Spalding, James R., a _World_ writer, 182
-
- Spanish War, _Sun’s_ news service in, 353–356
-
- Sports, the _Sun’s_ first prize-fight story, 58
-
- Sports department, 391–393
-
- Spears, John R., cruises around the world, 349
- reports America’s Cup races, 349
- covers Hatfield-McCoy feuds, 349
- books written by, 349
-
- Spears, Raymond S., reporter, 349
-
- Speed, Keats, becomes managing editor, 432
-
- Spencer, Edward, a writer of fiction for the _Sun_, 405
-
- Stanley, William J., part owner of the _Transcript_, 133
-
- Stanton, Henry Brewster, a _Sun_ writer from 1868 to 1887, 258, 259
- Beecher’s tribute to, 259
-
- Stanton, Edwin M., asks Dana to enter War Department, 215
- withdraws appointment, 216
-
- Steamships, Great Western arrives at New York, 119
- Sirius arrives at New York, 119
- the _Sun’s_ extras on arrival of, 142
- loss of the President, 143
-
- Stephens, Ann S., writes fiction for the _Sun_, 196
-
- Stereotyping, adopted by the _Sun_, 193
-
- Stetson, Francis Lynde, a _Sun_ contributor, 404
-
- Stevenson, Robert Louis, early successes of, first appear in the
- _Sun_, 403, 404
- South Seas articles of, complete only in the _Sun_, 403, 404
-
- Stewart, Alexander T., grave robbery of, 322
-
- Stewart, William (“Walsingham”), first dramatic critic to adopt
- intimate style, 411
-
- Stillman, Amos B., telegraph editor for forty-five years, 280
- “Quite a fire in Chicago,” 281
-
- Stokes, Edward S., conviction of, reported by Henry Mann, 317, 318
-
- Stone, William L., conflict of, with Bryant, 34
- the _Sun’s_ quarrel with, 56
- sketch of, 112
- exposes Maria Monk, 113
-
- Sullivan-Mitchell fight, Arthur Brisbane’s report of, 347, 348
-
- _Sun_, the, reprints of the first issue, 25
- size of the first issue, 25
- extant copies of first issue, 26
- second issue, contents of, 38
- attacks shinplasters and phrenology, 123
- sold by Day to Beach, 127
- plant, expenses, and circulation of, June, 1838, 128
- Day’s period of ownership of, 127
- editorial comment in 1837 on popularity of, 129
- issues extras on the arrival of the Great Western, the British
- Queen, and other steamships, 142
- uses horse expresses to bring Governor Seward’s message from
- Albany, 143
- uses train, trotting horses, and boat to get the news of the
- steamer Caroline case, 144, 145
- uses carrier pigeons to get ship news, 146, 147
- moves to Nassau and Fulton streets, 1842, 146, 147
- second home of, burned after it had moved, 157
- buys a new dress of type every three months, 158
- is seven columns wide in 1840, 158
- title of, reads “_The New York Sun_” for a few months, 158
- is eight columns wide in 1843, 158
- _Weekly Sun_, 169
- _American Sun_, for Europeans, 169
- _Illustrated Sun_, 169
- syndicates President Tyler’s Message in 1841, 169
- value of, $250,000 in 1852, 171
- becomes a two-cent paper August 1, 1864;
- a one-cent paper, July 1, 1916;
- a two-cent paper January 26, 1918, 194
- size of, reduced to five columns in 1863, 193
- _Weekly Sun_, continued by Dana, 199
- _Semi-Weekly Sun_ announced, 199
- Dana and his associates pay $175,000 for, 228, 229
- apologizes for issuing more than four pages, 278
- city editors under Cummings, 279
- telegraph editors, 280
- Office Cat of, 287–289
- only four pages for twenty years, 301
- extraordinary sales, 323–325
- success of, explained by E. P. Mitchell, 325
- the _Sun_ spirit, 326, 379
- home of, for forty-seven years, 369
- editors-in-chief, only three in fifty years, 371
- managing editors, list of, 371
- city editors, list of, 371
- night city editors, list of, 371
- night editors, list of, 372
- news system, 372
- ethics, 380–383
- list of editorial writers, 409
- price of, 431, 432
- homes of, 432
-
- “Sunbeams” column, 315
-
- Sun cholera cure, 173
-
- Swain, Wm. M., predicts Day’s ruin, 24
- founds Philadelphia _Public Ledger_, 135
- industry of, 135
- makes $3,000,000, 135
-
- Swift, John T., sends the _Sun_ a beat on Port Arthur’s fall, 376, 377
-
- Swinton, John, double intellectual life of, 259
- makes speeches attacking Dana, 260
- is managing editor of the _Times_, 261
- starts _John Swinton’s Paper_, 261
-
-
- Tammany Hall, old home of, bought by Dana for the _Sun_, 229
-
- Taylor, Bayard, European correspondent of the _Tribune_, 161
-
- Telegraph, comments on Morse’s new invention, 145
- a report that the _Sun_ tried to control, 146
- extended to New York in 1846, 146
- is opened from New York to Philadelphia, Boston, and Albany, 164
- lines completed in 1846, 165
- drives reprint from first page, 171
- first cable messages, 197, 198
-
- Theatres, the Bowery riot, 55–56
- attractions of the thirties, 121, 122
- “Footlight Flashes,” 315, 316
- list of _Sun_ critics, 411
-
- Thiéblin, Napoleon L., critic and essayist, 314, 315
- uses pen names of “Monsieur X,” “Azamet Batuk,” and “Rigolo,” 314,
- 315
-
- Tilden, Samuel J., editor of _Daily News_, 181
-
- Townsend, Edward W., writes _Chimmie Fadden_ stories, 330
- fiction characters created by, 411
-
- Trains, special news, used by _Sun_ and _Herald_, 166
-
- Trowbridge, H. Warren, writes fiction for the _Sun_, 195
-
- Tweed, William M., is boss of the city, 234
- as a source of news, 269
- statue of, a _Sun_ joke, 271–274
- declination by, 273
- retains W. O. Bartlett as counsel, 275
- denounced by the _Sun_, 275, 276
- absolute power of, 276
- stable of, described by the _Sun_, 277
- escapes from keepers, 277
-
-
- Van Anda, Carr V., night editor, 1893–1904, 372
-
- Van Buren, Martha, 51
-
- Vance, John, writes editorials, 174
- leaves the _Sun_, 192
-
- Vanderbilt, Cornelius, an advertiser in the first _Sun_, 27
- opposes Jay Gould, 235
- a _Sun_ interview with, in 1875, 316
-
- Van Dyke, Dr. Henry, deception of, by Tweed statue joke, 274
-
- Vila, Joseph, sports editor, _Evening Sun_, 400
- Damon Runyon’s tribute to, 393
- exposes huge betting, 393
-
-
- Wall Street news, Bennett appreciates value of, 109
-
- “Walsingham.” See William Stewart.
-
- Wardman, Ervin, first used phrase “Yellow Journalism,” 415
- becomes publisher of the _Sun_, 432
-
- Warren, General Fitz-Henry, writes the phrase, “Forward to
- Richmond!”, 213, 214
- career of, 214
- _Sun_ writer, soldier, and politician, 257, 258
- article of, on Sumner’s death, 258
-
- Watkins, James T., editorial writer, _Evening Sun_, 399
-
- Watterson, Henry, “You [Dana] don’t make the _Sun_,” 291
- “Mr. Dana is left alone,” 293–295
- predicts no end to the “personality of journalism,” 295
- first woman reporter of _Evening Sun_, 400
-
- Webb, James Watson, journalist and a duellist, 35–36
- editorial articles on, 61, 62
- the _Sun’s_ story of attack by, on Bennett, 108
- charges the _Sun_ with stealing a President’s message, 110, 111
- second assault on Bennett described, 114
- refuses Joseph Wood’s challenge, 115
- retires from newspaper work, 183
-
- Webster, Daniel, Bunker Hill speech of, reported by the _Sun_, 158
-
- Weeks, Caleb, carries the Moon Hoax to Herschel in Africa, 86
-
- Weston, Edward Payson, the best “leg man” in journalism, 283
- feats of, in pedestrianism, 283, 284
-
- Weyman, Charles S., editor of the “Sunbeams” column, 228
-
- Wheeler, Andrew Carpenter, (“Nym Crinkle”), dramatic critic, 411
-
- Whisky Ring scandal, 305
-
- White, Frank Marshall, brings the _Sun_ a beat on the missing steamer
- Umbria, 392, 393
-
- Whitman, Stephen French, _Evening Sun_ reporter, 399
-
- Wild pigeons, 43
-
- Williams, Barney (Bernard Flaherty), the _Sun’s_ first newsboy, 40
- makes first stage appearance, 121
-
- Williams, John, city editor, 279
-
- Willis, Nathaniel P., 37
-
- Wilson, Alexander C., associate of Raymond, 174
-
- Wilson, General James Harrison, quoted on Dana’s assignment to report
- on Grant, 217
- says Grant declared Dana would be appointed collector, 309
-
- Wisner, George W., the _Sun’s_ first reporter, 38
- becomes half owner of the _Sun_, 46
- indicted for attack on Attree, 61
- challenged to a duel, 62
- retires from the _Sun_, 64
-
- Wood, Benjamin, buys _Daily News_, 135
- owns _Daily News_, 181
-
- Wood, Fernando, proposes New York’s secession, 180
-
- Wood, Dr. John B., “The Great American Condenser,” 278
- condenses through a reader, 279
-
- Wood, Joseph, feud over, and wife, challenge of, to Col. Webb, 115
-
- Wood, Samuel A., originates rhymed news stories, 351
- spring poem by, 352
- “Snygless the Seas Are,” 352
-
-
- Yale University, students of, investigate the Moon story, 84–85
-
- Yellow Journalism, Col. Watterson’s statement on, 413
- defined by E. P. Mitchell, 415
- phrase, first used by Ervin Wardman, 415
-
- Young, John Russell, orders of, enrage Cummings, 266
-
- Young, Mr., charged by the _Transcript_ with biting two of its
- carriers, 119
-
- Young, William, city editor, 279
- managing editor, 282
-
-
-[Illustration: THE THIRD HEAD-LINE OF THE NEW YORK SUN]
-
-[Illustration: THE FOURTH HEAD-LINE OF THE NEW YORK SUN]
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s Notes
-
-
-Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made consistent when a
-predominant preference was found in the original book; otherwise they
-were not changed.
-
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-marks were remedied when the change was obvious, and otherwise left
-unbalanced.
-
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-and outside quotations. In versions of this eBook that support
-hyperlinks, the page references in the List of Illustrations lead to
-the corresponding illustrations.
-
-The index was not checked for proper alphabetization or correct page
-references.
-
-Page 139: Words appear to be missing from the paragraph beginning “When
-Beach was twenty.”
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY OF THE SUN. NEW YORK,
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-
-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Story of the Sun. New York, 1833-1918, by Frank M. O'Brien</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Story of the Sun. New York, 1833-1918</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Frank M. O'Brien</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: July 18, 2021 [eBook #65868]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: deaurider, Charlie Howard, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This book was produced from images made available by the HathiTrust Digital Library.)</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE STORY OF THE SUN. NEW YORK, 1833-1918 ***</div>
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<p class="center larger">Transcriber's Note</p>
-
-<p>Larger versions of most illustrations may be seen by right-clicking them
-and selecting an option to view them separately, or by double-tapping and/or
-stretching them.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div id="cover" class="newpage figcenter" style="max-width: 30em;">
- <img src="images/cover.jpg" width="1622" height="2162" alt="cover" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="newpage">
-<hr class="wide" />
-<h1>The Story of<br />
-<span class="large">The</span>
- <img src="images/i_001.png" width="288" height="93" style="max-width: 5em; padding: 0; vertical-align: -15%;" alt="logo" />
-<span class="large">Sun</span></h1>
-
-<hr class="wide" />
-<div id="if_i_001l" class="newpage figcenter" style="max-width: 50em;">
- <img src="images/i_001l.jpg" width="3034" height="710" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE FIRST HEAD-LINE OF THE NEW YORK SUN</div></div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="wide" />
-
-<div id="if_i_001r" class="newpage figcenter" style="max-width: 50em;">
- <img src="images/i_001r.jpg" width="3059" height="793" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE SECOND HEAD-LINE OF THE NEW YORK SUN</div></div>
-
-<hr class="wide" />
-
-<div id="i_frontis" class="newpage figcenter" style="max-width: 30em;">
- <img src="images/i_002.jpg" width="1607" height="2248" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
-
-BENJAMIN H. DAY, FOUNDER OF “THE SUN”</div></div>
-
-<div class="newpage p6 center wspace larger"><div class="bbox">
-<p class="xlarge">
-THE STORY OF<br />
-
-<span class="large">The</span> <img src="images/i_003.png" width="766" height="251" style="max-width: 5em; padding: 0; vertical-align: -10%;" alt="logo" /> <span class="large">Sun.</span></p>
-
-<div class="p1">
-<p class="rule2"> </p>
-<p class="rule2"> </p>
-<p class="rule3">NEW YORK, 1833–1918</p>
-<p class="rule2"> </p>
-<p class="rule2"> </p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p1 vspace"><span class="smaller">BY</span><br />
-
-<span class="larger">FRANK M. O’BRIEN</span></p>
-
-<p class="p1 small">WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY EDWARD<br />
-<span class="gesperrt1">PAGE MITCHELL, EDITOR OF “THE</span><br />
-SUN”—ILLUSTRATIONS AND FACSIMILES</p>
-
-<p class="p8 rule1">NEW YORK: GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="smaller">
-<p class="newpage p4 vspace">
-<i>Copyright, 1918,<br />
-By George H. Doran Company</i></p>
-
-<p class="p4"><i>Copyright, 1917, 1918, The Frank A. Munsey Company</i></p>
-<hr class="narrow" />
-
-<p><i>Copyright, 1918, The Sun Printing and Publishing Association</i></p>
-<hr class="narrow" />
-
-<p><i>Printed in the United States of America</i>
-</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<p class="newpage p4 center vspace wspace">
-TO<br />
-
-<span class="larger">FRANK A. MUNSEY</span></p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="AN_INTRODUCTION">AN INTRODUCTION<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">BY THE EDITOR OF THE SUN</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is truer, perhaps, of a newspaper than of most
-other complex things in the world that the whole
-may be greater than the sum of all its parts. In any
-daily paper worth a moment’s consideration the least
-fancifully inclined observer will discern an individuality
-apart from and in a degree independent of the
-dozens or hundreds or thousands of personal values
-entering at a given time into the composite of its grey
-pages.</p>
-
-<p>This entity of the institution, as distinguished from
-the human beings actually engaged in carrying it on,
-this fact of the newspaper’s possession of a separate
-countenance, a spirit or soul differentiating it from all
-others of its kind, is recognised either consciously or
-unconsciously by both the more or less unimportant
-workers who help to make it and by their silent partners
-who support it by buying and reading it. Its
-loyal friends and intelligent critics outside the establishment,
-the Old Subscriber and the Constant Reader,
-form the habit of attributing to the newspaper, as to
-an individual, qualities and powers beneficent or
-maleficent or merely foolish, according to their mood or
-digestion. They credit it with traits of character quite
-as distinct as belong to any man or woman of their
-acquaintance. They personify it, moreover, without
-much knowledge, if any, of the people directing and producing
-it; and, often and naturally, without any particular<span class="pagenum" id="Page_viii">viii</span>
-concern about who and what these people may be.</p>
-
-<p>On their own side, the makers of the paper are accustomed
-to individualise it as vividly as a crew does
-the ship. They know better than anybody else not
-only how far each personal factor, each element of the
-composite, is modified and influenced in its workings
-by the other personal factors associated in the production,
-but also the extent to which all the personal units
-are influenced and modified by something not listed in
-the office directory or visible upon the payroll; something
-that was there before they came and will be there
-after they go.</p>
-
-<p>Of course, that which has given persistent idiosyncrasy
-to a newspaper like the <i>Sun</i>, for example, is accumulated
-tradition. That which has made the whole
-count for more than the sum total of its parts, in the
-<i>Sun’s</i> case as in the case of its esteemed contemporaries,
-is the heritage of method and expedient, the increment
-of standardised skill and localised imagination contributed
-through many years to the fund of the paper
-by the forgotten worker as well as by the remembered.</p>
-
-<p>The manner of growth of the great newspaper’s well-defined
-and continuous character, distinguishing it from
-all the rest of the offspring of the printing press, a development
-sometimes not radically affected by changes
-of personnel, of ownership, of exterior conditions and
-fashions set by the popular taste, is a subject over
-which journalistic metaphysics might easily exert itself
-to the verge of boredom. Fortunately there has
-been found a much better way to deal with the attractive
-theme.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> is eighty-five years old as this book goes to
-press. In telling its intimate story, from the September
-Tuesday which saw the beginning of Mr. Day’s
-intrepid and epochal experiment, throughout the days<span class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">ix</span>
-of the Beaches, of Dana, of Laffan, and of Reick to the
-time of Mr. Munsey’s purchase of the property in the
-summer of 1916, Mr. O’Brien has done what has never
-been undertaken before, so far as is known to the
-writer of this introduction, for any newspaper with a
-career of considerable span.</p>
-
-<p>There have been general histories of Journalism, presenting
-casually the main facts of evolution and progress
-in the special instance. There have been satisfactory
-narratives of journalistic episodes, reasonably accurate
-accounts of certain aspects or dynastic periods
-of newspaper experience, excellent portrait biographies
-or autobiographies of journalists of genius and high
-achievement, with the eminent man usually in strong
-light in the foreground and his newspaper seldom
-nearer than the middle distance. But here, probably
-for the first time in literature of this sort, we have a
-real biography of a newspaper itself, covering the whole
-range of its existence, exhibiting every function of its
-organism, illustrating every quality that has been conspicuous
-in the successive stages of its growth. The
-<i>Sun</i> is the hero of Mr. O’Brien’s “Story of the <i>Sun</i>.”
-The human participants figure in their incidental relation
-to the main thread of its life and activities.
-They do their parts, big or little, as they pass in interesting
-procession. When they have done their parts
-they disappear, as in real life, and the story goes on,
-just as the <i>Sun</i> has gone on, without them except as
-they may have left their personal impress on the newspaper’s
-structure or its superficial decoration.</p>
-
-<p>During no small part of its four score and five
-years of intelligent interest in the world’s thoughts and
-doings it has been the <i>Sun’s</i> fortune to be regarded as
-in a somewhat exceptional sense the newspaper man’s
-newspaper. If in truth it has merited in any degree<span class="pagenum" id="Page_x">x</span>
-this peculiar distinction in the eyes of its professional
-brethren it must have been by reason of originality of
-initiative and soundness of method; perhaps by a
-chronic indifference to those ancient conventions of
-news importance or of editorial phraseology which,
-when systematically observed, are apt to result in a
-pale, dull, or even stupid uniformity of product. Mr.
-Dana wrote more than half a century ago to one of his
-associates, “Your articles have stirred up the animals,
-which you as well as I recognise as one of the great
-ends of life.” Sometimes he borrowed Titania’s wand;
-sometimes he used a red hot poker. Not only in that
-great editor’s time but also in the time of his predecessors
-and successors the <i>Sun</i> has held it to be a duty and
-a joy to assist to the best of its ability in the discouragement
-of anything like lethargy in the menagerie. Perhaps,
-again, that was one of the things that helped to
-make it the newspaper man’s newspaper.</p>
-
-<p>However this may be, it seems certain that to the
-students of the theory and practice of journalism, now
-happily so numerous in the land, the chronicler of one
-highly individual newspaper’s deeds and ways is affording
-an object lesson of practical value, a textbook
-of technical usefulness, as well as a store of authoritative
-history, entertaining anecdote, and suggestive professional
-information. And a much wider audience
-than is made up of newspaper workers present or to
-come will find that the story of a newspaper which Mr.
-O’Brien has told with wit and knowledge in the pages
-that follow becomes naturally and inevitably a swift and
-charming picture of the town in which that newspaper
-is published throughout the period of its service to that
-town—the most interesting period in the existence of
-the most interesting city of the world.</p>
-
-<p>It is a fine thing for the <i>Sun</i>, by all who have worked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xi">xi</span>
-for it in its own spirit beloved, I believe, like a creature
-of flesh and blood and living intelligence and human
-virtues and failings, that through Mr. Munsey’s wish
-it should have found in a son of its own schooling a
-biographer and interpreter so sympathetically responsive
-to its best traditions.</p>
-
-<p class="sigright">
-<span class="smcap">Edward P. Mitchell.</span>
-</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table id="toc" summary="Contents">
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2">CHAPTER I</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chapsub" colspan="2">SUNRISE AT 222 WILLIAM STREET</td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="small">
- <td> </td>
- <td class="tdr">PAGE</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Benjamin H. Day, with No Capital Except Youth and Courage, Establishes the First Permanent Penny Newspaper.—The Curious First Number Entirely His Own Work</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_21">21</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2">CHAPTER II</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chapsub" colspan="2">THE FIELD OF THE LITTLE “SUN”</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>A Very Small Metropolis Which Day and His Partner, Wisner, Awoke by Printing Small Human Pieces About Small Human Beings and Having Boys Cry the Paper</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_31">31</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2">CHAPTER III</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chapsub" colspan="2">RICHARD ADAMS LOCKE’S MOON HOAX</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>A Magnificent Fake Which Deceived Two Continents, Brought to “The Sun” the Largest Circulation in the World and, in Poe’s Opinion, Established Penny Papers</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_64">64</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xiv">xiv</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2">CHAPTER IV</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chapsub" colspan="2">DAY FINDS A RIVAL IN BENNETT</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>The Success of “The Sun” Leads to the Founding of The “Herald.”—Enterprises and Quarrels of a Furious Young Journalism.—The Picturesque Webb.—Maria Monk</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_103">103</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2">CHAPTER V</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chapsub" colspan="2">NEW YORK LIFE IN THE THIRTIES</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>A Sprightly City Which Daily Bought Thirty Thousand copies of “The Sun.”—The Rush to Start Penny Papers.—Day Sells “The Sun” for Forty Thousand Dollars</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_121">121</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2">CHAPTER VI</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chapsub" colspan="2">MOSES Y. BEACH’S ERA OF HUSTLE</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>“The Sun” Uses Albany Steamboats, Horse Expresses, Trotting Teams, Pigeons, and the Telegraph to Get News.—Poe’s Famous Balloon Hoax and the Case of Mary Rodgers</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_139">139</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2">CHAPTER VII</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chapsub" colspan="2">“THE SUN” IN THE MEXICAN WAR</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Moses Y. Beach as an Emissary of President Polk.—The Associated Press Founded in the Office of “The Sun.”—Ben Day’s Brother-in-Law Retires with a Small Fortune</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_164">164</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xv">xv</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2">CHAPTER VIII</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chapsub" colspan="2">“THE SUN” DURING THE CIVIL WAR</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>One of the Few Entirely Loyal Newspapers of New York.—Its Brief Ownership by a Religious Coterie.—It Returns to the Possession of M. S. Beach, Who Sells It to Dana</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_172">172</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2">CHAPTER IX</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chapsub" colspan="2">THE EARLIER CAREER OF DANA</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>His Life at Brook Farm and His Tribune Experience.—His Break with Greeley, His Civil War Services and His Chicago Disappointment.—His Purchase of “The Sun”</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_202">202</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2">CHAPTER X</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chapsub" colspan="2">DANA: HIS “SUN” AND ITS CITY</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>The Period of the Great Personal Journalists.—Dana’s Avoidance of Rules and Musty Newspaper Conventions.—His Choice of Men and His Broad Definition of News</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_233">233</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2">CHAPTER XI</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chapsub" colspan="2">DANA, AS MITCHELL SAW HIM</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>A Picture of the Room Where One Man Ruled for Thirty Years.—The Democratic Ways of a Newspaper Autocrat.—W. O. Bartlett, Pike, and His Other Early Associates</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_247">247</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xvi">xvi</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2">CHAPTER XII</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chapsub" colspan="2">DANA’S FIRST BIG NEWS MEN</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Amos J. Cummings, Dr. Wood, and John B. Bogart.—The Lively Days of Tweedism.—Elihu Root as a Dramatic Critic.—The Birth and Popularity of “The Sun’s” Cat</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_262">262</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2">CHAPTER XIII</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chapsub" colspan="2">DANA’S FAMOUS RIVALS PASS</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>The Deaths of Raymond, Bennett, and Greeley Leave Him the Dominant Figure of the American Newspaper Field.—Dana’s Dream of a Paper Without Advertisements</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_293">293</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2">CHAPTER XIV</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chapsub" colspan="2">“THE SUN” AND THE GRANT SCANDALS</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Dana’s Relentless Fight Against the Whisky Ring, the Crédit Mobilier, “Addition, Division, and Silence,” the Safe Burglary Conspiracy and the Boss Shepherd Scandal</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_304">304</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2">CHAPTER XV</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chapsub" colspan="2">“THE SUN” AND “HUMAN INTEREST”</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Something About Everything, for Everybody.—A Wonderful Four-Page Paper.—A Comparison of the Styles of “Sun” Reporters in Three Periods Twenty Years Apart</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_313">313</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xvii">xvii</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2">CHAPTER XVI</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chapsub" colspan="2">“SUN” REPORTERS AND THEIR WORK</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Cummings, Ralph, W. J. Chamberlin, Brisbane, Riggs, Dieuaide, Spears, O. K. Davis, Irwin, Adams, Denison, Wood, O’Malley, Hill, Cronyn.—Spanish War Work</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_328">328</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2">CHAPTER XVII</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chapsub" colspan="2">SOME GENIUS IN AN OLD ROOM</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Lord, Managing Editor for Thirty-Two Years.—Clarke, Magician of the Copy Desk.—Ethics, Fair Play and Democracy.—“The Evening Sun” and Those Who Make It</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_369">369</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2">CHAPTER XVIII</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chapsub" colspan="2">THE FINEST SIDE OF “THE SUN”</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Literary Associations of an Editorial Department That Has Encouraged and Attracted Men of Imagination and Talent.—Mitchell, Hazeltine, Church, and Their Colleagues</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_402">402</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chap" colspan="2">CHAPTER XIX</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc chapsub" colspan="2">“THE SUN” AND YELLOW JOURNALISM</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>The Coming and Going of a Newspaper Disease.—Dana’s Attitude Toward President Cleveland.—Dana’s Death.—Ownerships of Paul Dana, Laffan, Reick, and Munsey</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_413">413</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="tpad">
- <td class="tdl"><i>Bibliography</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_435">435</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="tpad">
- <td class="tdl"><i>Chronology</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_437">437</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="tpad">
- <td class="tdl"><i>Index</i></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#toclink_439">439</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="ILLUSTRATIONS">ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table id="loi" summary="Illustrations">
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">BENJAMIN H. DAY, FOUNDER OF “THE SUN”</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_frontis"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="small">
- <td class="tdl"> </td>
- <td class="tdr">PAGE</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">BENJAMIN H. DAY, A BUST</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_22">22</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">THE FIRST ISSUE OF “THE SUN”</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_28">28</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">THE FIRST HOME OF “THE SUN”</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_34a">34</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">THE SECOND HOME OF “THE SUN”</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_34b">34</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">BARNEY WILLIAMS, THE FIRST NEWSBOY</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_50">50</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">RICHARD ADAMS LOCKE, AUTHOR OF THE MOON HOAX</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_68">68</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">THE FIRST INSTALMENT OF THE MOON HOAX</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_96a">96</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">A MOON SCENE, FROM LOCKE’S GREAT DECEPTION</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_96b">96</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">MOSES YALE BEACH, SECOND OWNER OF “THE SUN”</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_124">124</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">AN EXTRA OF “THE SUN”</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_136a">136</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">THE THIRD HOME OF “THE SUN”</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_136b">136</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">MOSES SPERRY BEACH</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_166">166</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">ALFRED ELY BEACH</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_170">170</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHARLES A. DANA AT THIRTY-EIGHT</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_204">204</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">MR. DANA AT FIFTY</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_224">224</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">THE FIRST NUMBER OF “THE SUN” UNDER DANA</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_236a">236</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">THE HOME OF “THE SUN” FROM 1868 TO 1915</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_236b">236</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">MR. DANA IN HIS OFFICE</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_248">248</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">JOSEPH PULITZER</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_258a">258</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">ELIHU ROOT</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_258b">258</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">JUDGE WILLARD BARTLETT</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_258c">258</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">MR. DANA AT SEVENTY</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_270">270</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">AMOS JAY CUMMINGS</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_280">280</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">DANIEL F. KELLOGG</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_290a">290</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">AMOS B. STILLMAN</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_290b">290</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">JOHN B. BOGART</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_290c">290</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xx">xx</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">JAMES GORDON BENNETT, SR.</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_300a">300</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">HORACE GREELEY</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_300b">300</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">HENRY J. RAYMOND</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_300c">300</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">JULIAN RALPH</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_316">316</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">ARTHUR BRISBANE</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_330">330</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">EDWARD G. RIGGS</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_350">350</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">CHESTER SANDERS LORD</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_370">370</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">SELAH MERRILL CLARKE</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_380">380</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">SAMUEL A. WOOD</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_390a">390</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">OSCAR KING DAVIS</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_390b">390</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">THOMAS M. DIEUAIDE</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_390c">390</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">SAMUEL HOPKINS ADAMS</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_390d">390</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">WILL IRWIN</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_398a">398</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">FRANK WARD O’MALLEY</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_398b">398</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">EDWIN C. HILL</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_398c">398</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">PAUL DANA</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_404">404</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">WILLIAM M. LAFFAN</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_410">410</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">WILLIAM C. REICK</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_416">416</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">FRANK A. MUNSEY</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_422">422</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">EDWARD PAGE MITCHELL</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_430">430</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_21" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">21</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="THE_STORY_OF_THE_SUN"><span class="larger">THE STORY OF “THE SUN”</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">SUNRISE AT 222 WILLIAM STREET</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>Benjamin H. Day, with No Capital Except Youth and Courage,
-Establishes the First Permanent Penny Newspaper.—The
-Curious First Number Entirely His Own Work.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">In</span> the early thirties of last century the only newspapers
-in the city of New York were six-cent journals
-whose reading-matter was adapted to the politics
-of men, and whose only appeal to women was their size,
-perfectly suited to deep pantry-shelves.</p>
-
-<p>Dave Ramsey, a compositor on one of these sixpennies,
-the <i>Journal of Commerce</i>, had an obsession. It was
-that a penny paper, to be called the <i>Sun</i>, would be a
-success in a city full of persons whose interest was in
-humanity in general, rather than in politics, and whose
-pantry-shelves were of negligible width. Why his mind
-fastened on the <i>Sun</i> as the name of this child of his
-vision is not known; perhaps it was because there was
-a daily in London bearing that title. It was a short
-name, easily written, easily spoken, easily remembered.</p>
-
-<p>Benjamin H. Day, another printer, worked beside
-Dave Ramsey in 1830. Ramsey reiterated his idea to
-his neighbour so often that Day came to believe in it,
-although it is doubtful whether he had the great faith
-that possessed Ramsey. Now that due credit has been
-given to Ramsey for the idea of the penny <i>Sun</i>, he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">22</span>
-passes out of the record, for he never attempted to put
-his project into execution.</p>
-
-<p>Nor was Day’s enthusiasm for a penny <i>Sun</i> so big
-that he plunged into it at once. He was a business
-man rather than a visionary. With the savings from
-his wages as a compositor he went into the job-printing
-business in a small way. He still met his old chums
-and still talked of the <i>Sun</i>, but it is likely that he never
-would have come to start it if it had not been for the
-cholera.</p>
-
-<p>There was an epidemic of this plague in New York
-in 1832. It killed more than thirty-five hundred people
-in that year, and added to the depression of business
-already caused by financial disturbances and a wretched
-banking system. The job-printing trade suffered with
-other industries, and Day decided that he needed a
-newspaper—not to reform, not to uplift, not to arouse,
-but to push the printing business of Benjamin H. Day.
-Incidentally he might add lustre to the fame of the
-President, Andrew Jackson, or uphold the hands of the
-mayor of New York, Gideon Lee; but his prime purpose
-was to get the work of printing handbills for John
-Smith, the grocer, or letter-heads for Richard Robinson,
-the dealer in hay. Incidentally he might become rich
-and powerful, but for the time being he needed work at
-his trade.</p>
-
-<p>Ben Day was only twenty-three years old. He was
-the son of Henry Day, a hatter of West Springfield,
-Massachusetts, and Mary Ely Day; and sixth in descent
-from his first American ancestor, Robert Day. Shortly
-after the establishment of the Springfield <i>Republican</i>
-by Samuel Bowles, in 1824, young Day went into the
-office of that paper, then a weekly, to learn the printer’s
-trade. That was two years before the birth of the
-second and greater Samuel Bowles, who was later to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">23</span>
-make the <i>Republican</i>, as a daily, one of the greatest of
-American newspapers.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_22" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 19em;">
- <img src="images/i_022a.jpg" width="912" height="1819" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
-
-<p>BENJAMIN H. DAY</p>
-
-<p class="subhead">A Bust in the Possession of Mrs. Florence A. Snyder, Summit, N. J.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Day learned well his trade from Sam Bowles. When
-he was twenty, and a first-class compositor, he went to
-New York, and worked at the case in the offices of the
-<i>Evening Post</i> and the <i>Commercial Advertiser</i>. He married,
-when he was twenty-one, Miss Eveline Shepard.
-At the time of the <i>Sun’s</i> founding Mr. Day lived, with
-his wife and their infant son, Henry, at 75 Duane Street,
-only a few blocks from the newspaper offices.</p>
-
-<p>Day was a good-looking young man with a round,
-calm, resolute face. He possessed health, industry, and
-character. Also he had courage, for a man with a
-family was taking no small risk in launching, without
-capital, a paper to be sold at one cent.</p>
-
-<p>The idea of a penny paper was not new. In Philadelphia,
-the <i>Cent</i> had had a brief, inglorious existence.
-In Boston, the <i>Bostonian</i> had failed to attract the cultured
-readers of the modern Athens. Eight months before
-Day’s hour arrived the <i>Morning Post</i> had braved it
-in New York, selling first at two cents and later at one
-cent, but even with Horace Greeley as one of the
-founders it lasted only three weeks.</p>
-
-<p>When Ben Day sounded his friends, particularly the
-printers, as to their opinion of his project, they cited
-the doleful fate of the other penny journals. He drew,
-or had designed, a head-line for the <i>Sun</i> that was to be,
-and took it about to his cronies. A. S. Abell, a printer
-on the <i>Mercantile Advertiser</i>, poked the most fun at
-him. A penny paper, indeed! But this same Abell
-lived to stop scoffing, to found another <i>Sun</i>—this one
-in Baltimore—and to buy a half-million-dollar estate
-out of the profits of it. He was the second beneficiary
-of the penny <i>Sun</i> idea.</p>
-
-<p>William M. Swain, another journeyman printer, also<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">24</span>
-made light of Day’s ambition. He lived to be Day’s
-foreman, and later to own the Philadelphia <i>Public
-Ledger</i>. He told Day that the penny <i>Sun</i> would ruin
-him. As Day had not much enthusiasm at the outset,
-surely his friends did not add to it, unless by kindling
-his stubbornness.</p>
-
-<p>As for capital, he had none at all, in the money sense.
-He did have a printing-press, hardly improved from the
-machine of Benjamin Franklin’s day, some job-paper,
-and plenty of type. The press would throw off two
-hundred impressions an hour at full speed, man power.
-He hired a room, twelve by sixteen feet, in the building
-at 222 William Street. That building was still there,
-in the shadow of the Brooklyn Bridge approach, when
-the <i>Sun</i> celebrated its fiftieth anniversary in 1883; but
-a modern six-story envelope factory is on the site to-day.</p>
-
-<p>There is no question as to the general authorship of
-the first paper. Day was proprietor, publisher, editor,
-chief pressman, and mailing-clerk. He was not a lazy
-man. He stayed up all the night before that fateful
-Tuesday, September 3, 1833, setting with his own hands
-some advertisements that were regularly appearing in
-the six-cent papers, for he wanted to make a show of
-prosperity.</p>
-
-<p>He also wrote, or clipped from some out-of-town newspaper,
-a poem that would fill nearly a column. He rewrote
-news items from the West and South—some of
-them not more than a month old. As for the snappy
-local news of the day, he bought, in the small hours of
-that Tuesday morning, a copy of the <i>Courier and Enquirer</i>,
-the livest of the six-cent papers, took it to the
-single room in William Street, clipped out or rewrote
-the police-court items, and set them up himself. A
-boy, whose name is unknown to fame, assisted him at
-devil’s work. A journeyman printer, Parmlee, helped<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">25</span>
-with the press when the last quoin had been made tight
-in the fourth and last of the little pages.</p>
-
-<p>The sun was well up in the sky before its namesake
-of New York came slowly, hesitatingly, almost sadly,
-up over the horizon of journalism—never to set! In
-the years to follow, the <i>Sun</i> was to have changes in
-ownership, in policy, in size, and in style, but no week-day
-was to come when it could not shine. Of all the
-morning newspapers printed in New York on that 3rd
-of September, 1833, there is only one other—the <i>Journal
-of Commerce</i>—left.</p>
-
-<p>But young Mr. Day, wiping the ink from his hands
-at noon, and waiting in doubt to see whether the public
-would buy the thousand <i>Suns</i> he had printed, could not
-foresee this. Neither could he know that, by this humble
-effort to exalt his printing business, he had driven
-a knife into the sclerotic heart of ancient journalism.
-The sixpenny papers were to laugh at this tiny intruder—to
-laugh and laugh, and to die.</p>
-
-<p>The size of the first <i>Sun</i> was eleven and one-quarter
-by eight inches, not a great deal bigger than a sheet of
-commercial letter paper, and considerably less than one-quarter
-the size of a page of the <i>Sun</i> of to-day. Compared
-with the first <i>Sun</i>, the present newspaper is about
-sixteen times larger. The type was a good, plain face
-of agate, with some verse on the last page in nonpareil.</p>
-
-<p>An almost perfect reprint of the first <i>Sun</i> was issued
-as a supplement to the paper on its twentieth birthday,
-in 1853, and again—to the number of about one hundred
-and sixty thousand copies—on its fiftieth birthday, in
-1883. Many of the persons who treasure the replicas
-of 1883 believe them to be original first numbers, as
-they were not labelled “Presented gratuitously to the
-subscribers of the <i>Sun</i>,” as was the issue of 1853.
-Hardly a month passes by but the <i>Sun</i> receives one of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">26</span>
-them from some proud owner. It is easy, however, to tell
-the reprint from the original, for Mr. Day in his haste
-committed an error at the masthead of the editorial or
-second page of the first number. The date-line there
-reads “September 3, 1832,” while in the reprints it is
-“September 3, 1833,” as it should have been, but wasn’t,
-in the original. And there are minor typographical
-differences, invisible to the layman.</p>
-
-<p>Of the thousand, or fewer, copies of the first <i>Sun</i>, only
-five are known to exist—one in the bound file of the
-<i>Sun’s</i> first year, held jealously in the <i>Sun’s</i> safe; one
-in the private library of the editor of the <i>Sun</i>, Edward
-Page Mitchell; one in the Public Library at Fifth
-Avenue and Forty-second Street, New York; and two in
-the library of the American Type Founders Company,
-Jersey City.</p>
-
-<p>There were three columns on each of the four pages.
-At the top of the first column on the front page was a
-modest announcement of the <i>Sun’s</i> ambitions:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The object of this paper is to lay before the public,
-at a price within the means of every one, <span class="allsmcap">ALL THE NEWS
-OF THE DAY</span>, and at the same time afford an advantageous
-medium for advertising.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was added that the subscription in advance was
-three dollars a year, and that yearly advertisers were to
-be accommodated with ten lines every day for thirty
-dollars per annum—ten cents a day, or one cent a line.
-That was the old fashion of advertising. The friendly
-merchant bought thirty dollars’ worth of space, say in
-December, and inserted an advertisement of his fur
-coats or snow-shovels. The same advertisement might
-be in the paper the following July, for the newspapers
-made no effort to coordinate the needs of the seller<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">27</span>
-and the buyer. So long as the merchant kept his name
-regularly in print, he felt that was enough.</p>
-
-<p>The leading article on the first page was a semi-humorous
-story about an Irish captain and his duels.
-It was flanked by a piece of reprint concerning microscopic
-carved toys. There was a paragraph about a Vermont
-boy so addicted to whistling that he fell ill of it.
-Mr. Day’s apprentice may have needed this warning.</p>
-
-<p>The front-page advertising, culled from other newspapers
-and printed for effect, consisted of the notices
-of steamship sailings. In one of these Commodore
-Vanderbilt offered to carry passengers from New York
-to Hartford, by daylight, for one dollar, on his splendid
-low-pressure steamboat Water Witch. Cornelius Vanderbilt
-was then thirty-nine years old, and had made the
-boat line between New York and New Brunswick, New
-Jersey, pay him forty thousand dollars a year. When
-the <i>Sun</i> started, the commodore was at the height of his
-activity, and he stuck to the water for thirty years afterward,
-until he had accumulated something like forty
-million dollars.</p>
-
-<p>E. K. Collins had not yet established his famous Dramatic
-line of clipper-ships between New York and Liverpool,
-but he advertised the “very fast sailing coppered
-ship Nashville for New Orleans.” He was only thirty
-then.</p>
-
-<p>Cooks were advertised for by private families living
-in Broadway, near Canal Street—pretty far up-town
-to live at that day—and in Temple Street, near Liberty,
-pretty far down-town now.</p>
-
-<p>On the second page was a bit of real news, the melancholy
-suicide of a young Bostonian of “engaging manners
-and amiable disposition,” in Webb’s Congress Hall,
-a hotel. There were also two local anecdotes; a paragraph
-to the effect that “the city is nearly full of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">28</span>
-strangers from all parts of this country and Europe”;
-nine police-court items, nearly all concerning trivial
-assaults; news of murders committed in Florida, at
-Easton, Pennsylvania, and at Columbus, Ohio; a report
-of an earthquake at Charlottesville, Virginia, and a few
-lines of stray news from Mexico.</p>
-
-<p>The third page had the arrivals and clearances at
-the port of New York, a joke about the cholera in New
-Orleans, a line to say that the same disease had appeared
-in the City of Mexico, an item about an insurrection in
-the Ohio penitentiary, a marriage announcement, a death
-notice, some ship and auction advertisements, and the
-offer of a reward of one thousand dollars for the recovery
-of thirteen thousand six hundred dollars stolen
-from the mail stage between Boston and Lynn and the
-arrest of the thieves.</p>
-
-<p>The last page carried a poem, “A Noon Scene,” but
-the atmosphere was of the Elysian Fields over in Hoboken
-rather than of midday in the city. When Day
-scissored it, probably he did so with the idea that it
-would fill a column. Another good filler was the bank-note
-table, copied from a six-cent contemporary. The
-quotations indicated that not much of the bank currency
-of the day was accepted at par.</p>
-
-<p>The rest of the page was filled with borrowed advertising.
-The Globe Insurance Company, of which
-John Jacob Astor was a director, announced that it had
-a capital of a million dollars. The North River Insurance
-Company, whose directorate included William B.
-Astor, declared its willingness to insure against fire and
-against “loss or damage by inland navigation.” At
-that time the boilers of river steamboats had an unpleasant
-trick of blowing up; hence Commodore Vanderbilt’s
-mention of the low pressure of the Water Witch.
-John A. Dix, then Secretary of State of the State of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">29</span>
-New York, and later to be the hero of the “shoot him
-on the spot” order, advertised an election. Castleton
-House Academy, on Staten Island, offered to teach and
-board young gentlemen at twenty-five dollars a quarter.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_28" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 38em;">
- <img src="images/i_028a.jpg" width="1818" height="2405" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">THE FIRST ISSUE OF “THE SUN”</div></div>
-
-<p>Such was the first <i>Sun</i>. Part of it was stale news,
-rewritten. Part was borrowed advertising. It is doubtful
-whether even the police-court items were original, although
-they were the most human things in the issue,
-the most likely to appeal to the readers whom Day
-hoped to reach—people to whom the purchase of a paper
-at six cents was impossible, and to whom windy, monotonous
-political discussions were a bore.</p>
-
-<p>In those early thirties, daily journalism had not advanced
-very far. Men were willing, but means and
-methods were weak. The first English daily was the
-<i>Courrant</i>, issued in 1702. The <i>Orange Postman</i>, put out
-the following year, was the first penny paper. The
-London <i>Times</i> was not started until 1785. It was the
-first English paper to use a steam press, as the <i>Sun</i>
-was the first American paper.</p>
-
-<p>The first American daily was the <i>Pennsylvania
-Packet</i>, called later the <i>General Advertiser</i>, begun in
-Philadelphia in 1784. It died in 1837. Of the existing
-New York papers only the <i>Globe</i> dates back to the
-eighteenth century, having been founded in 1797 as the
-<i>Commercial Advertiser</i>. Next to it in age is the <i>Evening
-Post</i>, started in 1801.</p>
-
-<p>The weakness of the early dailies was largely due to
-the fact that their publishers looked almost entirely to
-advertising for the support of the papers. On the other
-hand, the editors were politicians or highbrows who
-thought more of a speech by Lord Piccadilly on empire
-than of a good street tragedy; more of an essay by Lady
-Geraldine Glue than of a first-class report of a kidnapping.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">30</span></p>
-
-<p>Another great obstacle to success—one for which
-neither editor nor publisher was responsible—was the
-lack of facilities for the transmission of news. Fulton
-launched the Clermont twenty-six years before Day
-launched the <i>Sun</i>, but even in Day’s time steamships
-were nothing to brag of, and the first of them was yet
-to cross the Atlantic. When the <i>Sun</i> was born, the most
-important railroad in America was thirty-four miles
-long, from Bordentown to South Amboy, New Jersey.
-There was no telegraph, and the mails were of pre-historic
-slowness.</p>
-
-<p>It was hard to get out a successful daily newspaper
-without daily news. A weekly would have sufficed for
-the information that came in, by sailing ship and stage,
-from Europe and Washington and Boston. Ben Day
-was the first man to reconcile himself to an almost impossible
-situation. He did so by the simple method of
-using what news was nearest at hand—the incidental
-happenings of New York life. In this way he solved his
-own problem and the people’s, for they found that the
-local items in the <i>Sun</i> were just what they wanted,
-while the price of the paper suited them well.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_31" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">31</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">THE FIELD OF THE LITTLE “SUN”</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>A Very Small Metropolis Which Day and His Partner,
-Wisner, Awoke by Printing Small Human Pieces About
-Small Human Beings and Having Boys Cry the Paper.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">How</span> far could the little <i>Sun</i> hope to cast its beam
-in a stodgy if not naughty world? The circulation
-of all the dailies in New York at the time was less than
-thirty thousand. The seven morning and four evening
-papers, all sold at six cents a copy, shared the field thus:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="center">MORNING PAPERS</p>
-
-<table id="t31a" class="tnarrow25" summary="morning papers circulation">
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Morning Courier and New York Enquirer</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">4,500</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Democratic Chronicle</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">4,000</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">New York <i>Standard</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">2,400</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">New York <i>Journal of Commerce</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">2,300</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">New York <i>Gazette and General Advertiser</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">1,500</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">New York <i>Daily Advertiser</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">1,400</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Mercantile Advertiser and New York Advocate</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">1,200</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="p1 center">EVENING PAPERS</p>
-
-<table id="t31b" class="tnarrow25" summary="evening papers circulation">
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Evening Post</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">3,000</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><i>Evening Star</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">2,500</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">New York <i>Commercial Advertiser</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">2,100</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">New York <i>American</i></td>
- <td class="tdr">1,600</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="in2">Total</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="bt">26,500</span></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-</div>
-
-<p>New York was the American metropolis, but it was
-of about the present size of Indianapolis or Seattle. Of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">32</span>
-its quarter of a million population, only eight or ten
-thousand lived above Twenty-third Street. Washington
-Square, now the residence district farthest down-town,
-had just been adopted as a park; before that it
-had been the Potter’s Field. In 1833 rich New Yorkers
-were putting up some fine residences there—of which a
-good many still stand. Sixth Street had had its name
-changed to Waverley Place in honor of Walter Scott,
-recently dead, the literary king of the day.</p>
-
-<p>Wall Street was already the financial centre, with its
-Merchants’ Exchange, banks, brokers, and insurance
-companies. Canal Street was pretty well filled with
-retail stores. Third Avenue had been macadamized
-from the Bowery to Harlem. The down-town streets
-were paved, and some were lighted with gas at seven
-dollars a thousand cubic feet.</p>
-
-<p>Columbia College, in the square bounded by Murray,
-Barclay, Church, and Chapel Streets, had a hundred
-students; now it has more than a hundred hundred.
-James Kent was professor of law in the Columbia of
-that day, and Charles Anthon was professor of Greek
-and Latin. A rival seat of learning, the University of
-the City of New York, chartered two years earlier, was
-temporarily housed at 12 Chambers Street, with a certain
-Samuel F. B. Morse as professor of sculpture and
-painting. There were twelve schools, harbouring six
-thousand pupils, whose welfare was guarded by the
-Public School Society of New York, Lindley Murray
-secretary. The National Academy of Design, incorporated
-five years before, guided the budding artist in
-Clinton Hall, and Mr. Morse was its president, while
-it had for its professor of mythology one William Cullen
-Bryant.</p>
-
-<p>Albert Gallatin was president of the National Bank,
-at 13 Wall Street. Often at the end of his day’s work<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">33</span>
-he would walk around to the small shop in William
-Street where his young friend Delmonico, the confectioner,
-was trying to interest the gourmets of the city
-in his French cooking. Gideon Lee, besides being
-mayor, was president of the Leather Manufacturers’
-Bank at 334 Pearl Street. He was the last mayor of
-New York to be appointed by the common council, for
-Dix’s advertisement in the first <i>Sun</i> called an election
-by which the people of the city gained the right to elect
-a mayor by popular vote.</p>
-
-<p>A list of the solid citizens of the New York of that
-year would include Peter Schermerhorn, Nicholas Fish,
-Robert Lenox, Sheppard Knapp, Samuel Swartwout,
-Henry Beekman, Henry Delafield, John Mason, William
-Paulding, David S. Kennedy, Jacob Lorillard, David
-Lydig, Seth Grosvenor, Elisha Riggs, John Delafield,
-Peter A. Jay, C. V. S. Roosevelt, Robert Ray, Preserved
-Fish, Morris Ketchum, Rufus Prime, Philip Hone, William
-Vail, Gilbert Coutant, and Mortimer Livingston.</p>
-
-<p>These men and their fellows ran the banks and the
-big business of that day. They read the six-cent papers,
-mostly those which warned the public that Andrew
-Jackson was driving the country to the devil. It would
-be years before the <i>Sun</i> would bring the light of common,
-everyday things into their dignified lives—if it
-ever did so. Day, the printer, did not look to them to
-read his paper, although he hoped for some small part
-of their advertising. It is likely that one of the Gouverneurs—Samuel
-L.—read the early <i>Sun</i>, but he was
-postmaster, and it was his duty to examine new and
-therefore suspicionable publications.</p>
-
-<p>Incidentally, Postmaster Gouverneur had one clerk
-to sort all the mail that came into the city from the rest
-of the world. It was a small New York upon which the
-timid <i>Sun</i> cast its still smaller beams. The mass of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">34</span>
-people had not been interested in newspapers, because
-the newspapers brought nothing into their lives but the
-drone of American and foreign politics. A majority of
-them were in sympathy with Tammany Hall, particularly
-since 1821, when the property qualification was
-removed from the franchise through Democratic effort.</p>
-
-<p>New York had literary publications other than the
-six-cent papers. The <i>Knickerbocker Magazine</i> was
-founded in January of 1833, with Charles Hoffman,
-assistant editor of the <i>American Magazine</i>, as editor.
-Among the contributors engaged were William Cullen
-Bryant and James K. Paulding. The subscription-list,
-it was proudly announced, had no fewer than eight
-hundred names on it. The <i>Mechanics’ Magazine</i>, the
-<i>Sporting Magazine</i>, the <i>American Ploughboy</i>, the <i>Journal
-of Public Morals</i>, and the <i>Youth’s Temperance Lecturer</i>
-were among the periodicals that contended for
-public favour.</p>
-
-<p>Bryant was a busy man, for he was the chief editor
-of the <i>Evening Post</i> as well as a magazine contributor
-and a teacher. Fame had come to him early, for
-“Thanatopsis” was published when he was twenty-three,
-and “To a Water-fowl” appeared a year later,
-in 1818. Now, in his thirties, he was no longer the
-delicate youth, the dreamy poet. One April day in
-1831 Bryant and William L. Stone, one of the editors
-of the <i>Commercial Advertiser</i>, had a rare fight in front
-of the City Hall, the poet beginning it with a cowskin
-whip swung at Stone’s head, and the spectators ending
-it after Stone had seized the whip. These two were
-editors of sixpenny “respectables.”</p>
-
-<div id="ip_34a" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 38em;">
- <img src="images/i_034a.jpg" width="1813" height="1073" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
-
-<p>THE FIRST HOME OF “THE SUN,” 222 WILLIAM STREET</p>
-
-<p class="subhead">(<em>Under the Arrow</em>)</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<div id="ip_34b" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 38em;">
- <img src="images/i_034ab.jpg" width="1816" height="1264" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
-
-<p>THE SECOND HOME OF “THE SUN”</p>
-
-<p class="subhead">Nassau Street, from Frankfort to Spruce, in the Early Forties. “The Sun’s”
-Second Home Is Shown at the Right End of the Block. The Tammany Hall
-Building Became “The Sun’s” Fourth Home in 1868.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Irving and Cooper, Bryant and Halleck, Nathaniel
-P. Willis and George P. Morris were the largest figures
-of intellectual New York. In 1833 Irving returned from
-Europe after a visit that had lasted seventeen years.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span>
-He was then fifty, and had written his best books.
-Cooper, half a dozen years younger, had long since
-basked in the glory that came to him with the publication
-of “The Spy,” “The Pilot,” and “The Last of the
-Mohicans.” He and Irving were guests at every cultured
-function.</p>
-
-<p>Prescott was finishing his first work, “The History
-of Ferdinand and Isabella.” Bancroft was beginning
-his “History of the United States.” George Ticknor
-had written his “Life of Lafayette.” Hawthorne had
-published only “Fanshawe” and some of the “Twice
-Told Tales.” Poe was struggling along in Baltimore.
-Holmes, a medical student, had written a few poems.
-Dr. John William Draper, later to write his great
-“History of the Intellectual Development of Europe,”
-arrived from Liverpool that year to make New York
-his home.</p>
-
-<p>Longfellow was professor of modern languages at
-Bowdoin, and unknown to fame as a poet. Whittier had
-written “Legends of New England” and “Moll
-Pitcher.” Emerson was in England. Richard Henry
-Dana and Motley were at Harvard. Thoreau was helping
-his father to make lead-pencils. Parkman, Lowell,
-and Herman Melville were schoolboys.</p>
-
-<p>Away off in Buffalo was a boy of fourteen who clerked
-in his uncle’s general store by day, selling steel traps to
-Seneca braves, and by night read Latin, Greek, poetry,
-history, and the speeches of Andrew Jackson. His name
-was Charles Anderson Dana.</p>
-
-<p>The leading newspaperman of the day in New York
-was James Watson Webb, a son of the General Webb
-who held the Bible upon which Washington took the
-oath of office as first President. J. Watson Webb had
-been in the army and, as a journalist, was never for
-peace at any price. He united the <i>Morning Courier</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">36</span>
-and the <i>Enquirer</i>, and established a daily horse express
-between New York and Washington, which is said to
-have cost seventy-five hundred dollars a month, in order
-to get news from Congress and the White House twenty-four
-hours before his rivals.</p>
-
-<p>Webb was famed as a fighter. He had a row with
-Duff Green in Washington in 1830. In January, 1836,
-he thrashed James Gordon Bennett in Wall Street. He
-incited a mob to drive Wood, a singer, from the stage
-of the Park Theater. In 1838 he sent a challenge to
-Representative Cilley, of Maine, a classmate of Longfellow
-and Hawthorne at Bowdoin. Cilley refused to
-fight, on the ground that he had made no personal reflections
-on Webb’s character; whereupon Representative
-Graves, of Kentucky, who carried the card for
-Webb, challenged Cilley for himself, as was the custom.
-They fought with rifles on the Annapolis Road, and
-Cilley was killed at the third shot.</p>
-
-<p>In 1842 Webb fought a duel with Representative
-Marshall, of Kentucky, and not only was wounded, but
-on his return to New York was sentenced to two years
-in prison “for leaving the State with the intention of
-giving or receiving a challenge.” At the end of two
-weeks, however, he was pardoned.</p>
-
-<p>Having deserted Jackson and become a Whig, Webb
-continued to own and edit the <i>Courier and Enquirer</i>
-until 1861, when it was merged with the <i>World</i>. His
-quarrels, all of political origin, brought prestige to his
-paper. Ben Day had no duelling-pistols. His only
-chance to advertise the <i>Sun</i> was by its own light and
-its popular price.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond Webb, Day had no lively journalist with
-whom to contend at the outset, and Webb probably did
-not dream that the <i>Sun</i> would be worthy of a joust.
-Perhaps fortunately for Day, Horace Greeley had just<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">37</span>
-failed in his attempt to run a one-cent paper. This was
-the <i>Morning Post</i>, which Greeley started in January,
-1833, with Francis V. Story, a fellow printer, as his
-partner, and with a capital of one hundred and fifty
-dollars. It ran for three weeks only.</p>
-
-<p>Greeley and Story still had some type, bought on
-credit, and they issued a tri-weekly, the <i>Constitutionalist</i>,
-which, in spite of its dignified title, was the avowed
-organ of the lotteries. Its columns contained the following
-card:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Greeley &amp; Story, No. 54 Liberty Street, New York,
-respectfully solicit the patronage of the public to their
-business of letterpress printing, particularly lottery-printing,
-such as schemes, periodicals, and so forth,
-which will be executed on favorable terms.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It must be remembered that at that time lotteries
-were not under a cloud. There were in New York
-forty-five lottery offices, licensed at two hundred and
-fifty dollars apiece annually, and the proceeds were
-divided between the public schools and a home for deaf-mutes.
-That was the last year of legalized lotteries.
-After they disappeared Greeley started the <i>New Yorker</i>,
-the best literary weekly of its time. It was not until
-April, 1841, that he founded the <i>Tribune</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Doubtless there were many young New Yorkers of
-that period who would have made bang-up reporters,
-but apparently, until Day’s time, with few exceptions
-they did not work on morning newspapers. One exception
-was James Gordon Bennett, whose work for Webb
-on the <i>Courier and Enquirer</i> helped to make it the leading
-American paper.</p>
-
-<p>Nathaniel P. Willis and George P. Morris would probably
-have been good reporters, for they knew New York
-and had excellent styles, but they insisted on being<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">38</span>
-poets. With Morris it was not a hollow vocation, for
-the author of “Woodman, Spare That Tree,” could always
-get fifty dollars for a song. He and Willis ran
-the <i>Mirror</i> and later the <i>New Mirror</i>, and wrote verse
-and other fanciful stuff by the bushel. Philip Hone
-would have been the best reporter in New York, as his
-diary reveals, but he was of the aristocracy, and he
-seems to have scorned newspapermen, particularly
-Webb and Bennett.</p>
-
-<p>But somehow, by that chance which seemed to smile
-on the <i>Sun</i>, Ben Day got clever reporters. He wanted
-one to do the police-court work, for he saw, from
-the first day of the paper, that that was the kind of
-stuff that his readers devoured. To them the details of
-a beating administered by James Hawkins to his wife
-were of more import than Jackson’s assaults on the
-United States Bank.</p>
-
-<p>When George W. Wisner, a young printer who was
-out of work, applied to the <i>Sun</i> for a job, Day told
-him that he would give him four dollars a week if he
-would get up early every day and attend the police-court,
-which held its sessions from 4 <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span> on. The people
-of the city were quite as human then as they are
-to-day. Unregenerate mortals got drunk and fought
-in the streets. Others stole shoes. The worst of all
-beat their wives. Wisner was to be the Balzac of the
-daybreak court in a year when Balzac himself was writing
-his “Droll Stories.”</p>
-
-<p>The second issue of the <i>Sun</i> continued the typographical
-error of the day before. The year in the date-line of
-the second page was “1832.” The big news in this
-paper was under date of Plymouth, England, August 1,
-and it told of the capture of Lisbon by Admiral Napier
-on the 25th of July. Day—or perhaps it was Wisner—wrote
-an editorial article about it:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">39</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>To us as Americans there can be little of interest in
-the triumph of one member of a royal family of Europe
-over another; and although we can but rejoice at the
-downfall of the modern Nero who so lately filled the
-Portuguese throne, yet if rumor speak the truth the
-victorious Pedro is no better than he should be.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The editor lamented the general lack of news:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>With the exception of the interesting news from
-Portugal there appears to be very little worthy of note.
-Nullification has blown over; the President’s tour has
-terminated; Black Hawk has gone home; the new race
-for President is not yet commenced, and everything
-seems settled down into a calm. Dull times, these, for
-us newspaper-makers. We wish the President or Major
-Downing or some other distinguished individual would
-happen along again and afford us material for a daily
-article. Or even if the sea-serpent would be so kind as
-to pay us a visit, we should be extremely obliged to him
-and would honor his snakeship with a most tremendous
-puff.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Theatrical advertising appeared in this number, the
-Park Theater announcing the comedy of “Rip Van
-Winkle,” as redramatized by Mr. Hackett, who played
-<em>Rip</em>. Mr. Gale was playing “Mazeppa” at the Bowery.
-Perhaps these advertisements were borrowed from a
-six-cent paper, but there was one “help wanted” advertisement
-that was not borrowed. It was the upshot
-of Day’s own idea, destined to bring another revolution
-in newspaper methods:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>TO THE UNEMPLOYED—A number of steady men
-can find employment by vending this paper. A liberal
-discount is allowed to those who buy to sell again.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Before that day there had been no newsboys; no
-papers were sold in the streets. The big, blanket political<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">40</span>
-organs that masqueraded as newspapers were
-either sold over the counter or delivered by carriers to
-the homes of the subscribers. Most of the publishers
-considered it undignified even to angle for new subscribers,
-and one of them boasted that his great circulation
-of perhaps two thousand had come unsolicited.</p>
-
-<p>The first unemployed person to apply for a job selling
-<i>Suns</i> in the streets was a ten-year-old-boy, Bernard
-Flaherty, born in Cork. Years afterward two continents
-knew him as Barney Williams, Irish comedian,
-hero of “The Emerald Ring,” and “The Connie Soogah,”
-and at one time manager of Wallack’s old Broadway
-Theatre.</p>
-
-<p>When Day got some regular subscribers, he sent
-carriers on routes. He charged them sixty-seven cents
-a hundred, cash, or seventy-five cents on credit. The
-first of these carriers was Sam Messenger, who delivered
-the <i>Sun</i> in the Fulton Market district, and
-who later became a rich livery-stable keeper. Live lads
-like these, carrying out Day’s idea, wrought the greatest
-change in journalism that ever had been made, for
-they brought the paper to the people, something that
-could not be accomplished by the six-cent sheets with
-their lofty notions and comparatively high prices.</p>
-
-<p>On the third day of the <i>Sun’s</i> life, with Wisner at the
-pen and Barney Flaherty “hollering” in the startled
-streets, the editor again expressed, this time more positively,
-his yearning that something would happen:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>We newspaper people thrive best on the calamities
-of others. Give us one of your real Moscow fires, or
-your Waterloo battle-fields; let a Napoleon be dashing
-with his legions through the world, overturning the
-thrones of a thousand years and deluging the world
-with blood and tears; and then we of the types are in
-our glory.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">41</span></p>
-
-<p>The yearner had to wait thirty years for another
-Waterloo, but he got his “real Moscow fire” in about
-two years, and so close that it singed his eyebrows.</p>
-
-<p>Lacking a Napoleon to exalt or denounce, Mr. Day
-used a bit of that same page for the publication of homelier
-news for the people:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The following are the drawn numbers of the New
-York consolidated lotteries of yesterday afternoon:</p>
-
-<p class="center b1">
-62 6 59 46 61 34 65 37 8 42
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>So Horace Greeley and his partner, with their tri-weekly
-paper, could not have been keeping all of the
-lottery patronage away from the <i>Sun</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Over in the police column Mr. Wisner was supplying
-gems like the following:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>A complaint was made by several persons who
-“thought it no sin to step to the notes of a sweet violin”
-and gathered under a window in Chatham Street, where
-a little girl was playing on a violin, when they were
-showered from a window above with the contents of
-a dye-pot or something of like nature. They were directed
-to ascertain their showerer.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The big story on the first page of the fourth issue of
-the <i>Sun</i> was a conversation between <em>Envy</em> and <em>Candor</em>
-in regard to the beauties of a Miss H., perhaps a fictitious
-person. But on the second page, at the head of
-the editorial column, was a real editorial article approving
-the course of the British government in freeing the
-slaves in the West Indies:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>We supposed that the eyes of men were but half
-open to this case. We imagined that the slave would
-have to toil on for years and <em>purchase</em> what in justice
-was already <em>his own</em>. We did not once dream that light
-had so far progressed as to prepare the British nation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">42</span>
-for the colossal stride in justice and humanity and benevolence
-which they are about to make. The abolition
-of West Indian slavery will form a brilliant era in the
-annals of the world. It will circle with a halo of imperishable
-glory the brows of the transcendent spirits
-who wield the present destinies of the British Empire.</p>
-
-<p>Would to Heaven that the honor of leading the way
-in this godlike enterprise had been reserved to our own
-country! But as the opportunity for this is passed, we
-trust we shall at least avoid the everlasting disgrace of
-long refusing to imitate so bright and glorious an example.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Thus the <i>Sun</i> came out for the freedom of the slave
-twenty-eight years before that freedom was to be accomplished
-in the United States through war. The <i>Sun</i>
-was the <i>Sun</i> of Day, but the hand was the hand of
-Wisner. That young man was an Abolitionist before
-the word was coined.</p>
-
-<p>“Wisner was a pretty smart young fellow,” said Mr.
-Day nearly fifty years afterward, “but he and I never
-agreed. I was rather Democratic in my notions. Wisner,
-whenever he got a chance, was always sticking in
-his damned little Abolitionist articles.”</p>
-
-<p>There is little doubt that Wisner wrote the article
-facing the <i>Sun</i> against slavery while he was waiting for
-something to turn up in the police-court. Then he went
-to the office, set up the article, as well as his piece
-about the arrest of Eliza Barry, of Bayard Street, for
-stealing a wash-tub, and put the type in the form.
-Considering that Wisner got four dollars a week for his
-break-o’-day work, he made a very good morning of that;
-and it is worthy of record that the next day’s <i>Sun</i> did
-not repudiate his assault on human servitude, although
-on September 10 Mr. Day printed an editorial grieving
-over the existence of slavery, but hitting at the methods
-of the Abolitionists.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">43</span></p>
-
-<p>These early issues were full of lively little “sunny”
-pieces, for instance:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Passing by the Beekman Street church early this
-morning, we discovered a milkman replenishing his
-lacteous cargo with Adam’s ale. We took the liberty
-to ask him, “Friend, why do ye do thus?” He replied,
-“None of your business”; and we passed on, determined
-to report him to the Grahamites.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A poem on Burns, by Halleck—perhaps reprinted
-from one of the author’s published volumes of verse—added
-literary tone to that morning’s <i>Sun</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In the next issue was some verse by Willis, beginning:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Look not upon the wine when it</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Is red within the cup!</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Then, and for some years afterward, the <i>Sun</i> exhibited
-a special aversion to alcohol in text and head-lines.
-“Cursed Effects of Rum!” was one of its favourite
-head-lines.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> was a week old before it contained dramatic
-criticism, its first subject in that field being the appearance
-of Mr. and Mrs. Wood at the Park Theatre in
-“Cinderella,” a comic opera. The paper’s first animal
-story was printed on September 12, recording the fact
-that on the previous Sunday about sixty wild pigeons
-stayed in a tree at the Battery nearly half an hour.</p>
-
-<p>On September 14 the <i>Sun</i> printed its first illustration—a
-two-column cut of “Herschel’s Forty-Feet Telescope.”
-This was Sir W. Herschel, then dead some ten
-years, and the telescope was on his grounds at Slough,
-near Windsor, England. Another knighted Herschel
-with another telescope in a far land was to play a big
-part in the fortunes of the <i>Sun</i>, but that comes later.
-In the issue with the cut of the telescope was a paragraph<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">44</span>
-about a rumour that Fanny Kemble, who had just
-captivated American theatregoers, had been married to
-Pierce Butler, of Philadelphia—as, indeed, she had.</p>
-
-<p>Broadway seems to have had its lure as early as
-1833, for in the <i>Sun</i> of September 17, on the first page,
-is a plaint by “Citizen”:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>They talk of the pleasures of the country, but would
-to God I had never been persuaded to leave the labor
-of the city for such woful pleasures. Oh, Broadway,
-Broadway! In an evil hour did I forsake thee for verdant
-walks and flowery landscapes and that there tiresome
-piece of made water. What walk is so agreeable
-as a walk through the streets of New York? What
-landscape more flowery than those of the print-shops?
-And what water was made by man equal to the Hudson?</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>This was followed by uplifting little essays on “Suicide”
-and “Robespierre.” The chief news of the day—that
-John Quincy Adams had accepted a nomination
-from the Anti-Masons—was on an inside page. What
-was possibly of more interest to the readers, it was
-announced that thereafter a ton of coal would be two
-thousand pounds instead of twenty-two hundred and
-forty—Lackawanna, broken and sifted, six dollars and
-fifty cents a ton.</p>
-
-<p>On Saturday, September 21, when it was only eighteen
-days old, the <i>Sun</i> adopted a new head-line. The
-letters remained the same, but the eagle device of the
-first issue was supplanted by the solar orb rising over
-hills and sea. This design was used only until December
-2, when its place was taken by a third emblem—a
-printing-press shedding symbolical effulgence upon
-the earth.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun’s</i> first book-notice appeared on September
-23, when it acknowledged the sixtieth volume of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">45</span>
-“Family Library” (Harpers), this being a biography
-of Charlemagne by G. P. R. James. “It treats of a
-most important period in the history of France.” The
-<i>Sun</i> had little space then for book-reviews or politics.
-Of its attitude toward the great financial fight then
-being waged, this lone paragraph gives a good view:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The <i>Globe</i> of Monday contains in six columns the
-reasons which prompted the President to remove the
-public deposits from the United States Bank, which
-were read to his assembled cabinet on the 18th instant.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Nicholas Biddle and his friends could fill other papers
-with arguments, but the <i>Sun</i> kept its space for
-police items, stories of authenticated ghosts, and yarns
-about the late Emperor Napoleon. The removal of
-William J. Duane as Secretary of the Treasury got two
-lines on a page where a big shark caught off Barnstable
-got three lines, and the feeding of the anaconda at the
-American Museum a quarter of a column. Miss Susan
-Allen, who bought a cigar on Broadway and was
-arrested when she smoked it while she danced in the
-street, was featured more prominently than the expected
-visit to New York of Mr. Henry Clay, after
-whom millions of cigars were to be named. For the
-satisfaction of universal curiosity it must be reported
-that Miss Allen was discharged.</p>
-
-<p>On October 1 of that same year—1833—the <i>Sun</i> came
-out for better fire-fighting apparatus, urging that the
-engines should be drawn by horses, as in London. In
-the same issue it assailed the gambling-house in Park
-Row, and scorned the allegation of Colonel Hamilton,
-a British traveller, that the tooth-brush was unknown in
-America. Slowly the paper was getting better, printing
-more local news; and it could afford to, for the penny<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">46</span>
-<i>Sun</i> idea had taken hold of New York, and the sales
-were larger every week.</p>
-
-<p>Wisner was stretching the police-court pieces out to
-nearly two columns. Now and then, perhaps when Mr.
-Day was away fishing, the reporter would slip in an
-Abolition paragraph or a gloomy poem on the horrors
-of slavery. But he was so valuable that, while his
-chief did not raise his salary of four dollars a week, he
-offered him half the paper, the same to be paid for out
-of the profits. And so, in January of 1834, Wisner
-became a half-owner of the <i>Sun</i>. Benton, another <i>Sun</i>
-printer, also wanted an interest, and left when he could
-not get it.</p>
-
-<p>Before it was two months old the <i>Sun</i> had begun to
-take an interest in aeronautics. It printed a full column,
-October 16, 1833, on the subject of Durant’s balloon
-ascensions, and quoted Napoleon as saying that
-the only insurmountable difficulty of the balloon in
-war was the impossibility of guiding its course. “This
-difficulty Dr. Durant is now endeavoring to obviate.”
-And the <i>Sun</i> added:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>May we not therefore look to the time, in perspective,
-when our atmosphere will be traversed with as much
-facility as our waters?</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the issue of October 17 a skit, possibly by Mr. Day
-himself, gave a picture of the trials of an editor of the
-period:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>SCENE—An editor’s closet—editor solus.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, a pretty day’s work of it I shall make. News,
-I have nothing—politics, stale, flat, and unprofitable—miscellany,
-enough of it—miscellany bills payable, and
-a miscellaneous list of subscribers with tastes as miscellaneous
-as the tongues of Babel. Ha! Footsteps!<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">47</span>
-Drop the first person singular and don the plural. WE
-must now play the editor.”</p>
-
-<p>(Enter Devil)—“Copy, sir!”</p>
-
-<p>(Enter A.)—“I missed my paper this morning, sir,
-I don’t want to take <span class="locked">it—”</span></p>
-
-<p>(Enter B.)—“There is a letter ‘o’ turned upside
-down in my advertisement this morning, sir! <span class="locked">I—I—”</span></p>
-
-<p>(Enter C.)—“You didn’t notice my new work, my
-treatise on a flea, this morning, sir! You have no literary
-taste! <span class="locked">Sir—”</span></p>
-
-<p>(Enter D.)—“Sir, your boy don’t leave my paper,
-sir—I live in a blind alley; you turn out of —— Street
-to the right—then take a left-hand turn—then to the
-right again—then go under an arch—then over a kennel—then
-jump a ten-foot fence—then enter a door—then
-climb five pair of stairs—turn fourteen corners—and
-you can’t miss my door. I want your boy to leave
-my paper first—it’s only a mile out of his way—if he
-don’t, I’ll <span class="locked">stop—”</span></p>
-
-<p>(Enter E.)—“Sir, you have abused my friend; the
-article against Mr. —— as a candidate is intolerable—it
-is scandalous—I’ll stop my paper—I’ll cane <span class="locked">you—I’ll—”</span></p>
-
-<p>(Enter F.)—“Mr. Editor, you are mealy-mouthed,
-you lack independence, your remarks upon Mr. ——,
-the candidate for Congress, are too tame. If you don’t
-put it on harder I’ll stop <span class="locked">my—”</span></p>
-
-<p>(Enter G.)—“Your remarks upon profane swearing
-are personal, d——n you, sir, you mean me—before I’ll
-patronize you longer I’ll see you in <span class="locked">——”</span></p>
-
-<p>(Enter H.)—“Mr. ——, we are very sorry you do
-not say more against the growing sin of profanity. Unless
-you put your veto on it more decidedly, no man of
-correct moral principles will give you his patronage—I,
-for <span class="locked">one—”</span></p>
-
-<p>(Enter I.)—“Bad luck to the dirty sowl of him,
-where does he keep himself? By the powers, I’ll strike
-him if I can get at his carcass, and I’ll kick him anyhow!
-Why do you fill your paper with dirty lies about
-Irishmen at all?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">48</span></p>
-
-<p>(Enter J.)—“Why don’t you give us more anecdotes
-and sich, Irish stories and them things—I don’t like the
-long <span class="locked">speeches—I—”</span></p>
-
-<p>(Devil)—“Copy, sir!”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The day after this evidence of unrest appeared the
-<i>Sun</i> printed, perhaps with a view to making all manner
-of citizens gnash their teeth, a few extracts from the
-narrative of Colonel Hamilton, “the British traveler in
-America”:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>In America there are no bells and no chambermaids.</p>
-
-<p>I have heard, since my arrival in America, the toast
-of “a bloody war in Europe” drank with enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>The whole population of the Southern and Western
-States are uniformly armed with daggers.</p>
-
-<p>At present an American might study every book
-within the limits of the Union and still be regarded in
-many parts of Europe, especially in Germany, as a man
-comparatively ignorant.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The editorial suggested that the colonel “had better
-look wild for the lake that burns with fire and brimstone.”</p>
-
-<p>The union printers were lively even in the first days
-of the <i>Sun</i>, which announced, on October 21, 1833, that
-the <i>Journal of Commerce</i> paid its journeymen only ten
-dollars a week, and added:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The proprietors of other morning papers cheerfully
-pay twelve dollars. Therefore, the office of the <i>Journal
-of Commerce</i> is what printers term a rat office—and
-the term “rat,” with the followers of the same profession
-with Faust, Franklin, and Stanhope, is a most
-odious term.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The “pork-barrel” was foreshadowed in an item
-printed when the <i>Sun</i> was just a month old:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">49</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>At the close of the present year the Treasury of the
-nation will contain twelve million dollars. This rich
-and increasing revenue will probably be a bone of contention
-at the next session of Congress.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>At the end of its first month the <i>Sun</i> was getting more
-and more advertising. Its news was lively enough, considering
-the times. Rum, the cholera in Mexico, assassinations
-in the South, the police-court, the tour of Henry
-Clay, and poems by Walter Scott were its long suit.
-The circulation of the little paper was now about twelve
-hundred copies, and the future seemed promising, even
-if Mr. Day did print, at suspiciously frequent intervals,
-articles inveighing against the debtor’s-prison law.</p>
-
-<p>The Astor House—now half a ruin—was at first to be
-called the Park Hotel, for the <i>Sun</i> of October 29, 1833,
-announced editorially:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>THE PARK HOTEL—Mr. W. B. Astor gives notice
-that he will receive proposals for building the long-contemplated
-hotel in Broadway, between Barclay and
-Vesey Streets.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>An advertisement which the <i>Sun</i> saw fit to notice
-editorially was inserted by a young man in search of
-a wife—“a young woman who understands the use of
-the needle, and who is willing to be industrious.” The
-editorial comment was:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The advertisement was handed to us by a respectable-looking
-young man, and of course we could not refuse
-to publish it—though if we were in want of a wife we
-think we should take a different course to obtain one.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Sometimes the police items, flecked with poetry, and
-presumably written by Wisner, were tantalizingly
-reticent, as:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">50</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Maria Jones was accused of stealing clothing, and
-committed. Certain affairs were developed of rather a
-singular and comical nature in relation to her.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Nothing more than that. Perhaps Wisner rather
-enjoyed being questioned by admiring friends when he
-went to dinner at the American House that day.</p>
-
-<p>Bright as the police reporter was, the ship-news man
-of that day lacked snap. The arrival from Europe of
-James Fenimore Cooper, who could have told the <i>Sun</i>
-more foreign news than it had ever printed, was disposed
-of in twelve words. But it must be remembered
-that the interview was then unknown. The only way
-to get anything out of a citizen was to enrage him,
-whereupon he would write a letter. But the <i>Sun</i> did
-say, a couple of days later, that Cooper’s newest novel,
-“The Headsman,” was being sold in London at seven
-dollars and fifty cents a copy—no doubt in the old-fashioned
-English form, three volumes at half a guinea
-each.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> blew its own horn for the first time on November
-9, 1833:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Its success is now beyond question, and it has exceeded
-the most sanguine anticipations of its publishers
-in its circulation and advertising patronage. Scarcely
-two months has it existed in the typographical firmament,
-and it has a daily circulation of upward of two
-thousand copies, besides a steadily increasing advertising
-patronage. Although of a character (we hope)
-deserving the encouragement of all classes of society,
-it is more especially valuable to those who cannot well
-afford to incur the expense of subscribing to a “blanket
-sheet” and paying ten dollars per annum.</p>
-
-<p>In conclusion we may be permitted to remark that the
-penny press, by diffusing useful knowledge among the
-operative classes of society, is effecting the march of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">51</span>
-intelligence to a greater degree than any other mode of
-instruction.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The same article called attention to the fact that the
-“penny” papers of England were really two-cent papers.
-The <i>Sun’s</i> price had been announced as “one
-penny” on the earliest numbers, but on October 8,
-when it was a little more than a month old, the legend
-was changed to read “Price one cent.”</p>
-
-<div id="ip_50" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 28em;">
- <img src="images/i_050a.jpg" width="1336" height="2164" alt="" />
- <div class="captionr"><i>From the Collection of Charles Burnham</i></div>
- <div class="captionl p1">
-<p class="subhead">BARNEY WILLIAMS, THE COMEDIAN, WHO WAS THE
-FIRST NEWSBOY OF “THE SUN”</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> ran its first serial in the third month of its
-existence. This was “The Life of Davy Crockett,” dictated
-or authorized by the frontiersman himself. It
-must have been a relief to the readers to get away from
-the usual dull reprint from foreign papers that had
-been filling the <i>Sun’s</i> first page. In those days the first
-pages were always the dullest, but Crockett’s lively
-stories about bear-hunts enlivened the <i>Sun</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Other celebrities were often mentioned. Aaron Burr,
-now old and feeble, was writing his memoirs. Martin
-Van Buren had taken lodgings at the City Hotel. The
-Siamese Twins were arrested in the South for beating
-a man. “Mr. Clay arrived in town last evening and
-attended the new opera.” This was “Fra Diavolo,” in
-which Mr. and Mrs. Wood sang at the Park Theatre.
-“It is said that Dom Pedro has dared his brother
-Miguel to single combat, which has been refused.”
-A week later the <i>Sun</i> gloated over the fact that Pedro—Pedro
-I of Brazil, who was invading Portugal on behalf
-of his daughter, Maria da Gloria—had routed the usurper
-Miguel’s army.</p>
-
-<p>On December 5, 1833, the <i>Sun</i> printed the longest
-news piece it had ever put in type—the message of
-President Jackson to the Congress. This took up three
-of the four pages, and crowded out nearly all the advertising.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">52</span></p>
-
-<p>On December 17, in the fourth month of its life, the
-<i>Sun</i> announced that it had procured “a machine press,
-on which one thousand impressions can be taken in an
-hour. The daily circulation is now nearly FOUR
-THOUSAND.” It was a happy Christmas for Day and
-Wisner. The <i>Sun</i> surely was shining!</p>
-
-<p>The paper retained its original size and shape during
-the whole of 1834, and rarely printed more than four
-pages. As it grew older, it printed more and more
-local items and developed greater interest in local affairs.
-The first page was taken up with advertising and reprint.
-A State election might have taken place the day
-before, but on page 1 the <i>Sun</i> worshippers looked for a
-bit of fiction or history. What were the fortunes of
-William L. Marcy as compared to a two-column thriller,
-“The Idiot’s Revenge,” or “Captain Chicken and Gentle
-Sophia”?</p>
-
-<p>The head-lines were all small, and most of them
-italics. Here are samples:</p>
-
-<p class="p1 b1 center larger wspace">
-<i>INGRATITUDE OF A CAT.</i><br />
-
-<i>PERSONALITY OF NAPOLEON.</i><br />
-
-<i>WONDERFUL ANTICS OF FLEAS.</i><br />
-
-<i>BROUGHT TO IT BY RUM.</i>
-</p>
-
-<p>The news paragraphs were sometimes models of condensation:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>PICKPOCKETS—On Friday night a Gentleman lost
-$100 at the Opera and then $25 at Tammany Hall.</p>
-
-<p>The Hon. Daniel Webster will leave town this morning
-for Washington.</p>
-
-<p>John Baker, the person whom we reported a short
-time since as being brought before the police for stealing
-a ham, died suddenly in his cell in Bellevue in the
-greatest agony—an awful warning to drunkards.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">53</span></p>
-
-<p>James G. Bennett has become sole proprietor and
-editor of the Philadelphia <i>Courier</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Crockett, it is expected, will visit the Bowery
-Theater this evening.</p>
-
-<p>RUMOR—It was rumored in Washington on the 6th
-that a duel would take place the next day between two
-members of the House.</p>
-
-<p>SUDDEN DEATH—Ann McDonough, of Washington
-Street, attempted to drink a pint of rum on a wager,
-on Wednesday afternoon last. Before it was half
-swallowed Ann was a corpse. Served her right!</p>
-
-<p>Bayington, the murderer, we learn by a contemporary,
-was formerly employed in this city on the <i>Journal
-of Commerce</i>. No wonder he came to an untimely fate.</p>
-
-<p>DUEL—We understand that a duel was fought at
-Hoboken on Friday morning last between a gentleman
-of Canada and a French gentleman of this city, in which
-the latter was wounded. The parties should be arrested.</p>
-
-<p>LAMENTABLE DEATH—The camelopard shipped
-at Calcutta for New York died the day after it was
-embarked. “We could have better spared a better”
-<em>crittur</em>, as Shakespeare doesn’t say.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i>, although read largely by Jacksonians, did
-not take the side of any political party. It favoured
-national and State economy and city cleanliness. It
-dismissed the New York Legislature of 1834 thus:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The Legislature of this State closed its arduous
-duties yesterday. It has increased the number of our
-banks and fixed a heavy load of debt upon posterity.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Nothing more. If the readers wanted more they
-could fly to the ample bosoms of the sixpennies; but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span>
-apparently they were satisfied, for in April of 1834 the
-<i>Sun’s</i> circulation reached eight thousand, and Colonel
-Webb, of the <i>Courier and Enquirer</i>, was bemoaning the
-success of “penny trash.” The <i>Sun</i> replied to him by
-saying that the public had been “imposed upon by ten-dollar
-trash long enough.” The <i>Journal of Commerce</i>
-also slanged the <i>Sun</i>, which promptly announced that
-the <i>Journal</i> was conducted by “a company of rich,
-aristocratical men,” and that it would take sides with
-any party to gain a subscriber.</p>
-
-<p>The influence of Partner Wisner, the Abolitionist,
-was evident in many pages of the <i>Sun</i>. On June 23,
-1834, it printed a piece about Martin Palmer, who was
-“pelted down with stones in Wall Street on suspicion
-of being a runaway slave,” and paid its respects to
-Boudinot, a Southerner in New York who was reputed
-to be a tracker of runaways. It was he who had set
-the crowd after the black:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The man who will do this will do anything; he would
-dance on his mother’s grave; he would invade the sacred
-precincts of the tomb and rob a corpse of its winding-sheet;
-he has no SOUL. It is said that this useless
-fellow is about to commence a suit against us for a
-libel. Try it, Mr. Boudinot!</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>During the anti-abolition riots of that year the <i>Sun</i>
-took a firm stand against the disturbers, although there
-is little doubt that many of them were its own readers.</p>
-
-<p>The paper made a vigorous little crusade against
-the evils of the Bridewell in City Hall Park, where
-dozens of wretches suffered in the filth of the debtors’
-prison. The <i>Sun</i> was a live wire when the cholera re-appeared,
-and it put to rout the sixpenny papers which
-tried to make out that the disease was not cholera, but
-“summer complaint.” Incidentally, the advertising<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">55</span>
-columns of that day, in nearly all the papers were filled
-with patent “cholera cures.”</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> had an eye for urban refinement, too, and
-begged the aldermen to see to it that pigs were prevented
-from roaming in City Hall Park. In the matter
-of silver forks, then a novelty, it was more conservative,
-as the following paragraph, printed in November, 1834,
-would indicate:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>EXTREME NICETY—The author of the “Book of
-Etiquette,” recently printed in London, says: “Silver
-forks are now common at every respectable table, and
-for my part I cannot see how it is possible to eat a
-dinner comfortably without them.” The booby ought
-to be compelled to cut his beefsteak with a piece of old
-barrel-hoop on a wooden trencher.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Not even abolition or etiquette, however, could sidetrack
-the <i>Sun’s</i> interest in animals. In one issue it dismissed
-the adjournment of Congress in three words and,
-just below, ran this item:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>THE ANACONDA—Most of those who have seen the
-beautiful serpent at Peale’s Museum will recollect that
-in the snug quarters allotted to him there are two
-blankets, on one of which he lies, and the other is covered
-over him in cold weather. Strange to say that on
-Monday night, after Mr. Peale had fed the serpent with
-a chicken, according to custom, the serpent took it into
-his head to swallow one of the blankets, which is a seven-quarter
-one, and this blanket he has now in his stomach.
-The proprietor feels much anxiety.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Almost every newspaper editor in that era had a theatre
-feud at one day or another. The <i>Sun’s</i> quarrel was
-with Farren, the manager of the Bowery, where Forrest
-was playing. So the <i>Sun</i> said:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">56</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>DAMN THE YANKEES—We are informed by a correspondent
-(though we have not seen the announcement
-ourselves) that Farren, the chap who damned the Yankees
-so lustily the other day, and who is now under
-bonds for a gross outrage on a respectable butcher near
-the Bowery Theater, is intending to make his appearance
-on the Bowery stage THIS EVENING!</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Five hundred citizens gathered at the theatre that
-night, waited until nine o’clock, and then charged
-through the doors, breaking up the performance of
-“Metamora.” The <i>Sun</i> described it:</p>
-
-<p>The supernumeraries scud from behind the scenes like
-quails—the stock actors’ teeth chattered—<i>Oceana</i>
-looked imploringly at the good-for-nothing Yankees—<i>Nahmeeoke</i>
-trembled—<i>Guy of Godalwin</i> turned on his
-heel, and <i>Metamora</i> coolly shouldered his tomahawk and
-walked off the stage.</p>
-
-<p>The management announced that Farren was discharged.
-The mayor of New York and Edwin Forrest
-made conciliatory speeches, and the crowd went away.</p>
-
-<p>The attacks of Colonel Stone, editor of the six-cent
-<i>Commercial</i>, aroused the <i>Sun</i> to retaliate in kind. A
-column about the colonel ended thus:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>He was then again cowskinned by Mr. Bryant of the
-<i>Post</i>, and was most unpoetically flogged near the American
-Hotel. He has always been the slave of avarice,
-cowardice, and meanness.... The next time he sees
-fit to attack the penny press we hope he will confine himself
-to facts.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A month later the <i>Sun</i> went after Colonel Stone
-again:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The colonel ... for the sake of an additional glass
-of wine and a couple of real Spanish cigars, did actually<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">57</span>
-perpetrate a most excellent and true article, the first
-we have seen of his for a long time past. Now we have
-serious thoughts that the colonel will yet become quite
-a decent fellow, and may ultimately ascend, after a
-long course of training, to a level with the penny dailies
-which have soared so far above him in the heavens of
-veracity.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It must be said of Colonel Stone that he was a man
-of literary and political attainments. He was editor
-of the <i>Commercial Advertiser</i> for more than twenty
-years.</p>
-
-<p>The colonel did not reform to the <i>Sun’s</i> liking at once,
-but the feud lessened, and presently it was the <i>Transcript</i>—a
-penny paper which sprang up when the <i>Sun’s</i>
-success was assured—to which the <i>Sun</i> took its biggest
-cudgels. One of the <i>Transcript’s</i> editors, it said, had
-passed a bogus three-dollar bill on the Bank of Troy.
-Another walked “on both sides of the street, like a
-twopenny postman,” while a third “spent his money
-at a theatre with females,” while his family was in
-want. But, added the <i>Sun</i>, “we never let personalities
-creep in.”</p>
-
-<p>The New York <i>Times</i>—not the present <i>Times</i>—had
-also started up, and it dared to boast of a circulation
-“greater than any in the city except the <i>Courier</i>.” Said
-the <i>Sun</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>If the daily circulation of the <i>Sun</i> be not larger than
-that of the <i>Times</i> and <i>Courier</i> both, then may we be
-hung up by the ears and flogged to death with a rattle-snake’s
-skin.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> took no risk in this. By November of 1834
-its circulation was above ten thousand. On December
-3 it published the President’s message in full and circulated
-fifteen thousand copies. At the beginning of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">58</span>
-1835 it announced a new press—a Napier, built by
-R. Hoe &amp; Co.—new type, and a bigger paper, circulating
-twenty thousand. The print paper was to cost four-fifths
-of a cent a copy, but the <i>Sun</i> was getting lots of
-advertising. With the increase in size, that New Year’s
-Day, the <i>Sun</i> adopted the motto, “It Shines for All.”
-which it is still using to-day. This motto doubtless
-was suggested by the sign of the famous Rising Sun
-Tavern, or Howard’s Inn, which then stood at the junction
-of Bedford and Jamaica turnpikes, in East New
-York. The sign, which was in front of the tavern as
-early as 1776, was supported on posts near the road and
-bore a rude picture of a rising sun and the motto which
-Day adopted.</p>
-
-<p>In the same month—January, 1835—the bigger and
-better <i>Sun</i> printed its first real sports story. The sporting
-editor, who very likely was also the police reporter
-and perhaps Partner Wisner as well, heard that there
-was to be a fight in the fields near Hoboken between
-Williamson, of Philadelphia, and Phelan, of New York.
-He crossed the ferry, hired a saddle-horse in Hoboken,
-and galloped to the ringside. It was bare knuckles,
-London rules, and only thirty seconds’ interval between
-rounds:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>At the end of three minutes Williamson fell. (Cheers
-and cries of “Fair Play!”) After breathing half a
-minute, they went at it again, and Phelan was knocked
-down. (Cheers and cries of “Give it to him!”) In
-three minutes more Williamson fell, and the adjoining
-woods echoed back the shouts of the spectators.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The match lasted seventy-two minutes and ended in
-the defeat of Williamson. The <i>Sun’s</i> report contained
-no sporting slang, and the reporter did not seem to like
-pugilism:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">59</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>And this is what is called “sports of the ring!” We
-can cheerfully encourage foot-races or any other humane
-and reasonable amusement, but the Lord deliver us from
-the “ring.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The following day the <i>Sun</i> denounced prize-fighting
-as “a European practice, better fitted for the morally
-and physically oppressed classes of London than the
-enlightened republican citizens of New York.”</p>
-
-<p>As prosperity came, the news columns improved. The
-sensational was not the only pabulum fed to the reader.
-Beside the story of a duel between two midshipmen he
-would find a review of the Burr autobiography, just out.
-Gossip about Fanny Kemble’s quarrel with her father—the
-<i>Sun</i> was vexed with the actress because she said
-that New York audiences were made up of butchers—would
-appear next to a staid report of the doings of
-Congress. The attacks on Rum continued, and the
-<i>Sun</i> was quick to oppose the proposed “licensing of
-houses of prostitution and billiard-rooms.”</p>
-
-<p>The success of Mr. Day’s paper was so great that
-every printer and newspaperman in New York longed
-to run a penny journal. On June 22, 1835, the
-paper’s name appeared at the head of the editorial
-column on Page 2 as <i>The True Sun</i>, although on the first
-page the bold head-line <i>THE SUN</i>, remained as usual.
-An editorial note said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>We have changed our inside head to <i>True Sun</i> for
-reasons which will hereafter be made known.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>On the following day the <i>True Sun</i> title was entirely
-missing, and its absence was explained in an editorial
-article as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Having understood on Wednesday (June 21) that a
-daily paper was about being issued in this city as nearly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">60</span>
-like our own as it could be got up, under the title of
-<i>The True Sun</i>, for the avowed purpose of benefitting the
-proprietors at our expense, we yesterday changed our
-inside title, being determined to place an injunction
-upon any such piratical proceedings. Yesterday morning
-the anticipated <i>Sun</i> made its appearance, and at
-first sight we immediately abandoned our intention of
-defending ourselves legally, being convinced that it is
-a mere catchpenny second-hand concern which (had it
-our whole list and patronage) would in one month be
-among the “Things that were.” It is published by
-William F. Short and edited by Stephen B. Butler, who
-announces that his “politics are Whig.”... Mr.
-Short, with the ingenuity of a London pickpocket,
-though without the honesty, has made up his paper as
-nearly like ours as was possible and given it the name
-of <i>The (true) Sun</i> for the purpose of imposing on the
-public.... We hereby publish William F. Short and
-Stephen B. Butler to our editorial brethren and to
-the printing profession in general as <em>Literary Scoundrels</em>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A day later (June 24, 1835) the <i>Sun</i> declared that
-in establishing the <i>True Sun</i> “Short, who is one of the
-printers of the <i>Messenger</i>, actually purloined the composition
-of his reading matter”; and it printed a letter
-from William Burnett, publisher of the <i>Weekly Messenger</i>,
-to support its charge of larceny.</p>
-
-<p>On June 28, six days after the <i>True Sun’s</i> first appearance,
-the <i>Sun</i> announced the failure of the pretender.
-The <i>True Sun’s</i> proprietors, it said, “have concluded
-to abandon their piratical course.”</p>
-
-<p>Another <i>True Sun</i> was issued by Benjamin H. Day
-in 1840, two years after he sold the <i>Sun</i> to Moses Y.
-Beach. A third <i>True Sun</i>, established by former employees
-of the <i>Sun</i> on March 20, 1843, ran for more than
-a year. A daily called the <i>Citizen and True Sun</i>, started
-in 1845, had a short life.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span></p>
-
-<p>When a contemporary did not fail the <i>Sun</i> poked
-fun at it:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>MAJOR NOAH’S SINGULARITY—The <i>Evening
-Star</i> of yesterday comes out in favor of the French,
-lottery, gambling, and phrenology for ladies. Is the
-man crazy?</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The editor whose sanity was questioned was the
-famous Mordecai Manuel Noah, one of the most versatile
-men of his time. He was a newspaper correspondent
-at fifteen. When he was twenty-eight, President
-Madison appointed him to be consul-general at Tunis,
-where he distinguished himself by his rescue of several
-Americans who were held as slaves in the Barbary
-States. On his return to New York, in 1816, he again
-entered journalism, and was successively connected with
-the <i>National Advocate</i>, the <i>Enquirer</i>, the <i>Commercial
-Advertiser</i>, the <i>Times and Messenger</i>, and the <i>Evening
-Star</i>. In 1825 he attempted to establish a great Jewish
-colony on Grand Island, in the Niagara River, but he
-found neither sympathy nor aid among his coreligionists,
-and the scheme was a failure.</p>
-
-<p>Noah wrote a dozen dramas, all of which have been
-forgotten, although he was the most popular playwright
-in America at that day. His <i>Evening Star</i> was a good
-paper, and the <i>Sun’s</i> quarrels with it were not serious.</p>
-
-<p>For their attacks on Attree, the editor of the <i>Transcript</i>,
-Messrs. Day and Wisner got themselves indicted
-for criminal libel. They took it calmly:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Bigger men than we have passed through that ordeal.
-There is Major Noah, the Grand Mogul of the editorial
-tribe, who has not only been indicted, but, we believe,
-placed at the bar. Then there’s Colonel Webb; no
-longer ago than last autumn he was indicted by the
-grand jury of Delaware County. The colonel, it is said,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">62</span>
-didn’t consider this a fair business transaction, and,
-brushing up the mahogany pistol, he took his coach and
-hounds, drove up to good old Delaware, and bid defiance
-to the whole posse comitatus of the county. The greatest
-men in the country have some time in the course of
-their lives been indicted.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A few weeks later, when Attree, who had left the
-<i>Transcript</i> to write “horribles” for the <i>Courier</i>, was
-terribly beaten in the street, the <i>Sun</i> denounced the
-assault and tried to expose the assailants.</p>
-
-<p>In February, 1835, a few days after the indictment of
-the partners, Mr. Wisner was challenged to a duel by a
-quack dentist whose medicines the <i>Sun</i> had exposed.
-The <i>Sun</i> announced editorially that Wisner accepted
-the challenge, and that, having the choice of weapons,
-he chose syringes charged with the dentist’s own medicine,
-the distance five paces. No duel!</p>
-
-<p>It would seem that the <i>Sun</i> owners sought a challenge
-from the fiery James Watson Webb of the mahogany
-pistol, for they made many a dig at his sixpenny
-paper. Here is a sample:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>OUTRAGEOUS—The <i>Courier and Enquirer</i> of Saturday
-morning is just twice as large as its usual size.
-The sheet is now large enough for a blanket and two
-pairs of pillow-cases, and it contains, in printers’ language,
-698,300 ems—equal to eight volumes of the ordinary-sized
-novels of the present day. If the reading
-matter were printed in pica type and put in one unbroken
-line, it would reach from Nova Zembla to Terra
-del Fuego. Such a paper is an insult to a civilized community.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A little later, when Colonel Webb’s paper boasted of
-“the largest circulation,” the <i>Sun</i> offered to bet the
-colonel a thousand dollars—the money to go to the
-Washington Monument Association—that the <i>Sun</i> had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">63</span>
-a circulation twice as great as that of the big sixpenny
-daily.</p>
-
-<p>It must not be thought, however, that the <i>Sun</i> did not
-attempt to treat the serious matters of the day. It
-handled them very well, considering the lack of facilities.
-The war crisis with France, happily dispelled; the
-amazing project of the Erie Railroad to build a line as
-far west as Chautauqua County, New York; the anti-abolitionist
-riots and the little religious rows; the ambitions
-of Daniel Webster and the approach of Halley’s
-comet—all these had their half-column or so.</p>
-
-<p>When Matthias the Prophet, the Dowie of that day,
-was brought to trial in White Plains, Westchester
-County, on a charge of having poisoned a Mr. Elijah
-Pierson, the <i>Sun</i> sent a reporter to that then distant
-court. It is possible that this reporter was Benjamin
-H. Day himself. At any rate, Day attended the trial,
-and there made the acquaintance of a man who that
-very summer made the <i>Sun</i> the talk of the world and
-brought to the young paper the largest circulation of
-any daily.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_64" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">64</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">RICHARD ADAMS LOCKE’S MOON HOAX</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>A Magnificent Fake Which Deceived Two Continents,
-Brought to “The Sun” the Largest Circulation in the
-World and, in Poe’s Opinion, Established Penny Papers.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> man whom Day met at the murder trial in
-White Plains was Richard Adams Locke, a reporter
-who was destined to kick up more dust than
-perhaps any other man of his profession. As he comes
-on the stage, we must let his predecessor, George W.
-Wisner, pass into the wings.</p>
-
-<p>Wisner was a good man, as a reporter, as a writer
-of editorial articles, and as part owner of the paper.
-His campaign for Abolition irritated Mr. Day at first,
-but the young man’s motives were so pure and his articles
-so logical that Day recognized the justice of the
-cause, even as he realized the foolish methods employed
-by some of the Abolitionists. Wisner set the face of
-the <i>Sun</i> against slavery, and Day kept it so, but there
-were minor matters of policy upon which the partners
-never agreed, never could agree.</p>
-
-<p>When Wisner’s health became poor, in the summer
-of 1835, he expressed a desire to get away from New
-York. Mr. Day paid him five thousand dollars for his
-interest in the paper—a large sum in those days, considering
-the fact that Wisner had won his share with
-no capital except his pen. Wisner went West and settled
-at Pontiac, Michigan. There his health improved,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">65</span>
-his fortune increased, and he was at one time a member
-of the Michigan Legislature.</p>
-
-<p>When Day found that Locke was the best reporter
-attending the trial of Matthias the Prophet, he hired
-him to write a series of articles on the religious fakir.
-These, the first “feature stories” that ever appeared
-in the <i>Sun</i>, were printed on the front page.</p>
-
-<p>A few weeks later, while the Matthias articles were
-still being sold on the streets in pamphlet form, Locke
-went to Day and told him that his boss, Colonel Webb
-of the <i>Courier and Enquirer</i>, had discharged him for
-working for the <i>Sun</i> “on the side.” Wisner was about
-to leave the paper, and Day was glad to hire Locke, for
-he needed an editorial writer. Twelve dollars a week
-was the alluring wage, and Locke accepted it.</p>
-
-<p>Locke was then thirty-five—ten years senior to his
-employer. Let his contemporary, Edgar Allan Poe, describe
-him:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>He is about five feet seven inches in height, symmetrically
-formed; there is an air of distinction about his
-whole person—the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">air noble</i> of genius. His face is
-strongly pitted by the smallpox, and, perhaps from the
-same cause, there is a marked obliquity in the eyes; a
-certain calm, clear <em>luminousness</em>, however, about these
-latter amply compensates for the defect, and the forehead
-is truly beautiful in its intellectuality. I am acquainted
-with no person possessing so fine a forehead
-as Mr. Locke.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Locke was nine years older than Poe, who at this
-time had most of his fame ahead of him. Poe was quick
-to recognize the quality of Locke’s writings; indeed,
-the poet saw, perhaps more clearly than others of that
-period, that America was full of good writers—a fact of
-which the general public was neglectful. This was Poe’s
-tribute to Locke’s literary gift:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">66</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>His prose style is noticeable for its concision, luminosity,
-completeness—each quality in its proper place.
-He has that <em>method</em> so generally characteristic of genius
-proper. Everything he writes is a model in its peculiar
-way, serving just the purposes intended and nothing to
-spare.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun’s</i> new writer was a collateral descendant of
-John Locke, the English philosopher of the seventeenth
-century. He was born in 1800, but his birthplace was
-not New York, as his contemporary biographers wrote.
-It was East Brent, Somersetshire, England. His early
-American friends concealed this fact when writing of
-Locke, for they feared that his English birth (all the
-wounds of war had not healed) would keep him out
-of some of the literary clubs. He was educated by his
-mother and by private tutors until he was nineteen,
-when he entered Cambridge. While still a student he
-contributed to the <i>Bee</i>, the <i>Imperial Magazine</i>, and
-other English publications. When he left Cambridge
-he had the hardihood to start the London <i>Republican</i>,
-the title of which describes its purpose. This was a
-failure, for London declined to warm to the theories of
-American democracy, no matter how scholarly their
-expression.</p>
-
-<p>Abandoning the <i>Republican</i>, young Locke devoted
-himself to literature and science. He ran a periodical
-called the <i>Cornucopia</i> for about six months, but it was
-not a financial success, and in 1832, with his wife and
-infant daughter, he went to New York. Colonel Webb
-put him at work on his paper.</p>
-
-<p>Locke could write almost anything. In Cambridge
-and in Fleet Street he had picked up a wonderful store
-of general information. He could turn out prose or
-poetry, politics or pathos, anecdotes or astronomy.</p>
-
-<p>While he lived in London, Locke was a regular reader<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">67</span>
-of the Edinburgh <i>New Philosophical Journal</i>, and he
-brought some copies of it to America. One of these,
-an issue of 1826, contained an article by Dr. Thomas
-Dick, of Dundee, a pious man, but inclined to speculate
-on the possibilities of the universe. In this article Dr.
-Dick suggested the feasibility of communicating with
-the moon by means of great stone symbols on the face
-of the earth. The people of the moon—if there were any—would
-fathom the diagrams and reply in a similar
-way. Dr. Dick explained afterward that he wrote this
-piece with the idea of satirizing a certain coterie of
-eccentric German astronomers.</p>
-
-<p>Now it happened that Sir John Frederick William
-Herschel, the greatest astronomer of his time, and the
-son of the celebrated astronomer Sir William Herschel,
-went to South Africa in January, 1834, and established
-an observatory at Feldhausen, near Cape Town, with
-the intention of completing his survey of the sidereal
-heavens by examining the southern skies as he had
-swept the northern, thus to make the first telescopic
-survey of the whole surface of the visible heavens.</p>
-
-<p>Locke knew about Sir John and his mission. The
-Matthias case had blown over, the big fire in Fulton
-Street was almost forgotten, and things were a bit dull
-on the island of Manhattan. The newspapers were in
-a state of armed truce. As Locke and his fellow journalists
-gathered at the American Hotel bar for their
-after-dinner brandy, it is probable that there was nothing,
-not even the great sloth recently arrived at the
-American Museum, to excite a good argument.</p>
-
-<p>Locke needed money, for his salary of twelve dollars
-a week could ill support the fine gentleman that he was;
-so he laid a plan before Mr. Day. It was a plot as well
-as a plan, and the first angle of the plot appeared on
-the second page of the <i>Sun</i> on August 21, 1835:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">68</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>CELESTIAL DISCOVERIES—The Edinburgh
-<i>Courant</i> says—“We have just learnt from an eminent
-publisher in this city that Sir John Herschel, at the
-Cape of Good Hope, has made some astronomical discoveries
-of the most wonderful description, by means of
-an immense telescope of an entirely new principle.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Nothing further appeared until Tuesday, August 25,
-when three columns of the <i>Sun’s</i> first page took the
-newspaper and scientific worlds by the ears. Those
-were not the days of big type. The <i>Sun’s</i> heading read:</p>
-
-<p class="p1 b0 center wspace vspace bold large">
-GREAT ASTRONOMICAL DISCOVERIES.</p>
-<hr class="narrow" />
-<p class="center bold vspace wspace">LATELY MADE<br />
-BY SIR JOHN HERSCHEL, LL.D., F.R.S., &amp;c.</p>
-<hr class="narrow" />
-<p class="center bold smaller wspace">At the Cape of Good Hope.</p>
-<hr class="narrow" />
-<p class="center b1">[<cite>From Supplement to the Edinburgh Journal of Science.</cite>]
-</p>
-
-<p>It may as well be said here that although there had
-been an Edinburgh <i>Journal of Science</i>, it ceased to
-exist several years before 1835. The periodical to which
-Dr. Dick, of Dundee, contributed his moon theories was,
-in a way, the successor to the <i>Journal of Science</i>, but
-it was called the <i>New Philosophical Journal</i>. The
-likeness of names was not great, but enough to cause
-some confusion. It is also noteworthy that the sly
-Locke credited to a supplement, rather than to the
-<i>Journal of Science</i> itself, the revelations which he that
-day began to pour before the eyes of <i>Sun</i> readers. Thus
-he started:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>In this unusual addition to our <i>Journal</i> we have the
-happiness of making known to the British public, and
-thence to the whole civilized world, recent discoveries
-in astronomy which will build an imperishable monument
-to the age in which we live, and confer upon the
-present generation of the human race proud distinction
-through all future time. It has been poetically said
-that the stars of heaven are the hereditary regalia of
-man as the intellectual sovereign of the animal creation.
-He may now fold the zodiac around him with a loftier
-consciousness of his mental supremacy.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div id="ip_68" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 34em;">
- <img src="images/i_068a.jpg" width="1607" height="2103" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
-
-<p>RICHARD ADAMS LOCKE, AUTHOR OF THE MOON HOAX</p>
-
-<p class="subhead">From an Engraving in the Possession of His Granddaughter, Mrs. F. Winthrop
-White of New Brighton, S. I.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>After solemnly dwelling on the awe which mortal
-man must feel upon peering into the secrets of the sky,
-the article declared that Sir John “paused several
-hours before he commenced his observations, that he
-might prepare his own mind for discoveries which he
-knew would fill the minds of myriads of his fellow men
-with astonishment.” It continued:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>And well might he pause! From the hour the first
-human pair opened their eyes to the glories of the blue
-firmament above them, there has been no accession to
-human knowledge at all comparable in sublime interest
-to that which he has been the honored agent in supplying.
-Well might he pause! He was about to become
-the sole depository of wondrous secrets which had been
-hid from the eyes of all men that had lived since the
-birth of time.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>At the end of a half-column of glorification, the writer
-got down to brass tacks:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>To render our enthusiasm intelligible, we will state
-at once that by means of a telescope, of vast dimensions
-and an entirely new principle, the younger Herschel, at
-his observatory in the southern hemisphere, has already
-made the most extraordinary discoveries in every planet
-of our solar system; has discovered planets in other
-solar systems; has obtained a distinct view of objects in
-the moon, fully equal to that which the unaided eye
-commands of terrestrial objects at the distance of one
-hundred yards; has affirmatively settled the question
-whether this satellite be inhabited, and by what orders
-of beings; has firmly established a new theory of cometary<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">70</span>
-phenomena; and has solved or corrected nearly
-every leading problem of mathematical astronomy.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>And where was the <i>Journal of Science</i> getting this
-mine of astronomical revelation for its supplement?
-The mystery is explained at once:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>We are indebted to the devoted friendship of Dr.
-Andrew Grant, the pupil of the elder, and for several
-years past the inseparable coadjutor of the younger Herschel.
-The amanuensis of the latter at the Cape of Good
-Hope, and the indefatigable superintendent of his telescope
-during the whole period of its construction and
-operations, Dr. Grant has been able to supply us with
-intelligence equal in general interest at least to that
-which Dr. Herschel himself has transmitted to the Royal
-Society. For permission to indulge his friendship in
-communicating this invaluable information to us, Dr.
-Grant and ourselves are indebted to the magnanimity of
-Dr. Herschel, who, far above all mercenary considerations,
-has thus signally honored and rewarded his fellow
-laborer in the field of science.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Regarding the illustrations which, according to the
-implications of the text, accompanied the supplement,
-the writer was specific. Most of them, he stated, were
-copies of “drawings taken in the observatory by Herbert
-Home, Esq., who accompanied the last powerful
-series of reflectors from London to the Cape. The
-engraving of the belts of Jupiter is a reduced copy of
-an imperial folio drawing by Dr. Herschel himself. The
-segment of the inner ring of Saturn is from a large
-drawing by Dr. Grant.”</p>
-
-<p>A history of Sir William Herschel’s work and a description
-of his telescopes took up a column of the
-<i>Sun</i>, and on top of this came the details—as the <i>Journal</i>
-printed them—of Sir John’s plans to outdo his
-father by revolutionary methods and a greater telescope.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">71</span>
-Sir John, it appeared, was in conference with Sir David
-Brewster:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>After a few minutes’ silent thought, Sir John diffidently
-inquired whether it would not be possible to
-effect a <em>transfusion of artificial light through the focal
-object of vision!</em> Sir David, somewhat startled at the
-originality of the idea, paused a while, and then hesitatingly
-referred to the refrangibility of rays and the
-angle of incidence. Sir John, grown more confident,
-adduced the example of the Newtonian reflector, in
-which the refrangibility was corrected by the second
-speculum and the angle of incidence restored by the
-third.</p>
-
-<p>“And,” continued he, “why cannot the illuminated
-microscope, say the hydro-oxygen, be applied to render
-distinct and, if necessary, even to magnify, the focal
-object?”</p>
-
-<p>Sir David sprang from his chair in an ecstasy of conviction,
-and, leaping half-way to the ceiling, exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p>“Thou art the man!”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Details of the casting of a great lens came next. It
-was twenty-four feet in diameter, and weighed nearly
-fifteen thousand pounds after it was polished; its estimated
-magnifying-power was forty-two thousand times.
-As he saw it safely started on its way to Africa, Sir
-John “expressed confidence in his ultimate ability to
-study even the entomology of the moon, in case she contained
-insects upon her surface.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus ended the first instalment of the story. Where
-had the <i>Sun</i> got the <i>Journal of Science</i> supplement?
-An editorial article answered that “it was very politely
-furnished us by a medical gentleman immediately from
-Scotland, in consequence of a paragraph which appeared
-on Friday last from the Edinburgh <i>Courant</i>.” The article
-added:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">72</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The portion which we publish to-day is introductory
-to celestial discoveries of higher and more universal interest
-than any, in any science yet known to the human
-race. Now indeed it may be said that we live in an age
-of discovery.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It cannot be said that the whole town buzzed with
-excitement that day. Perhaps this first instalment was
-a bit over the heads of most readers; it was so technical,
-so foreign. But in Nassau and Ann Streets, wherever
-two newspapermen were gathered together, there was
-buzzing enough. What was coming next? Why hadn’t
-they thought to subscribe to the Edinburgh <i>Journal of
-Science</i>, with its wonderful supplement?</p>
-
-<p>Nearly four columns of the revelations appeared on
-the following day—August 26, 1835. This time the
-reading public came trooping into camp, for the <i>Sun’s</i>
-reprint of the <i>Journal of Science</i> supplement got beyond
-the stage of preliminaries and predictions, and began
-to tell of what was to be seen on the moon. Scientists
-and newspapermen appreciated the detailed description
-of the mammoth telescope and the work of placing it,
-but the public, like a child, wanted the moon—and got
-it. Let us plunge in at about the point where the public
-plunged:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The specimen of lunar vegetation, however, which
-they had already seen, had decided a question of too
-exciting an interest to induce them to retard its exit.
-It had demonstrated that the moon has an atmosphere
-constituted similarly to our own, and capable of sustaining
-organized and, therefore, most probably, animal
-life.</p>
-
-<p>“The trees,” says Dr. Grant, “for a period of ten
-minutes were of one unvaried kind, and unlike any I
-have seen except the largest class of yews in the English
-churchyards, which they in some respects resemble.
-These were followed by a level green plain which, as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">73</span>
-measured by the painted circle on our canvas of forty-nine
-feet, must have been more than half a mile in
-breadth.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The article had explained that, by means of a great
-reflector, the lunar views were thrown upon a big canvas
-screen behind the telescope.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Then appeared as fine a forest of firs, unequivocal
-firs, as I have ever seen cherished in the bosom of my
-native mountains. Wearied with the long continuance
-of these, we greatly reduced the magnifying power of the
-microscope without eclipsing either of the reflectors,
-and immediately perceived that we had been insensibly
-descending, as it were, a mountainous district of highly
-diversified and romantic character, and that we were
-on the verge of a lake, or inland sea; but of what relative
-locality or extent, we were yet too greatly magnified
-to determine.</p>
-
-<p>On introducing the feeblest achromatic lens we possessed,
-we found that the water, whose boundary we had
-just discovered, answered in general outline to the Mare
-Nubicum of Riccoli. Fairer shores never angel coasted
-on a tour of pleasure. A beach of brilliant white sand,
-girt with wild, castellated rocks, apparently of green
-marble, varied at chasms, occurring every two or three
-hundred feet, with grotesque blocks of chalk or gypsum,
-and feathered and festooned at the summits with the
-clustering foliage of unknown trees, moved along the
-bright wall of our apartment until we were speechless
-with admiration.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A column farther on, in a wonderful valley of this
-wonderful moon, life at last burst upon the seers:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>In the shade of the woods on the southeastern side
-we beheld continuous herds of brown quadrupeds, having
-all the external characteristics of the bison, but more
-diminutive than any species of the <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">bos</i> genus in our
-natural history. Its tail was like that of our <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">bos grunniens</i>;
-but in its semicircular horns, the hump on its
-shoulders, the depth of its dewlap, and the length of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">74</span>
-its shaggy hair, it closely resembled the species to which
-I have compared it.</p>
-
-<p>It had, however, one widely distinctive feature, which
-we afterward found common to nearly every lunar
-quadruped we have discovered; namely, a remarkable
-fleshy appendage over the eyes, crossing the whole
-breadth of the forehead and united to the ears. We
-could most distinctly perceive this hairy veil, which
-was shaped like the upper front outline of the cap known
-to the ladies as Mary Queen of Scots cap, lifted and lowered
-by means of the ears. It immediately occurred to
-the acute mind of Dr. Herschel that this was a providential
-contrivance to protect the eyes of the animal
-from the great extremes of light and darkness to which
-all the inhabitants of our side of the moon are periodically
-subjected.</p>
-
-<p>The next animal perceived would be classed on earth
-as a monster. It was of a bluish lead color, about the
-size of a goat, with a head and beard like him, and a
-<em>single horn</em>, slightly inclined forward from the perpendicular.
-The female was destitute of the horn and
-beard, but had a much longer tail. It was gregarious,
-and chiefly abounded on the acclivitous glades of the
-woods. In elegance of symmetry it rivaled the antelope,
-and like him it seemed an agile, sprightly creature, running
-with great speed and springing from the green turf
-with all the unaccountable antics of the young lamb or
-kitten.</p>
-
-<p>This beautiful creature afforded us the most exquisite
-amusement. The mimicry of its movements upon our
-white-painted canvas was as faithful and luminous as
-that of animals within a few yards of a camera obscura
-when seen pictured upon its tympan. Frequently, when
-attempting to put our fingers upon its beard, it would
-suddenly bound away into oblivion, as if conscious of
-our earthly impertinence; but then others would appear,
-whom we could not prevent nibbling the herbage, say or
-do what we would to them.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>So, at last, the people of earth knew something concrete
-about the live things of the moon. Goats with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">75</span>
-beards were there, and every New Yorker knew goats,
-for they fed upon the rocky hills of Harlem. And the
-moon had birds, too:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>On examining the center of this delightful valley we
-found a large, branching river, abounding with lovely
-islands and water-birds of numerous kinds. A species
-of gray pelican was the most numerous, but black and
-white cranes, with unreasonably long legs and bill, were
-also quite common. We watched their piscivorous experiments
-a long time in hopes of catching sight of a
-lunar fish; but, although we were not gratified in this
-respect, we could easily guess the purpose with which
-they plunged their long necks so deeply beneath the
-water. Near the upper extremity of one of these islands
-we obtained a glimpse of a strange amphibious creature
-of a spherical form, which rolled with great velocity
-across the pebbly beach, and was lost sight of in the
-strong current which set off from this angle of the
-island.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>At this point clouds intervened, and the Herschel
-party had to call it a day. But it had been a big day,
-and nobody who read the <i>Sun</i> wondered that the astronomers
-tossed off “congratulatory bumpers of the best
-‘East India particular,’ and named this place of wonders
-the Valley of the Unicorn.” So ended the <i>Sun</i>
-story of August 26, but an editorial paragraph assured
-the patrons of the paper that on the morrow there would
-be a treat even richer.</p>
-
-<p>What did the other papers say? In the language of
-a later and less elegant period, most of them ate it up—some
-eagerly, some grudgingly, some a bit dubiously, but
-they ate it, either in crumbs or in hunks. The <i>Daily
-Advertiser</i> declared:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>No article has appeared for years that will command
-so general a perusal and publication. Sir John has<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">76</span>
-added a stock of knowledge to the present age that will
-immortalize his name and place it high on the page of
-science.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Mercantile Advertiser</i>, knowing that its lofty
-readers were unlikely to see the moon revelations in
-the lowly <i>Sun</i>, hastened to begin reprinting the articles
-in full, with the remark that the document appeared to
-have intrinsic evidence of authenticity.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Times</i>, a daily then only a year old, and destined
-to live only eighteen months more—later, of course, the
-title was used by a successful daily—said that everything
-in the <i>Sun</i> story was probable and plausible, and
-had an “air of intense verisimilitude.”</p>
-
-<p>The New York <i>Sunday News</i> advised the incredulous
-to be patient:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Our doubts and incredulity may be a wrong to the
-learned astronomer, and the circumstances of this wonderful
-discovery may be correct.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Courier and Enquirer</i> said nothing at all. Like
-the <i>Journal of Commerce</i>, it hated the <i>Sun</i> for a lucky
-upstart. Both of these sixpenny respectables stood
-silent, with their axes behind their backs. Their own
-readers, the Livingstons and the Stuyvesants, got not a
-line about the moon from the blanket sheets, but they
-sent down into the kitchen and borrowed the <i>Sun</i> from
-the domestics, on the shallow pretext of wishing to
-discover whether their employees were reading a moral
-newspaper—as indeed they were.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Herald</i>, then about four months old, said not a
-word about the moon story. In fact, that was a period
-in which it said nothing at all about any subject, for
-the fire of that summer had unfortunately wiped out
-its plant. On the very days when the moon stories appeared,
-Mr. Bennett stood cracking his knuckles in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">77</span>
-front of his new establishment, the basement of 202
-Broadway, trying to hurry the men who were installing
-a double-cylinder press. Being a wise person, he advertised
-his progress in the <i>Sun</i>. It may have vexed
-him to see the circulation of the <i>Sun</i>—which he had
-imitated in character and price—bound higher and
-higher as he stood helpless.</p>
-
-<p>The third instalment of the literary treasure so
-obligingly imported by the “medical gentleman immediately
-from Scotland” introduced to <i>Sun</i> readers new
-and important regions of the moon—the Vagabond
-Mountains, the Lake of Death, craters of extinct volcanoes
-twenty-eight hundred feet high, and twelve luxuriant
-forests divided by open plains “in which waved
-an ocean of verdure, and which were probably prairies
-like those of North America.” The details were satisfying:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Dr. Herschel has classified not less than thirty-eight
-species of forest trees and nearly twice this number of
-plants, found in this tract alone, which are widely different
-to those found in more equatorial latitudes. Of
-animals he classified nine species of mammalia and five
-of oviparia. Among the former is a small kind of reindeer,
-the elk, the moose, the horned bear, and the biped
-beaver.</p>
-
-<p>The last resembles the beaver of the earth in every
-other respect than its destitution of a tail and its invariable
-habit of walking upon only two feet. It carries
-its young in its arms, like a human being, and walks
-with an easy, gliding motion. Its huts are constructed
-better and higher than those of many tribes of human
-savages, and from the appearance of smoke in nearly
-all of them there is no doubt of its being acquainted
-with the use of fire.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The largest lake described was two hundred and
-sixty-six miles long and one hundred and ninety-three<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">78</span>
-wide, shaped like the Bay of Bengal, and studded with
-volcanic islands. One island in a large bay was pinnacled
-with quartz crystals as brilliant as fire. Near
-by roamed zebras three feet high. Golden and blue
-pheasants strutted about. The beach was covered with
-shell-fish. Dr. Grant did not say whether the fire-making
-beavers ever held a clambake there.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> of Friday, August 28, 1835, was a notable
-issue. Not yet two years old, Mr. Day’s newspaper had
-the satisfaction of announcing that it had achieved the
-largest circulation of any daily in the world. It had, it
-said, 15,440 regular subscribers in New York and 700
-in Brooklyn, and it sold 2,000 in the streets and 1,220
-out of town—a grand total of 19,360 copies, as against
-the 17,000 circulation of the London <i>Times</i>. The double-cylinder
-Napier press in the building at Nassau and
-Spruce Streets—the corner where the <i>Tribune</i> is to-day,
-and to which the <i>Sun</i> had moved on August 3—had to
-run ten hours a day to satisfy the public demand. People
-waited with more or less patience until three o’clock
-in the afternoon to read about the moon.</p>
-
-<p>That very issue contained the most sensational instalment
-of all the moon series, for through that mystic
-chain which included Dr. Grant, the supplement of the
-Edinburgh <i>Journal of Science</i>, the “medical gentleman
-immediately from Scotland,” and the <i>Sun</i>, public curiosity
-as to the presence of human creatures on the orb
-of night was satisfied at last. The astronomers were
-looking upon the cliffs and crags of a new part of the
-moon:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>But whilst gazing upon them in a perspective of
-about half a mile we were thrilled with astonishment
-to perceive four successive flocks of large winged creatures,
-wholly unlike any kind of birds, descend with a
-slow, even motion from the cliffs on the western side<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">79</span>
-and alight upon the plain. They were first noticed by
-Dr. Herschel, who exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p>“Now gentlemen, my theories against your proofs,
-which you have often found a pretty even bet, we have
-here something worth looking at. I was confident that
-if ever we found beings in human shape it would be in
-this longitude, and that they would be provided by their
-Creator with some extraordinary powers of locomotion.
-First, exchange for my Number D.”</p>
-
-<p>This lens, being soon introduced, gave us a fine half-mile
-distance; and we counted three parties of these
-creatures, of twelve, nine, and fifteen in each, walking
-erect toward a small wood near the base of the eastern
-precipices. Certainly they were like human beings, for
-their wings had now disappeared, and their attitude in
-walking was both erect and dignified.</p>
-
-<p>Having observed them at this distance for some minutes,
-we introduced lens H.<em>z</em>., which brought them to the
-apparent proximity of eighty yards—the highest clear
-magnitude we possessed until the latter end of March,
-when we effected an improvement in the gas burners.</p>
-
-<p>About half of the first party had passed beyond our
-canvas; but of all the others we had a perfectly distinct
-and deliberate view. They averaged four feet in height,
-were covered, except on the face, with short and glossy
-copper-colored hair, and had wings composed of a thin
-membrane, without hair, lying snugly upon their backs,
-from the top of the shoulders to the calves of the legs.</p>
-
-<p>The face, which was of a yellowish flesh-color, was a
-slight improvement upon that of the large orang-utan,
-being more open and intelligent in its expression, and
-having a much greater expanse of forehead. The mouth,
-however, was very prominent, though somewhat relieved
-by a thick beard upon the lower jaw, and by lips
-far more human than those of any species of the <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">Simia</i>
-genus.</p>
-
-<p>In general symmetry of body and limbs they were infinitely
-superior to the orang-utan; so much so that, but
-for their long wings, Lieutenant Drummond said they
-would look as well on a parade-ground as some of the
-old cockney militia. The hair on the head was a darker<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">80</span>
-color than that of the body, closely curled, but apparently
-not woolly, and arranged in two curious semi-circles
-over the temples of the forehead. Their feet
-could only be seen as they were alternately lifted in
-walking; but from what we could see of them in so transient
-a view, they appeared thin and very protuberant
-at the heel.</p>
-
-<p>Whilst passing across the canvas, and whenever we
-afterward saw them, these creatures were evidently
-engaged in conversation; their gesticulation, more particularly
-the varied action of the hands and arms, appeared
-impassioned and emphatic. We hence inferred
-that they were rational beings, and, although not perhaps
-of so high an order as others which we discovered
-the next month on the shores of the Bay of Rainbows,
-that they were capable of producing works of art and
-contrivance.</p>
-
-<p>The next view we obtained of them was still more favorable.
-It was on the borders of a little lake, or expanded
-stream, which we then for the first time perceived
-running down the valley to the large lake, and
-having on its eastern margin a small wood. Some of
-these creatures had crossed this water and were lying
-like spread eagles on the skirts of the wood.</p>
-
-<p>We could then perceive that their wings possessed
-great expansion, and were similar in structure to those
-of the bat, being a semi-transparent membrane expanded
-in curvilineal divisions by means of straight
-radii, united at the back by the dorsal integuments.
-But what astonished us very much was the circumstance
-of this membrane being continued from the shoulders to
-the legs, united all the way down, though gradually decreasing
-in width. The wings seemed completely under
-the command of volition, for those of the creatures
-whom we saw bathing in the water spread them instantly
-to their full width, waved them as ducks do
-theirs to shake off the water, and then as instantly
-closed them again in a compact form.</p>
-
-<p>Our further observation of the habits of these creatures,
-who were of both sexes, led to results so very remarkable
-that I prefer they should be first laid before<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">81</span>
-the public in Dr. Herschel’s own work, where I have
-reason to know that they are fully and faithfully stated,
-however incredulously they may be received....</p>
-
-<p>The three families then almost simultaneously spread
-their wings, and were lost in the dark confines of the
-canvas before we had time to breathe from our paralyzing
-astonishment. We scientifically denominated them
-the <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">vespertilio-homo</i>, or man-bat; and they are doubtless
-innocent and happy creatures, notwithstanding
-some of their amusements would but ill comport with
-our terrestrial notions of decorum.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>So ended the account, in Dr. Grant’s words, of that
-fateful day. The editor of the supplement, perhaps a
-cousin of the “medical gentleman immediately arrived
-from Scotland,” added that although he had of course
-faithfully obeyed Dr. Grant’s injunction to omit “these
-highly curious passages,” he did not “clearly perceive
-the force of the reasons assigned for it,” and he added:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>From these, however, and other prohibited passages,
-which will be published by Dr. Herschel with the certificates
-of the civil and military authorities of the
-colony, and of several Episcopal, Wesleyan, and other
-ministers who, in the month of March last, were permitted
-under the stipulation of temporary secrecy to
-visit the observatory and become eye-witnesses of the
-wonders which they were requested to attest, we are confident
-his forthcoming volumes will be at once the most
-sublime in science and the most intense in general interest
-that ever issued from the press.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>New York now stopped its discussion of human
-slavery, the high cost of living—apples cost as much as
-four cents apiece in Wall Street—and other familiar
-topics, and devoted its talking hours to the man-bats of
-the moon. The <i>Sun</i> was stormed by people who wanted
-back numbers of the stories, and flooded with demands<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">82</span>
-by mail. As the text of the <i>Journal of Science</i> article
-indicated that the original narrative had been illustrated,
-there was a cry for pictures.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Day was busy with the paper and its overworked
-press, but he gave Mr. Locke a free hand, and that
-scholar took to Norris &amp; Baker, lithographers, in the
-Union Building, Wall Street, the drawings which had
-been intrusted to his care by the “medical gentleman
-immediately from Scotland.” Mr. Baker, described by
-the <i>Sun</i> as quite the most talented lithographic artist
-of the city, worked day and night on his delightful task,
-that the illustrations might be ready when the <i>Sun’s</i>
-press should have turned out, in the hours when it was
-not printing <i>Suns</i>, a pamphlet containing the astronomical
-discoveries.</p>
-
-<p>“Dr. Herschel’s great work,” said the <i>Sun</i>, “is preparing
-for publication at ten guineas sterling, or fifty
-dollars; and we shall give all the popular substance of
-it for twelve or thirteen cents.” The pamphlets were to
-be sold two for a quarter; the lithographs at twenty-five
-cents for the set.</p>
-
-<p>Most newspapers that mentioned the discovery of
-human creatures on the moon were credulous. The
-<i>Evening Post</i>, edited by William Cullen Bryant and
-Fitz-Greene Halleck—“the chanting cherubs of the
-<i>Post</i>,” as Colonel Webb was wont to call them—only
-skirted the edge of doubt:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>That there should be winged people in the moon does
-not strike us as more wonderful than the existence of
-such a race of beings on earth; and that there does or
-did exist such a race rests on the evidence of that most
-veracious of voyagers, <em>Peter Wilkins</em>, whose celebrated
-work not only gives an account of the general appearance
-and habits of a most interesting tribe of flying Indians,
-but also of those more delicate and engaging<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">83</span>
-traits which the author was enabled to discover by reason
-of the conjugal relations he entered into with one of
-the females of the winged tribe.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><em>Peter Wilkins</em> was the hero of Robert Paltock’s imaginative
-book, “The Life and Adventures of Peter Wilkins,
-a Cornish Man,” published in London in 1750.
-Paltock’s winged people, said Southey, were “the most
-beautiful creatures of imagination that were ever devised.”</p>
-
-<p>The instalment of the discoveries printed on August
-29 revealed to the reader the great Temple of the Moon,
-built of polished sapphire, with a roof of some yellow
-metal, supported by columns seventy feet high and six
-feet in diameter:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>It was open on all sides, and seemed to contain
-neither seats, altars, nor offerings, but it was a light
-and airy structure, nearly a hundred feet high from
-its white, glistening floor to the glowing roof, and it
-stood upon a round, green eminence on the eastern side
-of the valley. We afterward, however, discovered two
-others which were in every respect facsimiles of this
-one; but in neither did we perceive any visitants except
-flocks of wild doves, which alighted on its lustrous
-pinnacles.</p>
-
-<p>Had the devotees of these temples gone the way of all
-living, or were the latter merely historical monuments?
-What did the ingenious builders mean by the globe surrounded
-with flames? Did they, by this, record any
-past calamity of <em>their</em> world, or predict any future one
-of <em>ours</em>? I by no means despair of ultimately solving
-not only these, but a thousand other questions which
-present themselves respecting the object in this planet;
-for not the millionth part of her surface has yet been
-explored, and we have been more desirous of collecting
-the greatest possible number of new facts than of indulging
-in speculative theories, however seductive to the
-imagination.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">84</span></p>
-
-<p>The conclusion of this astounding narrative, which
-totalled eleven thousand words, was printed on August
-31. In the valley of the temple a new set of man-bats
-was found:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>We had no opportunity of seeing them actually engaged
-in any work of industry or art; and, so far as we
-could judge, they spent their happy hours in collecting
-various fruits in the woods, in eating, flying, bathing,
-and loitering about upon the summits of precipices.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>One night, when the astronomers finished work, they
-neglectfully left the telescope facing the eastern horizon.
-The risen sun burned a hole fifteen feet in circumference
-through the reflecting chamber, and ruined
-part of the observatory. When the damage was repaired,
-the moon was invisible, and so Dr. Herschel
-turned his attention to Saturn. Most of the discoveries
-here were technical, as the <i>Sun</i> assured its readers, and
-the narrative came to an end. An editorial note added:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>This concludes the supplement with the exception of
-forty pages of illustrative and mathematical notes,
-which would greatly enhance the size and price of this
-work without commensurably adding to its general interest.
-In order that our readers may judge for themselves
-whether we have withheld from them any matter
-of general comprehension and interest, we insert one
-of the notes from those pages of the supplement which
-we thought it useless to reprint; and it may be considered
-a fair sample of the remainder. For ourselves,
-we know nothing of mathematics beyond counting dollars
-and cents, but to geometricians the following new
-method of measuring the height of the lunar mountains,
-adopted by Sir John Herschel, may be quite interesting.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Perhaps the pretended method of measuring lunar
-mountains was not interesting to laymen, but it may
-have been the cause of an intellectual tumult at Yale.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">85</span>
-At all events, a deputation from that college hurried
-to the steamboat and came to New York to see the
-wonderful supplement. The collegians saw Mr. Day,
-and voiced their desire.</p>
-
-<p>“Surely,” he replied, “you do not doubt that we
-have the supplement in our possession? I suppose the
-magazine is somewhere up-stairs, but I consider it almost
-an insult that you should ask to see it.”</p>
-
-<p>On their way out the Yale men heard, perhaps from
-the “devil,” that one Locke was interested in the matter
-of the moon, that he had handled the supplement, and
-that he was to be seen at the foot of the stairs, smoking
-his cigar and gazing across City Hall Park. They advanced
-upon him, and he, less brusque than Mr. Day,
-told the scientific pilgrims that the supplement was in
-the hands of a printer in William Street—giving the
-name and address.</p>
-
-<p>As the Yale men disappeared in the direction of the
-printery, Locke started for the same goal, and more
-rapidly. When the Yalensians arrived, the printer,
-primed by Locke, told them that the precious pamphlet
-had just been sent to another shop, where certain proof-reading
-was to be done. And so they went from post
-to pillar until the hour came for their return to New
-Haven. It would not do to linger in New York, for
-Professors Denison Olmsted and Elias Loomis were
-that very day getting their first peep at Halley’s comet,
-about to make the regular appearance with which it
-favours the earth every seventy-six years.</p>
-
-<p>But Yale was not the only part of intellectual New
-England to be deeply interested in the moon and its
-bat-men. The <i>Gazette</i> of Hampshire, Massachusetts,
-insisted that Edward Everett, who was then running
-for Governor, had these astronomical discoveries in
-mind when he declared that “we know not how soon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">86</span>
-the mind, in its researches into the labyrinth of nature,
-would grasp some clue which would lead to a new universe
-and change the aspect of the world.”</p>
-
-<p>Harriet Martineau, who was touring America at the
-time, wrote in her “Sketches of Western Travel” that
-the ladies of Springfield, Massachusetts, subscribed to
-a fund to send missionaries to the benighted luminary.
-When the <i>Sun</i> articles reached Paris, they were at once
-translated into illustrated pamphlets, and the caricaturists
-of the Paris newspapers drew pictures of the
-man-bats going through the streets singing “<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Au Clair
-de la Lune</i>.” London, Edinburgh, and Glasgow made
-haste to issue editions of the work.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, of course, Sir John Herschel was busy
-with his telescope at the Cape, all unaware of his expanded
-fame in the north. Caleb Weeks, of Jamaica,
-Long Island, the Adam Forepaugh of his day, was setting
-out for South Africa to get a supply of giraffes for
-his menagerie, and he had the honour of laying in the
-great astronomer’s hand a clean copy of the pamphlet.
-To say that Sir John was amazed at the <i>Sun’s</i> enterprise
-would be putting it mildly. When he had read
-the story through, he went to Caleb Weeks and said that
-he was overcome; that he never could hope to live up
-to the fame that had been heaped upon him.</p>
-
-<p>In New York, meanwhile, Richard Adams Locke had
-spilled the beans. There was a reporter named Finn,
-once employed by the <i>Sun</i>, but later a scribe for the
-<i>Journal of Commerce</i>. He and Locke were friends.
-One afternoon Gerard Hallock, who was David Hale’s
-partner in the proprietorship of the <i>Journal of Commerce</i>,
-called Finn to his office and told him to get extra
-copies of the <i>Sun</i> containing the moon story, as the
-<i>Journal</i> had decided, in justice to its readers, that it
-must reprint it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">87</span></p>
-
-<p>Perhaps at the <i>Sun</i> office, perhaps in the tap-room
-of the Washington Hotel, Finn met Locke, and they
-went socially about to public places. Finn told Locke
-of the work on which he was engaged, and said that,
-as the moon story was already being put into type at the
-<i>Journal</i> office, it was likely that it would be printed on
-the morrow.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t print it right away,” said Locke. “I wrote
-it myself.”</p>
-
-<p>The next day the <i>Journal</i>, instead of being silently
-grateful for the warning, denounced the alleged discoveries
-as a hoax. Mr. Bennett, who by this time
-had the <i>Herald</i> once more in running order, not only
-cried “Hoax!” but named Locke as the author.</p>
-
-<p>Probably Locke was glad that the suspense was over.
-He is said to have told a friend that he had not intended
-the story as a hoax, but as satire.</p>
-
-<p>“It is quite evident,” he said, as he saw the whole
-country take the marvellous narrative seriously, “that
-it is an abortive satire; and I am the best self-hoaxed
-man in the whole community.”</p>
-
-<p>But while the <i>Sun’s</i> rivals denounced the hoax, the
-<i>Sun</i> was not quick to admit that it had gulled not only
-its own readers but almost all the scientific world. Barring
-the casual conversation between Locke and Finn,
-there was no evidence plain enough to convince the layman
-that it was a hoax. The <i>Sun</i> fenced lightly and
-skilfully with all controverters. On September 16,
-more than two weeks after the conclusion of the story,
-it printed a long editorial article on the subject of the
-authenticity of the discoveries, mentioning the wide-spread
-interest that had been displayed in them:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Most of those who incredulously regard the whole
-narrative as a hoax are generously enthusiastic in
-panegyrizing not only what they are pleased to denominate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">88</span>
-its ingenuity and talent, but also its useful effect
-in diverting the public mind, for a while, from that
-bitter apple of discord, the abolition of slavery, which
-still unhappily threatens to turn the milk of human
-kindness into rancorous gall. That the astronomical
-discoveries have had this effect is obvious from our exchange
-papers. Who knows, therefore, whether these
-discoveries in the moon, with the visions of the blissful
-harmony of her inhabitants which they have revealed,
-may not have had the effect of reproving the discords of
-a country which might be happy as a paradise, which
-has valleys not less lovely than those of the Ruby Colosseum,
-of the Unicorn, or of the Triads; and which has
-not inferior facilities for social intercourse to those possessed
-by the <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">vespertiliones-homines</i>, or any other
-<i xml:lang="la" lang="la">homines</i> whatever?</p>
-
-<p>Some persons of little faith but great good nature,
-who consider the “moon story,” as it is vulgarly called,
-an adroit fiction of our own, are quite of the opinion
-that this was the amiable moral which the writer had in
-view. Other readers, however, construe the whole as
-an elaborate satire upon the monstrous fabrications of
-the political press of the country and the various genera
-and species of its party editors. In the blue goat with
-the single horn, mentioned as it is in connection with
-the royal arms of England, many persons fancy they
-perceive the characteristics of a notorious foreigner
-who is the supervising editor of one of our largest morning
-papers.</p>
-
-<p>We confess that this idea of intended satire somewhat
-shook our own faith in the genuineness of the extracts
-from the Edinburgh <i>Journal of Science</i> with
-which a gentleman connected with our office furnished
-us as “from a medical gentleman immediately from
-Scotland.”</p>
-
-<p>Certain correspondents have been urging us to come
-out and confess the whole to be a hoax; but this we can
-by no means do until we have the testimony of the
-English or Scotch papers to corroborate such a declaration.
-In the mean time let every reader of the account
-examine it and enjoy his own opinion. Many intelligent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">89</span>
-and scientific persons will believe it true, and will
-continue to do so to their lives’ end; whilst the skepticism
-of others would not be removed though they were
-in Dr. Herschel’s observatory itself.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The New York showmen of that day were keen for
-novelty, and the moon story helped them to it. Mr.
-Hannington, who ran the diorama in the City Saloon—which
-was not a barroom, but an amusement house—on
-Broadway opposite St. Paul’s Church, put on “The
-Lunar Discoveries; a Brilliant Illustration of the Scientific
-Observation of the Surface of the Moon, to Which
-Will Be Added the Reported Lunar Observations of
-Sir John Herschel.” Hannington had been showing
-“The Deluge” and “The Burning of Moscow,” but the
-wonders of the moon proved to be far more attractive
-to his patrons. The <i>Sun</i> approved of this moral
-spectacle:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Hannington forever and still years afterward, say we!
-His panorama of the lunar discoveries, in connexion
-with the beautiful dioramas, are far superior to any
-other exhibition in this country.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Not less popular than Hannington’s panorama was
-an extravaganza put on by Thomas Hamblin at the
-Bowery Theatre, and called “Moonshine, or Lunar Discoveries.”
-A <i>Sun</i> man went to review it, and had to
-stand up; but he was patient enough to stay, and he
-wrote this about the show:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>It is quite evident that Hamblin does not believe a
-word of the whole story, or he would never have taken
-the liberties with it which he has. The wings of the
-man-bats and lady-bats, who are of an orange color and
-look like angels in the jaundice, are well contrived for
-effect; and the dialogue is highly witty and pungent.
-Major Jack Downing’s blowing up a whole flock of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">90</span>
-winged lunarians with a combustible bundle of Abolition
-tracts, after vainly endeavoring to catch a long aim
-at them with his rifle, is capital; as are also his puns
-and jokes upon the splendid scenery of the Ruby Colosseum.
-Take it altogether, it is the most amusing thing
-that has been on these boards for a long time.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Thus the moon eclipsed the regular stars of the New
-York stage. Even Mrs. Duff, the most pathetic <i>Isabella</i>
-that ever appeared in “The Fatal Marriage,” saw her
-audiences thin out at the Franklin Theatre. Sol Smith’s
-drolleries in “The Lying Valet,” at the Park Theatre,
-could not rouse the laughter that the burlesque man-bats
-caused at the Bowery.</p>
-
-<p>All this time there was a disappointed man in Baltimore;
-disappointed because the moon stories had
-caused him to abandon one of the most ambitious stories
-he had attempted. This was Edgar Allan Poe, and the
-story he dropped was “Hans Pfaall.”</p>
-
-<p>In the spring of 1835 the Harpers issued an edition
-of Sir John Herschel’s “Treatise on Astronomy,” and
-Poe, who read it, was deeply interested in the chapter
-on the possibility of future lunar investigations:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The theme excited my fancy, and I longed to give
-free rein to it in depicting my day-dreams about the
-scenery of the moon; in short, I longed to write a story
-embodying these dreams. The obvious difficulty, of
-course, was that of accounting for the narrator’s acquaintance
-with the satellite; and the equally obvious
-mode of surmounting the difficulty was the supposition
-of an extraordinary telescope.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Poe spoke of this ambition to John Pendleton Kennedy,
-of Baltimore, already the author of “Swallow
-Barn,” and later to have the honour of writing, as the
-result of a jest by Thackeray, the fourth chapter of
-the second volume of “The Virginians.” Kennedy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">91</span>
-assured Poe that the mechanics of telescope construction
-were so fixed that it would be impossible to impart
-verisimilitude to a tale based on a superefficient telescope.
-So Poe resorted to other means of bringing the
-moon close to the reader’s eye:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>I fell back upon a style half plausible, half bantering,
-and resolved to give what interest I could to an actual
-passage from the earth to the moon, describing the
-lunar scenery as if surveyed and personally examined by
-the narrator.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Poe wrote the first part of “Hans Pfaall,” and published
-it in the <i>Southern Literary Messenger</i>, of which
-he was then editor, at Richmond, Virginia. Three weeks
-afterward the first instalment of Locke’s moon story
-appeared in the <i>Sun</i>. At the moment Poe believed that
-his idea had been kidnapped:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>No sooner had I seen the paper than I understood the
-jest, which not for a moment could I doubt had been
-suggested by my own <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">jeu d’esprit</i>. Some of the New
-York journals—the <i>Transcript</i>, among others—saw the
-matter in the same light, and published the moon story
-side by side with “Hans Pfaall,” thinking that the
-author of the one had been detected in the author of
-the other.</p>
-
-<p>Although the details are, with some exceptions, very
-dissimilar, still I maintain that the general features of
-the two compositions are nearly identical. Both are
-hoaxes—although one is in a tone of mere banter, the
-other of down-right earnest; both hoaxes are on one
-subject, astronomy; both on the same point of that subject,
-the moon; both professed to have derived exclusive
-information from a foreign country; and both attempt
-to give plausibility by minuteness of scientific detail.
-Add to all this, that nothing of a similar nature had
-even been attempted before these two hoaxes, the one of
-which followed immediately upon the heels of the other.</p>
-
-<p>Having stated the case, however, in this form, I am<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">92</span>
-bound to do Mr. Locke the justice to say that he denies
-having seen my article prior to the publication of his
-own; I am bound to add, also, that I believe him.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Nor can any unbiassed person who reads, for purpose
-of comparison, the “Astronomical Discoveries” and
-“Hans Pfaall” suspect that Locke based his hoax on
-the story of the Rotterdam debtor who blew his creditors
-to bits and sailed to the moon in a balloon. Chalk
-and cheese are much more alike than these two products
-of genius.</p>
-
-<p>Poe may have intended to fall back upon “a style
-half plausible, half bantering,” as he described it, but
-there is not the slightest plausibility about “Hans
-Pfaall.” It is as near to humour as the great, dark mind
-could get. “Mere banter,” as he later described it, is
-better. The very episode of the dripping pitcher of
-water, used to wake <i>Hans</i> at an altitude where even
-alcohol would freeze, is enough proof, if proof at all
-were necessary, to strip the tale of its last shred of
-verisimilitude. No child of twelve would believe in
-<i>Hans</i>, while Locke’s fictitious “Dr. Grant” deceived
-nine-tenths—the estimate is Poe’s—of those who read
-the narrative of the great doings at the Cape of Good
-Hope.</p>
-
-<p>Locke had spoiled a promising tale for Poe—who tore
-up the second instalment of “Hans Pfaall” when he
-“found that he could add very little to the minute and
-authentic account of Sir John Herschel”—but the poet
-took pleasure, in later years, in picking the <i>Sun’s</i> moon
-story to bits.</p>
-
-<p>“That the public were misled, even for an instant,”
-Poe declared in his critical essay on Locke’s writings,
-“merely proves the gross ignorance which, ten or twelve
-years ago, was so prevalent on astronomical topics.”</p>
-
-<p>According to Locke’s own description of the telescope,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">93</span>
-said Poe, it could not have brought the moon nearer
-than five miles; yet Sir John—Locke’s Sir John—saw
-flowers and described the eyes of birds. Locke had an
-ocean on the moon, although it had been established beyond
-question that the visible side of the moon is dry.
-The most ridiculous thing about the moon story, said
-Poe, was that the narrator described the entire bodies
-of the man-bats, whereas, if they were seen at all by an
-observer on the earth, they would manifestly appear as
-if walking heels up and head down, after the fashion of
-flies on a ceiling.</p>
-
-<p>And yet the hoax, Poe admits, “was, upon the whole,
-the greatest hit in the way of sensation—of merely
-popular sensation—ever made by any similar fiction
-either in America or Europe.” Whether Locke intended
-it as satire or not—a debatable point—it was a
-hoax of the first water. It deceived more persons, and
-for a longer time, than any other fake ever written: and,
-as the <i>Sun</i> pointed out, it hurt nobody—except, perhaps,
-the feelings of Dr. Dick, of Dundee—and it took
-the public mind away from less agreeable matters.
-Some of the wounded scientists roared, but the public,
-particularly the New York public, took the exposure of
-Locke’s literary villainy just as Sir John Herschel accepted
-it—with a grin.</p>
-
-<p>As for the inspiration of the moon story, the record
-is nebulous. If Poe was really grieved at his first
-thought that Locke had taken from him the main imaginative
-idea—that the moon was inhabited—then Poe
-was oversensitive or uninformed, for that idea was at
-least two centuries old.</p>
-
-<p>Francis Godwin, an English bishop and author, who
-was born in 1562, and who died just two centuries before
-the <i>Sun</i> was first printed, wrote “The Man in the
-Moone, or a Discourse of a Voyage Thither by Domingo<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">94</span>
-Gonsales, the Speedy Messenger.” This was published
-in London in 1638, five years after the author’s death.</p>
-
-<p>In the same year there appeared a book called “The
-Discovery of a World in the Moone,” which contained
-arguments to prove the moon habitable. It was written
-by John Wilkins—no relative of the fictitious <i>Peter</i> of
-Paltock’s story, but a young English clergyman who
-later became Bishop of Chester, and who was the first
-secretary of the Royal Society. Two years later Wilkins
-added to his “Discovery of a World” a “Discourse
-Concerning the Possibility of a Passage Thither.”</p>
-
-<p>Cyrano de Bergerac, he of the long nose and the
-passion for poetry and duelling, later to be immortalized
-by Rostand, read these products of two Englishmen’s
-fancy, and about 1650 he turned out his joyful “Histoire
-Comique des Etats et Empires de la Lune.” But
-Bergerac had also been influenced by Dante and by
-Lucian, the latter being the supposed inspiration of the
-fanciful narratives of Rabelais and Swift. Perhaps
-these writers influenced Godwin and Wilkins also; so
-the trail, zigzagged and ramifying, goes back to the
-second century. It is hard to indict a man for being
-inspired, and in the case of the moon story there is no
-evidence of plagiarism. If “Hans Pfaall” were to be
-compared with Locke’s story for hoaxing qualities, it
-would only suffer by the comparison. It would appear
-as the youthful product of a tyro, as against the cunning
-work of an artist of almost devilish ingenuity.</p>
-
-<p>Is there any doubt that the moon hoax was the sole
-work of Richard Adams Locke? So far as concerns the
-record of the <i>Sun</i>, the comments of Locke’s American
-contemporaries, and the belief of Benjamin H. Day, expressed
-in 1883 in a talk with Edward P. Mitchell, the
-answer must be in the negative. Yet it must be set
-down, as a literary curiosity at least, that it has been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">95</span>
-believed in France and by at least one English antiquary
-of repute that the moon hoax was the work of a Frenchman—Jean
-Nicolas Nicollet, the astronomer.</p>
-
-<p>Nicollet was born at Cluses, in Savoy, in 1786. First
-a cowherd, he did not learn to read until he was twelve.
-Once at school his progress was rapid, and at nineteen
-he become preceptor of mathematics at Chambry. He
-went to Paris, where in 1817 he was appointed secretary-librarian
-of the Observatory, and he studied astronomy
-with Laplace, who refers to Nicollet’s assistance
-in his works. In 1823 he was appointed to the government
-bureau of longitudes, and at the same time was
-professor of mathematics in the College of Louis le
-Grand.</p>
-
-<p>He became a master of English, and through this
-knowledge and his own mathematical genius he was able
-to assemble, for the use of the French life-insurance
-companies, all that was known, and much that he himself
-discovered, of actuarial methods; this being incorporated
-in his letter to M. Outrequin on “Assurances
-Having for Their Basis the Probable Duration of
-Human Life.” He also wrote “Memoirs upon the
-Measure of an Arc of Parallel Midway Between the
-Pole and the Equator” (1826), and “Course of Mathematics
-for the Use of Mariners” (1830).</p>
-
-<p>In 1831 Nicollet failed in speculation, losing not only
-his own fortune but that of others. He came to the
-United States, arriving early in 1832, the very year that
-Locke came to America. It is probable that he was in
-New York, but there is no evidence as to the length of
-his stay. It is known, however, that he was impoverished,
-and that he was assisted by Bishop Chanche,
-of Natchez, to go on with his chosen work—an exploration
-of the Mississippi and its tributaries. He made
-astronomical and barometrical observations, determined<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">96</span>
-the geographical position and elevation of many important
-points, and studied Indian lore.</p>
-
-<p>The United States government was so well pleased
-with Nicollet’s work that it sent him to the Far West
-for further investigations, with Lieutenant John C. Frémont
-as assistant. His “Geology of the Upper Mississippi
-Region and of the Cretaceous Formation of the
-Upper Missouri” was one of the results of his journeys.
-After this he tried, through letters, to regain his lost
-standing in France by seeking election to the Paris
-Academy of Sciences, but he was black-balled, and,
-broken-hearted, he died in Washington in 1843.</p>
-
-<p>The Englishman who believed that Nicollet was the
-author of the moon hoax was Augustus De Morgan,
-father of the late William De Morgan, the novelist, and
-himself a distinguished mathematician and litterateur.
-He was professor of mathematics at University College,
-London, at the time when the moon pamphlet first appeared
-in England. His “Budget of Paradoxes,” an
-interesting collection of literary curiosities and puzzles,
-which he had written, but not carefully assembled, was
-published in 1872, the year after his death.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_96a" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 38em;">
- <img src="images/i_096a.jpg" width="1813" height="801" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
-
-<p>THE FIRST INSTALLMENT OF THE MOON HOAX</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<div id="ip_96b" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 38em;">
- <img src="images/i_096ab.jpg" width="1820" height="1655" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
-
-<p>A MOON SCENE, FROM LOCKE’S GREAT DECEPTION</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Two fragments, printed separately in this volume,
-refer to the moon hoax. The first is this:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="hang b1">“Some Account of the Great Astronomical Discoveries
-Lately Made by Sir John Herschel at the Cape of
-Good Hope.”—Second Edition, London, 12mo, 1836.</p>
-
-<p>This is a curious hoax, evidently written by a person
-versed in astronomy and clever at introducing probable
-circumstances and undesigned coincidences. It first
-appeared in a newspaper. It makes Sir J. Herschel discover
-men, animals, <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">et cetera</i>, in the moon, of which
-much detail is given. There seems to have been a
-French edition, the original, and English editions in
-America, whence the work came into Britain; but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">97</span>
-whether the French was published in America or at
-Paris I do not know. There is no doubt that it was
-produced in the United States by M. Nicollet, an astronomer,
-once of Paris, and a fugitive of some kind.</p>
-
-<p>About him I have heard two stories. First, that he
-fled to America with funds not his own, and that this
-book was a mere device to raise the wind. Secondly,
-that he was a protégé of Laplace, and of the Polignac
-party, and also an outspoken man. That after the Revolution
-he was so obnoxious to the republican party that
-he judged it prudent to quit France; which he did in
-debt, leaving money for his creditors, but not enough,
-with M. Bouvard. In America he connected himself
-with an assurance office. The moon story was written,
-and sent to France, chiefly with the intention of entrapping
-M. Arago, Nicollet’s especial foe, into the belief
-of it. And those who narrate this version of the
-story wind up by saying that M. Arago <em>was</em> entrapped,
-and circulated the wonders through Paris until a letter
-from Nicollet to M. Bouvard explained the hoax.</p>
-
-<p>I have no personal knowledge of either story; but as
-the poor man had to endure the first, it is but right that
-the second should be told with it.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The second fragment reads as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="hang b1">“The Moon Hoax; or, the Discovery That the Moon Has
-a Vast Population of Human Beings.” By Richard
-Adams Locke.—New York, 1859.</p>
-
-<p>This is a reprint of the hoax already mentioned. I
-suppose “R. A. Locke” is the name assumed by M.
-Nicollet. The publisher informs us that when the hoax
-first appeared day by day in a morning newspaper, the
-circulation increased fivefold, and the paper obtained
-a permanent footing. Besides this, an edition of sixty
-thousand was sold off in less than one month.</p>
-
-<p>This discovery was also published under the name of
-A. R. Grant. Sohnke’s “Bibliotheca Mathematica”
-confounds this Grant with Professor R. Grant of Glasgow,
-the author of the “History of Physical Astronomy,”
-who is accordingly made to guarantee the discoveries<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">98</span>
-in the moon. I hope Adams Locke will not
-merge in J. C. Adams, the codiscoverer of Neptune.
-Sohnke gives the titles of three French translations of
-“The Moon Hoax” at Paris, of one at Bordeaux, and of
-Italian translations at Parma, Palermo, and Milan.</p>
-
-<p>A correspondent, who is evidently fully master of
-details, which he has given at length, informs me that
-“The Moon Hoax” first appeared in the New York <i>Sun</i>,
-of which R. A. Locke was editor. It so much resembled
-a story then recently published by Edgar A. Poe, in a
-Southern paper, “Adventures of Hans Pfaall,” that
-some New York journals published the two side by side.
-Mr. Locke, when he left the New York <i>Sun</i>, started
-another paper, and discovered the manuscript of Mungo
-Park; but this did not deceive. The <i>Sun</i>, however, continued
-its career, and had a great success in an account
-of a balloon voyage from England to America, in
-seventy-five hours, by Mr. Monck Mason, Mr. Harrison
-Ainsworth, and others.</p>
-
-<p>I have no doubt that M. Nicollet was the author of
-“The Moon Hoax,” written in a way which marks the
-practised observatory astronomer beyond all doubt, and
-by evidence seen in the most minute details. Nicollet
-had an eye to Europe. I suppose that he took Poe’s
-story and made it a basis for his own. Mr. Locke, it
-would seem, when he attempted a fabrication for himself,
-did not succeed.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In his remark that “there seems to have been a
-French edition, the original,” Augustus De Morgan was
-undoubtedly misled, for every authority consultable
-agrees that the French pamphlets were merely translations
-of the story originally printed in the <i>Sun</i>; and
-De Morgan had learned this when he wrote his second
-note on the subject.</p>
-
-<p>The M. Arago whom De Morgan believes Nicollet
-sought to entrap was Dominique François Arago, the
-celebrated astronomer. In 1830, as a reward for his
-many accomplishments, he was made perpetual secretary<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">99</span>
-of the Paris Academy of Sciences, and in the following
-year—the year of Nicollet’s fall from grace—he
-was elected to the Chamber of Deputies. As to the intimation
-that Arago was really misled by the moon
-story, it is unlikely. W. N. Griggs, a contemporary of
-Locke, insists in a memoir of that journalist that the
-narrative was read by Arago to the members of the
-Academy, and was received with mingled denunciation
-and laughter. But hoaxing Arago in a matter of astronomy
-would have been a difficult feat. Surely the discrepancies
-pointed out by Poe would have been noticed
-immediately.</p>
-
-<p>It is, however, easy to understand De Morgan’s belief
-that Nicollet was the author of the moon story. Much
-of the narrative, particularly parts which have here
-been omitted, is made up of technicalities which could
-have come only from the pen of a man versed in the
-intricacies of astronomical science. They were not put
-into the story to interest <i>Sun</i> readers, for they are far
-over the layman’s head, but for the purpose of adding
-verisimilitude to a yarn which, stripped of the technical
-trimmings, would have been pretty bald.</p>
-
-<p>It was plain to De Morgan that Nicollet was one of
-the few men alive in 1835 who could have woven the
-scientific fabric in which the hoax was disguised. It
-was also apparent to him that Nicollet, jealous of the
-popularity of Arago, might have had a motive for
-launching a satire, if not a hoax. And then there was
-Nicollet’s presence in America at the time of the moon
-story’s publication, Nicollet’s knowledge of English, and
-Nicollet’s poverty. The coincidences are interesting,
-if nothing more.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>Let us see what the French said about Nicollet and
-the story that came to the <i>Sun</i> from “a medical gentleman<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">100</span>
-immediately from Scotland.” In a sketch of Nicollet
-printed in the “Biographie Universelle” (Michaud,
-Paris, 1884), the following appears:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>There has been attributed to him an article which
-appeared in the daily papers of France, and which, in
-the form of a letter dated from the United States, spoke
-of an improvement in the telescope invented by the
-learned astronomer Herschel, who was then at the Cape
-of Good Hope. It has been generally and with much
-probability attributed to Nicollet.</p>
-
-<p>With the aid of this admirable improvement Herschel
-was supposed to have succeeded in discovering on the
-surface of the moon live beings, buildings of various
-kinds, and a multitude of other interesting things. The
-description of these objects and the ingenious method
-employed by the English astronomer to attain his purpose
-was so detailed, and covered with a veneer of
-science so skilfully applied, that the general public was
-startled by the announcement of the discovery, of which
-North America hastened to send us the news.</p>
-
-<p>It has even been said that several astronomers and
-physicists of our country were taken in for a moment.
-That seems hardly probable to us. It was easy to perceive
-that it was a hoax written by a learned and mischievous
-person.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The “Nouvelle Biographie Générale” (Paris, 1862),
-says of Nicollet:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>He is believed to be the author of the anonymous
-pamphlet which appeared in 1836 on the discoveries in
-the moon made by Herschel at the Cape of Good Hope.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Cruel, consistent Locke, never to have written down
-the details of the conception and birth of the best invention
-that ever spoofed the world! He leaves history
-to wonder whether it be possible that, with one
-word added, the French biographer was right, and that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">101</span>
-it was “a hoax written by a learned and <em>a</em> mischievous
-person.” Certain it is that Nicollet never wrote all
-of the moon story; certain, too, that Locke wrote much,
-if not all of it. The calculations of the angles of reflection
-might have been Nicollet’s, but the blue unicorn is
-the unicorn of Locke.</p>
-
-<p>No man can say when the germ of the story first took
-shape. It might have been designed at any time after
-Herschel laid the plans for his voyage to the Cape of
-Good Hope, and that was at least two years before it
-appeared in the <i>Sun</i>. Was Nicollet in New York then,
-and did he and Locke lay their heads together across
-a table at the American Hotel and plan the great
-deceit?</p>
-
-<p>There was one head full of figures and the stars;
-another crammed with the imagination that brought
-forth the fire-making biped beavers and the fascinating,
-if indecorous, human bats. If they never met, more is
-the pity. Whether they met, none can say. Go to ask
-the ghosts of the American Hotel, and you find it gone,
-and in its place the Woolworth Building, earth’s spear
-levelled at the laughing moon.</p>
-
-<p>Whatever happened, the credit must rest with Richard
-Adams Locke. Even if the technical embellishments
-of the moon story were borrowed, still his was the genius
-that builded the great temple, made flowers to bloom in
-the lunar valleys, and grew the filmy wings on the
-<i xml:lang="la" lang="la">vespertilio-homo</i>. His was the art that caused the
-bricklayer of Cherry Street to sit late beside his candle,
-spelling out the rare story with joyous labour. It must
-have been a reward to Locke, even to the last of his
-seventy years, to know that he had made people read
-newspapers who never had read them before; for that
-is what he really accomplished by this huge, complex
-lie.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">102</span></p>
-
-<p>“From the epoch of the hoax,” wrote Poe, “the Sun
-shone with unmitigated splendor. Its success firmly
-established the ‘penny system’ throughout the country,
-and (through the <i>Sun</i>) consequently we are indebted
-to the genius of Mr. Locke for one of the most important
-steps ever yet taken in the pathway of human progress.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_103" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">103</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">DAY FINDS A RIVAL IN BENNETT</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>The Success of “The Sun” Leads to the Founding of the
-“Herald.”—Enterprises and Quarrels of a Furious
-Young Journalism.—The Picturesque Webb.—Maria
-Monk.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> usefulness of Richard Adams Locke as a <i>Sun</i>
-reporter did not end with the moon hoax. Far
-from expressing regret that its employee had gulled
-half the earth, the <i>Sun</i> continued to meet exposure with
-a calm and almost flippant front, insisting that it would
-never admit the non-existence of the man-bats until
-official contradiction arrived from Edinburgh or the
-Cape of Good Hope. The paper realized the value, in
-public interest, of Locke’s name, and was proud to announce,
-in November of 1835, that it had commissioned
-Locke to write another series of articles, telling the
-story of the “Life and Adventures of Manuel Fernandez,
-otherwise Richard C. Jackson, convicted of the
-murder of John Roberts, and to be executed at the Bellevue
-Prison, New York, on Thursday next, the 19th
-instant.”</p>
-
-<p>This was a big beat, for the young men of the <i>Courier
-and Enquirer</i>, and perhaps of the <i>Herald</i>, had been trying
-to get a yarn from the criminal, a Spaniard who
-had served in foreign wars, had been captured by savages
-in Africa, and had had many other adventures.
-Fernandez was convicted of killing another sailor for
-his attention to Fernandez’s mistress, a Mrs. Schultz;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">104</span>
-and for about three weeks Locke spent several hours a
-day in the condemned man’s cell. The “Life and Adventures,”
-which was printed on the first page of the
-<i>Sun</i>, ran serially from November 14 to November 25,
-and was read with avidity.</p>
-
-<p>It was ironical that the hero of the story, who had
-expressed to Locke an eagerness to have his career set
-before the public in its true light, was prevented from
-reading the later instalments; for the law, taking no
-cognizance of the literary side of the matter, went about
-its business, and Fernandez was hanged in the Bellevue
-yard on the 19th, a morning when the <i>Sun’s</i> narrative
-had wrecked the sailor off the coast of Wales. Mr.
-Locke reported the execution and drew upon the autopsy
-to verify the “Adventures.”</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>It is an interesting fact that the corpse of Fernandez
-exhibited marks of all those serious injuries which are
-recorded in the course of our narrative of his life, more
-particularly that dreadful fracture of his vertebræ which
-he suffered in Leghorn.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The mere word of a “medical gentleman immediately
-from Scotland” was no longer to be relied upon!</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun’s</i> story of the great fire of December, 1835,
-sounds like Locke, but it may have been written by one
-of the other bright young men who worked for Benjamin
-H. Day. Among them were William M. Prall, who
-succeeded Wisner as the court reporter, and Lucius
-Robinson.</p>
-
-<p>“Robinson seemed to be a young man of excellent
-ideas, but not very highly educated,” Mr. Day remarked
-about fifty years later.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps the Day standards were very high. Robinson
-was twenty six when he worked on the <i>Sun</i>. He had
-been educated at an academy in Delhi, New York, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">105</span>
-after that had studied law and been admitted to the
-bar. He was too poor to practise at once, and went into
-newspaper work to make a living. After leaving the
-<i>Sun</i> he was elected district attorney of Greene County,
-and in 1843 was appointed master of chancery in New
-York. He left the Democratic party when the Republican
-party was organized, but returned to his old political
-allegiance after the Civil War. In 1876 he was
-elected Governor of New York—an achievement which
-still left him a little less famous than his fellow reporter,
-Locke.</p>
-
-<p>“Give us one of your real Moscow fires,” sighed the
-<i>Sun</i> in the first week of its existence.</p>
-
-<p>The prayer was answered a little more than two
-years later, when about twenty blocks south of Wall
-Street, between Broad Street and the East River, were
-consumed. The fire started late in the evening of
-Wednesday, December 16, and all that the <i>Sun</i> printed
-about it the next morning was one triple-leaded paragraph:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>POSTSCRIPT—HALF PAST 1 O’CLOCK—A TREMENDOUS
-CONFLAGRATION is now raging in the
-lower part of the city. The Merchants’ Exchange is in
-flames. Nearly all the blocks in the triangle bounded
-by William and Wall Streets and the East River are
-consumed! Several hundred buildings are already
-down, and the firemen have given out. God only knows
-when the fire will be arrested.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>On Friday morning the <i>Sun</i> had two and a half columns
-about the fire, and gave an approximately correct
-estimate that seven hundred buildings had been burned,
-at a loss of twenty million dollars. The calamity provided
-an opportunity for the fine writing then indulged
-in, and the fire reporter did not overlook it; nor did he
-forget Moscow. Here are typical extracts:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">106</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Where but thirty hours since was the rich and prosperous
-theater of a great and productive commerce,
-where enterprise and wealth energized with bold and
-commanding efforts, now sits despondency in sackcloth
-and a wide and dreary waste of desolation reigns.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed as if God were running in his anger and
-sweeping away with the besom of his wrath the proudest
-monuments of man. Destruction traveled and triumphed
-on every breeze, and billows of fire rolled over
-and buried in their burning bosoms the hopes and fortunes
-of thousands. Like the devouring elements when
-it fed on Moscow’s palaces and towers, it was literally
-a “sea of fire,” and the terrors of that night of wo and
-ruin rolling years will not be able to efface.</p>
-
-<p>The merchants of the First Ward, like Marius in the
-ruins of Carthage, sit with melancholy moans, gazing
-at the graves of their fortunes, and the mournful mementoes
-of the dreadful devastation that reigns.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>On the afternoon of the following day the <i>Sun</i> got out
-an extra edition of thirty thousand copies, its normal
-morning issue of twenty-three thousand being too small
-to satisfy the popular demand. The presses ran without
-stopping for nearly twenty-four hours.</p>
-
-<p>On Monday, the 21st, the <i>Sun</i> had the enterprise to
-print a map of the burned district. Copies of the special
-fire editions went all over the world. At least one of
-them ran up against poetic justice. When it reached
-Canton, China, six months after the fire, the English
-newspaper there classed the story of the conflagration
-with Locke’s “Astronomical Discoveries,” and begged
-its readers not to be alarmed by the new hoax.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> had grown more and more prosperous. In
-the latter part of 1835 its four pages, each eleven and
-one-half by eighteen inches, were so taken up with advertising
-that it was not unusual to find reading-matter
-in only five of the twenty columns. Some days the publisher
-would apologize for leaving out advertisements,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">107</span>
-on other days, for having so little room for news. He
-promised relief, and it came on January 4, 1836, when
-the paper was enlarged. It remained a four-page <i>Sun</i>,
-but the pages were increased in size to fourteen by
-twenty inches. In announcing the enlargement, the
-third in a year, the <i>Sun</i> remarked:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>We are now enabled to print considerably more than
-twenty-two thousand copies, on both sides, in less than
-eight hours. No establishment in this country has such
-facilities, and no daily newspaper in the world enjoys
-so extensive a circulation.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the first enlarged edition Mr. Day made the boast
-that the <i>Sun</i> now had a circulation more than double
-that of all the sixpenny respectables combined. He
-had a word, too, about the penny papers that had sprung
-up in the <i>Sun’s</i> wake:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>One after another they dropped and fell in quick succession
-as they had sprung up; and all, with but one
-exception worth regarding, have gone to the “receptacle
-of things lost upon earth.” Many of these departed
-ephemerals have struggled hard to keep within their
-nostrils the breath of life; and it is a singular fact that
-with scarcely an exception they have employed, as a
-means of bringing a knowledge of their being before the
-public, the most unlimited and reckless abuse of ourselves,
-the impeachment of our character, public and
-private; the implications, moral and political; in short,
-calumny in all its forms.</p>
-
-<p>As to the last survivor of them worth note, which remains,
-we have only to say, the little world we opened
-has proved large enough for us both.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The exception to the general rule of early mortality
-was of course the <i>Herald</i>. In spite of this broad attitude
-toward his only successful competitor, Day could<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">108</span>
-not keep from swapping verbal shots with Bennett. The
-<i>Sun</i> said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Bennett, whose only chance of dying an upright man
-will be that of hanging perpendicularly upon a rope,
-falsely charges the proprietor of this paper with being
-an infidel, the natural effect of which calumny will be
-that every reader will believe him to be a good Christian.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Day had a dislike for Colonel Webb, of the <i>Courier
-and Enquirer</i>, almost as great as his enmity toward Bennett;
-so when Webb assaulted Bennett on January 19,
-1836, it was rather a hard story to write. This is the
-<i>Sun’s</i> account of the fray:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Low as he had fallen, both in the public estimation
-and his own, we were astonished to learn last evening
-that Colonel Webb had stooped so far beneath anything
-of which we had ever conceived it possible for him to be
-guilty, as publicly, and before the eyes of hundreds who
-knew him, to descend to a public personal chastisement
-of that villainous libel on humanity of all kinds, the
-notorious vagabond Bennett. But so it is.</p>
-
-<p>As the story is told to us by an eye-witness, the
-colonel met the brawling coward in Wall Street, took
-him by the throat, and with a cowhide striped the
-human parody from head to foot. For the space of
-nearly twenty minutes, as we are told, did the right
-arm of the colonel ply his weapon with unremitted activity,
-at which time the bystanders, who evidently enjoyed
-the scene mightily, interceded in behalf of the
-suffering, supplicating wretch, and Webb suffered him
-to run.</p>
-
-<p>Had it been a dog, or any other decent animal, or had
-the colonel himself with a pair of good long tongs removed
-a polecat from his office, we know not that we
-would have been so much surprised; but that he could,
-by any possibility, have so far descended from himself as
-to come in public contact with the veriest reptile that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">109</span>
-ever defiled the paths of decency, we could not have
-believed.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Webb’s quarrel with Bennett grew out of the <i>Herald’s</i>
-financial articles. Bennett was the first newspaperman
-to see the news value of Wall Street. When he was
-a writer on the <i>Courier and Enquirer</i>, and one of
-Webb’s most useful men, he made a study of stocks,
-not as a speculator, but as an investigator. He had a
-taste for money matters. In 1824, five years after his
-arrival in America from the land of his birth, Scotland,
-he tried to establish a commercial school in New York
-and to lecture on political economy. He could not
-make a go of it, and so returned to newspaper work as
-reporter, paragrapher, and poet.</p>
-
-<p>In 1828 he became Washington correspondent of the
-<i>Enquirer</i>, and it was at his suggestion that Webb, in
-1829, bought that paper and consolidated it with his
-own <i>Courier</i>. Bennett was a Tammany Society man,
-therefore a Jacksonian. He left Webb because of
-Webb’s support of Nicholas Biddle, and started a Jackson
-organ, the <i>Pennsylvanian</i>, in Philadelphia. This
-was a failure.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile Bennett had seen the <i>Sun</i> rise, and he felt
-that there must be room for another penny paper in
-New York. With his knowledge of stocks he believed
-that he could make Wall Street news a telling feature.
-In his second issue of the <i>Herald</i>, May 11, 1835, he
-printed the first money-market report, and three days
-later he ran a table of sales on the Stock Exchange.
-At this time, and for three years afterward, Bennett
-visited Wall Street daily and wrote his own reports.</p>
-
-<p>His flings at the United States Bank, of which Webb’s
-friend Biddle was president, and his stories of alleged
-stock speculations by the colonel himself, were the cause<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">110</span>
-of Webb’s animosity toward his former associate. Bennett
-took Webb’s assault calmly, and even wrote it up
-in the <i>Herald</i>, suggesting at the end that Webb’s torn
-overcoat had suffered more damage than anything else.</p>
-
-<p>Day’s quarrel with Bennett, which never reached the
-physical stage, was the natural outcome of an intense
-rivalry among the most successful penny papers of that
-period—the <i>Sun</i>, the <i>Herald</i>, and the <i>Transcript</i>.
-Against the sixpenny respectables these three were one
-for all and all for one, but against one another they
-were as venomous as a young newspaper of that day felt
-that it had to be to show that it was alive.</p>
-
-<p>Day’s antagonism toward Webb was sporadic. Most
-of the time the young owner of the <i>Sun</i> treated the fiery
-editor of the <i>Courier and Enquirer</i> as flippantly as he
-could, knowing that Webb liked to be taken seriously.
-Day’s constant <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">bête noire</i> was the commercial and foreign
-editor of Webb’s paper, Mr. Hoskin, an Englishman.</p>
-
-<p>On January 21, 1836, the <i>Sun</i> charged that Webb and
-Hoskin had rigged a “diabolical plot” against it. The
-sixpenny papers had formed a combination for the purpose
-of sharing the expense of running horse-expresses
-from Philadelphia to New York, bringing the Washington
-news more quickly than the penny papers could
-get it by mail. The <i>Sun</i> and the <i>Transcript</i> then formed
-a combination of their own, and in this way saved themselves
-from being beaten on Jackson’s message, sent to
-Congress in December, 1835.</p>
-
-<p>In January, 1836, Jackson sent a special message to
-Congress. It was delivered on Monday, the 18th, and
-on Wednesday, the 20th, the <i>Sun</i> published a column
-summary of it. Webb made the charge that his messenger
-from Washington had been lured into Day’s
-offices, and that the <i>Sun</i> got its story by opening the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">111</span>
-package containing the message intended for the
-<i>Courier and Enquirer.</i> The <i>Sun</i> replied that it received
-the message legitimately, and that the whole
-thing was a scheme to discredit Mr. Day and his bookkeeper,
-Moses Y. Beach:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The insinuation of Webb that we violated the sanctity
-of a seal we hurl back in proud defiance to his own
-brow.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Webb went to the police and to the grand jury, and
-for a few days it looked as if the hostile editors might
-reach for something of larger calibre than pens. Thus
-the <i>Sun</i> of January 22:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>We were informed yesterday at the police office, and
-subsequently by a gentleman from Wall Street, that
-Webb, of the <i>Courier and Enquirer</i>, had openly threatened
-to make a personal assault upon us. It was lucky
-for him that we did not hear this threat; but we can
-now only say that if such, or anything similar to it, be
-his intention, he will find each of the three editors of
-the <i>Sun</i> always provided with a brace of “mahogany
-stock” pistols, to accommodate him in any way he likes,
-or may not like.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The specification of “mahogany stock” referred to
-Colonel Webb’s own supposed predilection for pistols
-of that description. Mr. Day and his aids may have
-carried these handsome weapons, but it is not on record
-that they made use of them, or that they had occasion
-to do so. Persons gunning for editors seemed to neglect
-Mr. Day in favour of Mr. Bennett.</p>
-
-<p>No sooner was this fierce clash with Webb over than
-the <i>Sun</i> found itself bombarded from many sides in the
-war over Maria Monk. This woman’s “Awful Disclosures”
-had just been published in book form by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">112</span>
-Howe &amp; Bates, of 68 Chatham Street, New York. They
-purported to be “a narrative of her sufferings during a
-residence of five years as a novice and two years as a
-black nun in the Hôtel Dieu Nunnery at Montreal.” On
-January 18, 1836, the <i>Sun</i> began to publish these shocking
-stories, in somewhat condensed and expurgated
-form. It did not vouch for their truth, but declared that
-it printed them from an “imperative sense of duty.”
-“We have no better means than are possessed by any
-reader,” it cautiously added, “to decide upon their truth
-or falsehood.”</p>
-
-<p>The “Disclosures” ran in the <i>Sun</i> for ten days, during
-which time about one-half of the book was printed.
-Maria Monk herself was in New York, and so cleverly
-had she devised the imposture that she was received in
-good society as a martyr. Such was the public interest
-that it was estimated by Cardinal Manning, in 1851,
-that between two hundred and two hundred and fifty
-thousand copies of the volume were sold in America and
-England. The Know-Nothing Party used it for political
-capital, and anti-Catholic riots in several cities were the
-result of its publication.</p>
-
-<p>Its partial appearance in the <i>Sun</i>, while it may have
-helped the circulation of the book, undoubtedly hastened
-the exposure of the fraud. The editor of the <i>Commercial
-Advertiser</i>, William Leete Stone, liked nothing better
-than to show up impostors. He had already written
-a life of Matthias the Prophet, and he decided to get at
-the truth of Maria Monk’s revolting story.</p>
-
-<p>Stone was at this time forty-four years old. He had
-been editor of the Herkimer <i>American</i>, with Thurlow
-Weed as his journeyman; of the <i>Northern Whig</i>, of Hudson,
-New York; of the Albany <i>Daily Advertiser</i>, and of
-the Hartford <i>Mirror</i>. In 1821 he came to New York
-and succeeded Zachariah Lewis as editor of the <i>Commercial<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">113</span>
-Advertiser</i>. As a Mason he had a controversy
-with John Quincy Adams, who was prominent in the
-anti-Masonic movement.</p>
-
-<p>Stone was prominent politically. In 1825 he and
-Thurlow Weed accompanied Lafayette in his tour of
-the United States. In 1841 President William Henry
-Harrison appointed him minister to The Hague, but
-when Harrison died he was recalled by President Tyler.
-He was also the first superintendent of the New York
-public schools—an office which he held at the time of
-his death, in 1844.</p>
-
-<p>Stone went to Montreal, visited the Hôtel Dieu, and
-minutely compared the details set down by the Monk
-woman in regard to the inmates of the nunnery and
-the plan of the building. The result of his investigation
-was to establish the fact that the “Awful Disclosures”
-were fiction, and he exposed the impostor not only in
-his newspaper, but in his book, “Maria Monk and the
-Nunnery of the Hôtel Dieu.” The adherents of the
-woman abused Stone roundly for this, and the general
-belief in her fake was not entirely dissipated for years;
-not even after her own evil history was told, and after
-the Protestant residents of Montreal had held a mass-meeting
-to denounce her. Maria Monk died in the city
-prison in New York fourteen years after she had created
-the most unpleasant scandal of the time.</p>
-
-<p>News matters of a genuine kind diverted the types
-from Maria Monk. There was the celebrated murder of
-Helen Jewett, a case in which Mr. Bennett played detective
-with some success, and the Alamo massacre.
-Crockett, Bowie, and the rest of that band of heroes
-met their death on March 6, 1836, but the details did
-not reach New York for more than a month; it was
-April 12 when the <i>Sun</i> gave a column to them.</p>
-
-<p>Texas and the Seminole War kept the news columns<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">114</span>
-full until May 10, when Colonel Webb again pounced
-upon James Gordon Bennett. Said the <i>Sun</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Upon calculating the number of public floggings
-which that miserable scribbler, Bennett, has received,
-we have pretty accurately ascertained that there is not
-a square inch of his body which has not been lacerated
-somewhere about fifteen times. In fact, he has become
-a common flogging property; and Webb has announced
-his intention to cowskin him every Monday morning until
-the Fourth of July, when he will offer him a holiday.
-We understand that Webb has offered to remit the flogging
-upon the condition that he will allow him to shoot
-him; but Bennett says:</p>
-
-<p>“No; skin for skin, behold, all that a man hath will
-he give for his life!”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> beat the town on a great piece of news that
-spring. “Triumphant News from Texas! Santa Anna
-Captured!” the head-lines ran.</p>
-
-<p>This appeared on May 18, four weeks after Sam
-Houston had taken the Mexican president; but it was
-the first intimation New York had had of the victory at
-San Jacinto.</p>
-
-<p>During the investigation of the murder of Helen
-Jewett and the trial of Richard P. Robinson, the suspect,
-the <i>Sun</i> attacked Bennett for the manner in which
-the <i>Herald</i> handled the case. Bennett saw a good yellow
-story in the murder, for the house in which the murdered
-girl had lived could not be said to be questionable;
-there was no doubt about its character. Bennett’s interviewing
-of the victim’s associates did not please the
-<i>Sun</i>, which pictured the unfortunate women “mobbed
-by several hundred vagabonds of all sizes and ages—amongst
-whom the long, lank figure of the notorious
-Bennett was most conspicuous.”</p>
-
-<p>When it was not Bennett, it was Colonel Webb or one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">115</span>
-of his men. The <i>Sun</i> went savagely after the proprietor
-of the <i>Courier and Enquirer</i> because he led the hissing
-at the Park Theatre against Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wood,
-the English opera-singers. The offence of the Woods
-lay in giving a performance on an evening when a benefit
-was announced for Mrs. Conduit, another popular
-vocalist. The town was divided upon the row, but as
-the Woods and Mrs. Conduit were all English-born, it
-was not a racial feud like the Macready-Forrest affair.
-The <i>Sun</i> rebuked Colonel Webb particularly because,
-after booing at the Woods, he had refused Mr. Wood’s
-offer to have it out over pistols and coffee.</p>
-
-<p>Wood was not a lily-finger. He had been plain Joe
-Wood, the pugilist, before he married the former Lady
-Lennox and embraced tenor song in a serious way. Society
-rather took the part of the Woods, for after the
-Park Theatre row a dinner in their compliment was
-arranged by Henry Ogden, Robert C. Wetmore, Duncan
-C. Pell, John P. Hone, Carroll Livingston, and
-other leading New Yorkers.</p>
-
-<p>The fearlessness of the <i>Sun</i> did not stop with saucing
-its contemporaries. When Robinson was acquitted of
-the Jewett murder, after a trial which the <i>Sun</i> reported
-to the extent of nearly a page a day, the <i>Sun</i> editorially
-declared:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Our opinion, calmly and dispassionately formed from
-the evidence, is that Richard P. Robinson is guilty of
-the wilful and peculiarly atrocious murder of Helen
-Jewett.... Any good-looking young man, possessing
-or being able to raise among his friends the sum of
-fifteen hundred dollars to retain Messrs. Maxwell,
-Price, and Hoffman for his counsel, might murder any
-person he chose with perfect impunity.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Robinson’s acquittal was credited largely to Ogden
-Hoffman, whose summing up the <i>Sun</i> described as “the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">116</span>
-most magnificent production of mind, eloquence, and
-rhetorical talent that ever resounded in a hall of justice.”
-This was the Ogden Hoffman of whom Decatur
-said, when Hoffman left the navy in 1816, that he regretted
-that the young man should have exchanged “an
-honourable profession for that of a lawyer.” Hoffman
-and his partner Maxwell, who shared in this tremendous
-fee of fifteen hundred dollars, had been district
-attorneys of New York before the time of the Jewett
-murder, and the <i>Sun</i> inquired what would have been
-Robinson’s fate if Hoffman, and not Phenix, had been
-the prosecutor.</p>
-
-<p>On August 20, 1836, the <i>Sun</i> announced that its circulation
-averaged twenty-seven thousand copies daily,
-or fifty-six hundred more than the combined sale of the
-eleven six-cent papers. Of the penny papers the Sun
-credited the <i>Herald</i> with thirty-two hundred and the
-<i>Transcript</i> with ten thousand, although both these
-rivals claimed at least twice as much. Columns were
-filled with the controversy which followed upon the
-publication of these figures. The <i>Sun</i> departed from a
-scholarly argument with the <i>Transcript</i> over the pronunciation
-of “elegiac,” and denounced it as a “nestle-tripe,”
-whatever that was.</p>
-
-<p>There was a little room left for the news. Aaron
-Burr’s death got a stick; Marcy’s nomination for Governor
-of New York, an inch; Audubon’s arrival in
-America, four lines. News that looks big now may not
-have seemed so imposing then, as this <i>Sun</i> paragraph of
-September 22, 1836, would show:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Two more States are already spoken of for addition
-to the Union, under the names of Iowa and Wisconsin.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Richard Adams Locke left the <i>Sun</i> in the fall of
-1836, and on October 6, in company with Joseph Price,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">117</span>
-started the <i>New Era</i>, a penny paper for which the <i>Sun</i>
-wished success. In less than a month, however, Locke
-and his former employer were quarrelling about the price
-of meals at the Astor House. That famous hotel was
-opened in May, 1836, with all New York marvelling at
-the wonders of its walnut furniture, so much nicer than
-the conventional mahogany! Before it was built, it
-was referred to as the Park Hotel. When it opened it
-was called Astor’s Hotel, but in a few months it came
-to be known by the name which stuck to it until it was
-abandoned in 1913.</p>
-
-<p>But to return to our meal. Said Mr. Locke’s <cite>New
-Era</cite>:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>A paragraph is going the rounds of the papers abusing
-the Astor House. Nothing can be more groundless.
-Where the arrangements are complete, the charges, of
-course, must be corresponding. We suppose the report
-has been set afloat by some person who was kicked out
-for not paying his bill.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>To this horrid insinuation Day replied:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The report they speak of was set afloat by ourselves,
-after paying $1.25 for a breakfast for a lady and her
-infant a year and a half old, served just one hour and
-seven minutes after it was ordered, with coffee black
-as ink and without milk, and that, too, in a room so
-uncleanly as to be rather offensive.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Locke wanted to make the <i>New Era</i> another <i>Sun</i>,
-but he failed. His second hoax, “The Lost Manuscript
-of Mungo Park,” which purported to tell hitherto unrelated
-adventures of the Scottish explorer, fell down.
-The public knew that the <i>New Era</i> was edited by the
-author of the moon story. When the <i>New Era</i> died,
-Locke went to the Brooklyn <i>Eagle</i>, just founded, and he
-succeeded Henry C. Murphy, the proprietor and first<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">118</span>
-editor, when that famous lawyer and writer was running
-for mayor of Brooklyn. Locke afterward was a
-custom-house employee. He died on Staten Island in
-1871.</p>
-
-<p>Squabbling with his former friend Locke over hotel
-service was no such sport for Day as tilting at the
-owner of the <i>Herald</i>. The <i>Sun</i> attacked Bennett in the
-fall of 1836 for his attitude toward the Hamblin benefit.
-Thomas Sowerby Hamblin was made bankrupt by the
-Bowery Theatre fire on September 22, for the great fires
-of the previous December had ruined practically all the
-fire-insurance companies of New York, and there was
-not a policy on the theatre which this English actor-manager,
-with James H. Hackett, had made the leading
-playhouse of America. Hamblin did not like Bennett’s
-articles and the <i>Sun</i> thus noted the result of them:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Alas, poor Bennett! He seems destined to be flogged
-into immortal fame, and become the common buffet-block
-of all mankind. Mr. Hamblin paid him a complimentary
-visit last evening [November 17] in his editorial
-closet and lathered him all into lumps and
-blotches, although the living lie was surrounded by his
-minions and had a brace of loaded pistols lying on his
-desk when the outraged visitor first laid hands on him.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>When the <i>Sun’s</i> advertising business had increased
-until its income from that source was more than two
-hundred dollars a day, it bought two new presses of the
-Napier type from Robert Hoe, at a cost of seven thousand
-dollars. These enabled Mr. Day to run off thirty-two
-hundred papers an hour on each press. On the 2nd
-of January, 1837, the size of the <i>Sun</i> was slightly increased,
-about an inch being added to the length and
-width of each of its four pages.</p>
-
-<p>In February, 1837, the price of flour rose from the
-normal of about $5.50 a barrel to double that amount.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">119</span>
-The <i>Sun</i> declared that the increase was not natural,
-but rather the result of a combination—a suspicion
-which seems to have been shared by a large number of
-citizens. The bread riots of February 13 and later
-were the result of an agitation for lower prices.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Journal of Commerce</i> denounced the <i>Sun</i> as an
-inciter of the riots, and suggested that the grand jury
-should direct its attention toward Mr. Day. The <i>Sun</i>
-not only refused to recede from its stand, but suggested
-that the foreman of the grand jury, the famous Philip
-Hone, had himself incited a riot—the riot against the
-Abolitionists, July 11, 1834—which had a less worthy
-purpose than the <i>Sun’s</i> stand on the matter of flour
-prices. The <i>Sun</i> was virtuously indignant, even more
-than it had been a short time before, when the Transcript
-charged the <i>Sun’s</i> circulation man, Mr. Young,
-with biting two of the <i>Transcript’s</i> carriers!</p>
-
-<p>The beginning of regular transatlantic steamship
-service did not find in the <i>Sun</i> a completely joyous welcome—thanks,
-perhaps, to the temperament of Lieutenant
-Hosken, R.N. He was an officer of the Great
-Western, a side-wheeler of no less than thirteen hundred
-and forty tons, with paddles twenty-eight feet in diameter.
-This new ship, built at Bristol, and a marvel of
-its time, reached New York, April 23, 1838, after a passage
-of only sixteen days! The Sirius, another new
-vessel, got in a few hours ahead of the Great Western,
-after a voyage of eighteen days. The <i>Sun</i> said of this
-double event:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Of the conduct of the officers in command of the
-Great Western, we regret that we are compelled by reports
-to place it in no very favorable contrast with the
-gentlemanly demeanor of the officers of the Sirius.
-Every attention has been paid her, citizens have turned
-out to welcome her arrival, she was saluted by the battery<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">120</span>
-on Ellis’s Island, <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">et cetera, et cetera</i>, and thousands
-of other demonstrations of courtesy were made, which
-proved only throwing pearls before swine. A news boat
-was ordered to keep off or be run down, and the hails
-of that boat and others were answered through a speaking-trumpet
-in a manner which would have done toward
-the savage of Nootka Sound, but is not exactly the style
-in which to meet the courtesies of members of a community
-upon which the line of packets depends in a
-large part for success. One would have thought that all
-the impudence of Europe was put on board a vessel
-built of large tonnage expressly for its embarkation.
-By the time our corporation officers have run the suspender-buttons
-off their breeches in chase of Lieutenant
-Hosken, R. N., they will discover that they have been
-fools for their pains.</p>
-
-<p>Reverse this account entirely, and it will apply to the
-Sirius—testimony which we are happy to make.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>So the <i>Sun</i> was not obsequiously grateful for the
-arrival of a ship whose speed enabled it to announce
-on April 24 that Queen Victoria had issued, on the 6th,
-the proclamation of the details of her coronation at
-Westminster on June 26, and that O’Connell was taking
-steps to remove the civil disabilities from the Jews.</p>
-
-<p>All this time the <i>Sun</i> was not neglecting the minor
-local happenings about which its patrons liked to read.
-The police-courts, the theatres, and the little scandals
-had their column or two.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_121" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">121</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">NEW YORK LIFE IN THE THIRTIES</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>A Sprightly City Which Daily Bought Thirty Thousand
-Copies of “The Sun.”—The Rush to Start Penny Papers.—Day
-Sells “The Sun” for Forty Thousand Dollars.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">No</span> dull city, that New York of Ben Day’s time!
-Almost a dozen theatres of the first class were
-running. The Bowery, the first playhouse in America
-to have a stage lighted with gas, had already been twice
-burned and rebuilt. The Park, which saw the American
-début of Macready, Edwin Forrest, and James H.
-Hackett, was offering such actors as Charles Kean,
-Charles and Fanny Kemble, Charles Mathews, Sol
-Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Wood, and Master Joseph
-Burke, the Irish Roscius. Forrest, then talked of as a
-candidate for Congress, was the favourite of New York.
-On his appearance, said a <i>Sun</i> review of his acting in
-“King Lear,” the audience uttered “the roar of seven
-thunders.”</p>
-
-<p>There was vaudeville to be enjoyed at Niblo’s Garden,
-a circus at Vauxhall Garden. Drama held the
-boards at the Olympic and the National. The Franklin
-was one of the new theatres. It was in Chatham Street,
-between James and Oliver, and it was there that Barney
-Williams, the <i>Sun’s</i> pioneer newsboy, made his first
-stage appearance, as a jig-dancer, when he was about
-fifteen years old.</p>
-
-<p>Charlotte Cushman, Hackett, Forrest, and Sol Smith<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">122</span>
-were the leading American actors of that day, although
-Junius Brutus Booth had achieved some prominence.
-Edwin Booth, Joseph Jefferson, William J. Florence,
-and Maggie Mitchell were children, all a little older
-than the <i>Sun</i>. John T. Raymond was born at Buffalo
-in 1836, John E. McCullough in Ireland the next
-year, and Lawrence Barrett at Paterson, New Jersey,
-in 1838.</p>
-
-<p>The hotels were temples of plenty. English travellers,
-going to the new Astor, the American, Niblo’s, or
-the New York House, recoiled in horror at the appetite
-of the Yankee. At breakfast they saw the untutored
-American break two or three boiled eggs into a tumbler
-and eat them therefrom—and then they wrote letters
-to the London <i>Times</i> about it. At dinner, served in the
-hotels about noon—three o’clock was the fashionable
-hour in private houses—the hungry New Yorker, including
-Mr. Day and his brother-in-law, Mr. Beach,
-would sit down to roast beef, venison, prairie-chicken,
-and a half-dozen vegetables. Bottles of brandy stood
-in the centre of the table for him who would; surely not
-for Mr. Day, who printed daily pieces about the effects
-of strong drink!</p>
-
-<p>There was gambling on Park Row—Chatham Row,
-it was called then—games in the Elysian Fields of
-Hoboken on Sundays, and duels there on week-days;
-picnickings in the woods about where the Ritz-Carlton
-stands to-day; horse-racing on the Boulevard, now
-upper Broadway, and rowing races on the Harlem.
-Those who liked thoroughbred racing went to the Union
-Course on Long Island, or to Saratoga.</p>
-
-<p>Club life was young. Cooper, Halleck, Bryant, and
-other literary moguls had started the Bread and Cheese
-Club in 1824. The Hone Club, named for Mayor Hone,
-sprang up in 1836, and gave dinners for Daniel Webster,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">123</span>
-William H. Seward, and other great Whigs. In
-that same year the Union Club was founded—the oldest
-New York club that is still in existence.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> was not as popular in the clubs as it is
-to-day. A clubman of 1837 caught reading any newspaper
-except the <i>Courier and Enquirer</i>, the <i>Evening
-Post</i>, or one of their like, would have been frowned upon
-by his colleagues.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> found plenty to print.</p>
-
-<p>“We write,” it boasted, “more original editorial
-matter than any other paper in the city, great or small.”</p>
-
-<p>It poked with its paragraphs at the shinplaster, that
-small form of currency issued by private bankers. It
-made fun of phrenology, then one of the fads. It jeered
-at animal magnetism, another craze. It had the Papineau
-rebellion, the Patriot War, Indian uprisings, and
-the belated news from Europe. It printed extracts from
-the “Pickwick Papers.” Dickens was all the rage.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun’s</i> comment on “Nicholas Nickleby,” when
-Dickens’s fourth book reached New York in 1838, was
-that it was as well written as “Oliver Twist,” and “not
-so gloomy.” Yet the grimness of the earlier novel had
-a fascination for the youth of that day. It was this
-book, read by candle-light after the store was closed,
-that so weakened the eyes of Charles A. Dana—still
-clerking in Buffalo—that he believed he would have to
-become a farmer.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> did not mention, in its report of the Patriot
-War, that Dana was a member of the Home Guard in
-Buffalo, and had ideas of enlisting as a regular soldier.
-The <i>Sun</i> did not know of the youth’s existence; nor is
-it likely that he read Mr. Day’s paper.</p>
-
-<p>A piece of “newspaper news” was printed in the
-<i>Sun</i> of June 1, 1837—a description of the first so-called
-endless paper roll in operation. Day still printed on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">124</span>
-small, flat sheets, but evidently he was impressed with
-the novelty. The touch about the rag-mill, of course,
-was fiction:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>We have been shown a sheet of paper about a hundred
-feet in length and two feet wide, printed on both sides
-by a machine at one operation. This extraordinary invention
-enables a person to print off any length of paper
-required for any number of copies of a work or a public
-journal without a single stop, and without the assistance
-of any person except one to put in the rags at the
-extremity of the machine.</p>
-
-<p>This wonderful operation is effected by the placing
-of the types on stereotype plates on the surface of two
-cylinders, which are connected with the paper-making
-machinery. The paper, as it issues from the mill, enters
-in a properly moistened state between the rollers, which
-are evenly inked by an ingenious apparatus, and
-emerges in a printed form. The number of copies can
-be measured off by the yard or mile. The work which
-we have seen from this press is “Robinson Crusoe,” and
-consists of one hundred and sixty duodecimo pages.</p>
-
-<p>The Bible could be printed off and almost disseminated
-among the Indians in one continuous stream of
-living truth. The <i>Sun</i> would occupy a roll about seven
-feet in diameter, and our issue to Boston, Philadelphia,
-and other cities would be not far from a quarter of a
-mile long, each. The two cents postage on this would
-be but a trifle. The whole length of our paper would be
-about seventy-seven thousand feet, a papyrus which it
-must be confessed it would take Lord Brougham a
-longer time to unroll than the vitrified scrolls of Herculaneum
-and Pompeii.</p>
-
-<p>All that it is necessary for a man to do on going into
-a paper-mill is to take off his shirt, hand it to the devil
-who officiates at one extremity, and have it come out
-“Robinson Crusoe” at the other. We should like to
-exchange some of our old shirts in this way, as we cannot
-afford the expense, during these hard times, of getting
-them washed.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Thomas French, the inventor, is from Ithaca,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">125</span>
-and is now in this city. He has one roll about six inches
-in diameter which is six hundred feet long.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div id="ip_124" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 28em;">
- <img src="images/i_124a.jpg" width="1331" height="1706" alt="" />
- <div class="captionm"><p>(<i>From a Picture in the Possession of
-Mrs. Jennie Beach Gasper</i>)</p></div>
- <div class="captionl">
-
-<p>MOSES YALE BEACH, SECOND OWNER OF “THE SUN”</p></div></div>
-
-<p>No display advertising was printed in the <i>Sun</i> of
-those years, but there was a variety of “liners.” These
-were adorned with tiny cuts of ships, shoes, horses,
-cows, hats, dogs, clocks, and what not. For <span class="locked">example—</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Came to the premises of F. Reville, Gardener, on the
-16th inst., a COW, which has since calved. The owner
-is requested to call, prove property, and pay expenses.
-Bloomingdale, between fifth and sixth mile-stones.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>That is nearly five miles north of the City Hall, on
-the West Side—a region where now little grows except
-the rentals of palatial apartment-houses. Here are
-two other advertisements characteristic of the time:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>A CARD—TO BUTCHERS—Mr. Stamler, having
-retired to private life, would be glad to see his friends,
-the Butchers, at his house, No. 5 Rivington Street, this
-afternoon, between the hours of 2 and 5 <span class="allsmcap">P.M.</span>, to partake
-of a collation.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>SIX CENTS REWARD!—Run away from the subscriber,
-on the 30th of May, Charles Eldridge, an indented
-apprentice to the Segar-Making business, about
-16 years of age, 4 feet high, broken back. Had on, when
-he left, a round jacket and blue pantaloons. The above
-reward and no charges will be paid for his delivery to</p>
-
-<p class="p0 sigright">JOHN DIBBEN, No. 354 Bowery.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>On June 15, 1837, the name of Benjamin H. Day,
-which had appeared at the masthead of the <i>Sun</i> since its
-beginning, disappeared. In its place was the legend:
-“Published daily by the proprietor.” This gave rise to
-a variety of rumours, and about a week later, on June
-23, the <i>Sun</i> said editorially:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">126</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Several of our contemporaries are in a maze of wonder
-because we have taken our beautiful cognomen
-from the imprint of the <i>Sun</i>. Some of the loafers among
-them have even flattered themselves that our humble
-self in person had consequently disappeared. Not so,
-gentlemen—for though we may not be ambitious that
-our thirty thousand subscribers should daily pronounce
-our name while poring over advertisements on the first
-page, we nevertheless remain steadily at our post, and
-shall thus continue during the pleasure of a generous
-public, except, perchance, an absence of a few months
-on a trip to Europe, which we purpose to make this
-season.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to a certain report that we had lost
-twenty thousand dollars by shaving notes, we have
-nothing to say. Our private business transactions cannot
-in the least interest the public at large.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Day’s name never went back. The reason for its disappearance
-was a libel-suit brought by a lawyer named
-Andrew S. Garr. On May 3, 1837, the <i>Sun</i> printed a
-report of a case in the Court of Chancery, in which it
-was incidentally mentioned that Garr had once been
-indicted for conspiracy to defraud. The reporter neglected
-to add that Garr had been acquitted. At the end
-of the article was the quotation:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>When rogues get quarreling, the truth will out.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Garr sued Day for ten thousand dollars, and Day not
-only took his name from the top of the first column of
-the first page, but apparently made a wash sale of the
-newspaper.</p>
-
-<p>The case was tried in February, 1838, and on the
-16th of that month Garr got a verdict for three thousand
-dollars—“to be extracted,” as the <i>Sun</i> said next
-morning, “from the right-hand breeches-pocket of the
-defendant, who about a year since ceased replenishing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">127</span>
-that fountain of the ‘needful’ from the prolific source
-of the <i>Sun’s</i> rays by virtue of a total, unconditional,
-and unrevisionary sale of the same to its present proprietor.”</p>
-
-<p>The name of that “present proprietor” was not
-given; but on June 28, 1838, the following notice appeared
-at the top of the first page:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Communications intended for the <i>Sun</i> must be addressed
-to Moses Y. Beach, 156 Nassau Street, corner
-of Spruce.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Day was really out of the <i>Sun</i> then, after having been
-its master for five years lacking sixty-seven days, and
-the paper passed into the actual ownership of Beach,
-who had married Day’s sister, and who had acted as
-the bookkeeper of the <i>Sun</i> almost from its inception.
-There were those, including Edgar Allan Poe, who believed
-that Beach was the boss of the <i>Sun</i> even in the
-days of the moon hoax, but they were mistaken. The
-paper, as the <i>Sun</i> itself remarked on December 4, 1835,
-was “altogether ruled by Benjamin H. Day.”</p>
-
-<p>“I owned the whole concern,” said Mr. Day in 1883,
-“till I sold it to Beach. And the silliest thing I ever
-did in my life was to sell that paper!”</p>
-
-<p>And why did Day sell, for forty thousand dollars, a
-paper which had the largest circulation in the world—about
-thirty thousand copies? The answer is that it
-was not paying as well as it had paid.</p>
-
-<p>There were a couple of years when his profits had
-been as high as twenty thousand dollars. The net return
-for the six months ending October 1, 1836, as announced
-by the <i>Sun</i> on April 19, 1837, was $12,981.88;
-but at the time when Day sold out, the <i>Sun</i> was about
-breaking even. The advertising, due to general dulness
-in business—for which the bank failures and the big<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">128</span>
-fire were partly to blame—had fallen off. It was costing
-Day three hundred dollars a week more for operating
-expenses and materials than he got for the sales of
-newspapers, and this loss was barely made up by the
-advertising receipts. With what he had saved, and the
-forty thousand paid to him by Beach, he would have a
-comfortable fortune. He was only twenty-eight years
-old, and there might be other worlds to conquer.</p>
-
-<p>From nothing at all except his own industry and
-common sense Day had built up an enterprise which the
-<i>Sun</i> itself thus described a few days before the change
-of ownership:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Some idea of the business done in the little three-story
-building at the corner of Nassau and Spruce
-Streets occupied by the <i>Sun</i> for the publication of a
-penny paper may be formed from the fact that the
-annual outlay for material and wages exceeds ninety-three
-thousand dollars—very nearly two thousand a
-week, and more than three hundred a day for the six
-working days. On this outlay we circulate daily thirty
-thousand papers. Allowing the other nine morning
-papers an average of three thousand circulation—which
-may fall short in two or three cases, while it is a large
-estimate for all the rest—it will appear that the circulation
-of the <i>Sun</i> newspaper is daily more than of all
-the others united.</p>
-
-<p>That this is not mere gasconade, but susceptible of
-proof, we refer the curious to the paper-makers who
-furnish the stock for this immense circulation; to the
-type-founders who give us a new dress three times a
-year, and to the Messrs. Hoe &amp; Co., who built our two
-double-cylinder Napier presses, which throw off copies
-of the <i>Sun</i> at the rate of four thousand per hour. We
-invite newspaper publishers to visit our establishment
-when the presses are in operation, and we shall be happy
-to show them what would have astonished Dr. Faust,
-with all his intimacy with a certain <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">nil admirari</i>
-potentate.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">129</span></p>
-
-<p>As for the influence of the paper among the people,
-the <i>Sun</i> dealt in no vain exaggeration when it said of
-itself, a year before Day’s departure:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Since the <i>Sun</i> began to shine upon the citizens of
-New York there has been a very great and decided
-change in the condition of the laboring classes and the
-mechanics. Now every individual, from the rich aristocrat
-who lolls in his carriage to the humble laborer who
-wields a broom in the streets, reads the <i>Sun</i>; nor can
-even a boy be found in New York City or the neighboring
-country who will not know in the course of the day
-what is promulgated in the <i>Sun</i> in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>Already can we perceive a change in the mass of the
-people. They think, talk, and act in concert. They
-understand their own interest, and feel that they have
-numbers and strength to pursue it with success.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> newspaper has probably done more to benefit
-the community by enlightening the minds of the common
-people than all the other papers together.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Day found New York journalism a pot of cold, stale
-water, and left it a boiling caldron; not so much by
-what he wrote as by the way in which he made his
-success. There were better newspapermen than Day
-before and during his time, plenty of them. They had
-knowledge and experience, they knew style, but they
-did not know the people. In their imagination the
-“gentle reader” was a male between the ages of thirty-five
-and ninety, with a burning interest in politics, and
-a fancy that the universe revolved around either Andrew
-Jackson or Daniel Webster. Why write for any one
-who did not have fixed notions on the subject of the
-United States Bank or Abolition?</p>
-
-<p>To the mind of the sixpenny editor, the man who
-did not have six cents to spend was a negligible quantity.
-Nothing was worth printing unless it carried an
-appeal to the professional man or the merchant.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">130</span></p>
-
-<p>The <i>Courier and Enquirer</i>, under Colonel Webb,
-belched broadsides of old-fashioned Democratic doctrine,
-and Webb hired the best men he could find to load
-the guns. He had Bennett, Noah, James K. Paulding,
-and, later, Charles King and Henry J. Raymond. These
-were all good writers, most of them good newspapermen;
-but so far as the general public was concerned,
-Colonel Webb might as well have put them in a cage.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Journal of Commerce</i> was a great sixpenny, but
-it was not for the people to read. From 1828 until the
-Civil War its editor was Gerard Hallock, an enterprising
-journalist who ran expensive horse-expresses to
-Washington to get the proceedings of Congress, but
-would not admit that the public at large was more interested
-in a description of the murdered Helen Jewett’s
-gowns than in a new currency bill. The clipper-ships
-that lay off Sandy Hook to get the latest foreign news
-from the European vessels cost Hallock and Webb, who
-combined in this enterprise, twenty thousand dollars a
-year—probably more than they spent on all their local
-news.</p>
-
-<p>In the solemn sanctum of the <i>Evening Post</i>, William
-Cullen Bryant and William Leggett wrote scholarly
-verse and free-trade editorials. They were live men, but
-their newspaper steed was slow. Leggett could urge
-Bryant to give a beating to Stone, the editor of the <i>Commercial
-Advertiser</i>, and he himself fought a duel with
-Blake, the treasurer of the Park Theatre; but these
-great men had little steam when it came to making a
-popular newspaper. The great editors were of a cult.
-They revolved around one another, too far aloft for the
-common eye.</p>
-
-<p>Charles King was the most conservative of them all.
-He was a son of Rufus King, Senator from New York
-and minister to England, and he was editor of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">131</span>
-<i>American</i>, an evening sixpenny, from 1827 to 1845. He
-lacked nothing in scholarship, but his paper was miserably
-dull, and rarely circulated more than a thousand
-copies. He remained at his editorial desk for four years
-after the <i>American</i> was absorbed by the <i>Courier and
-Enquirer</i>, and then he became president of Columbia
-College, a place better suited to him.</p>
-
-<p>Such were the men who ruled the staid, prosy, and
-expensive newspapers of New York when Day and his
-penny <i>Sun</i> popped up. Most of them are better known
-to fame than Day is, but not one of them did anything
-comparable to the young printer’s achievement in making
-a popular, low-priced daily newspaper—and not only
-making it, but making it stick. For Day started something
-that went rolling on, increasing in size and
-weight until it controlled the thought of the continent.
-Day was the Columbus, the <i>Sun</i> was the egg. Anybody
-could do the trick—after Day showed how simple it was.</p>
-
-<p>Bennett and his <i>Herald</i> were the first to profit by
-the example of the young Yankee printer. It should
-have been easy for Bennett, yet he had already failed
-at the same undertaking. He was at work in the newspaper
-field of New York as early as 1824, nine years
-before Day started the <i>Sun</i>. He failed as proprietor
-of the Sunday <i>Courier</i> (1825), and he failed again with
-the Philadelphia <i>Pennsylvanian</i>. He had a wealth of
-experience as assistant to Webb and as the Washington
-correspondent of the <i>Enquirer</i>.</p>
-
-<p>It was no doubt due to the success of the <i>Sun</i> that
-Bennett, after two failures, established the <i>Herald</i>. He
-saw the human note that Ben Day had struck, and he
-knew, as a comparatively old newspaperman—he was
-forty when he started the <i>Herald</i>—what mistakes Day
-was making in the neglect of certain news fields, such
-as Wall Street. But the value of the penny paper Day<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">132</span>
-had already proved, and Day had established, ahead of
-everybody else, the newsboy system, by which the man
-in the street could get a paper whenever he liked without
-making a yearly investment.</p>
-
-<p>Bennett may have written the constitution of popular
-journalism, but it was Day who wrote its declaration
-of independence. If it had not been for the untrained
-Day, fifteen years younger than Bennett, it is possible
-that there would have been no <i>Herald</i> to span nearly a
-century under the ownership of father and son; and the
-two James Gordon Bennetts not only owned but absolutely
-<em>were</em> the <i>Herald</i> from May 10, 1835, when the
-father started the paper, until May 14, 1918, when the
-son died.</p>
-
-<p>It had been said of Bennett that he discovered that
-“a paper universally denounced will be read.” Day
-learned that much a year before the <i>Herald</i> was started.
-Day was sensational, and he seemed to court the written
-assaults of the sixpenny editors. Bennett also sought
-abuse, and did not care when it brought physical pain
-with it. He was still more sensational than Day. If
-there was nothing else, his own personal affairs were
-made the public’s property. He was about to marry,
-so the <i>Herald</i> printed this:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>TO THE READERS OF THE HERALD—Declaration
-of Love—Caught at Last—Going to be Married—New
-Movement in Civilization.</p>
-
-<p>My ardent desire has been through life to reach the
-highest order of human excellence by the shortest possible
-cut. Association, night and day, in sickness and
-in health, in war and in peace, with a woman of the
-highest order of excellence must produce some curious
-results in my heart and feelings, and these results the
-future will develop in due time in the columns of the
-<i>Herald</i>. Meantime I return my heartfelt thanks for
-the enthusiastic patronage of the public, both of Europe<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">133</span>
-and of America. The holy estate of wedlock will only
-increase my desire to be still more useful. God Almighty
-bless you all—JAMES GORDON BENNETT.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>James Parton described Bennett as “a man of French
-intellect and Scotch habits.” Bennett was not of Scottish
-blood, his parents being of French descent, but
-his youth in Scotland, where he was born, probably
-impregnated him with the thrift of his environment.
-He established the no-credit system in the <i>Herald</i> business
-office. Probably he had observed that Colonel
-Webb had lost a fortune in unpaid subscriptions and
-advertisements.</p>
-
-<p>Bennett was a good business man and an energetic
-editor. He used all the ideas that Day had proved
-profitable, and many of his own. Perhaps the most
-valuable thing he learned from Day was that it was
-unwise to be a slave to a political party. But his own
-experience with the luckless <i>Pennsylvanian</i>, a Jackson
-organ, may have convinced him of the futility of the
-strictly partisan papers, which neglected the news for
-the sake of the office-holders.</p>
-
-<p>Day’s success with the <i>Sun</i> was responsible for the
-birth, not only of the <i>Herald</i>, but of a host of American
-penny papers, which were established at the rate of a
-dozen a year. Of the New York imitators the <i>Jeffersonian</i>,
-published by Childs &amp; Devoe, and the <i>Man</i>,
-owned by George H. Evans, an Englishman who was the
-Henry George of his day, were not long for this world.
-The <i>Transcript</i>, started in 1834, flashed up for a time
-as a dangerous rival of the <i>Sun</i>. Three compositors,
-William J. Stanley, Willoughby Lynde, and Billings
-Hayward, owned it. Its editor was Asa Greene, erstwhile
-physician and bookseller and always humorist.
-He wrote “The Adventures of Dr. Dodimus Duckworth,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">134</span>
-“The Perils of Pearl Street,” and “The Travels
-of Ex-Barber Fribbleton in America”—this last a
-travesty on the books of travel turned out by Englishmen
-who visited the States.</p>
-
-<p>William H. Attree, a former compositor, wrote the
-<i>Transcript’s</i> lively police-court stories, the <i>Sun’s</i> rival
-having learned how popular was crime. The <i>Transcript</i>
-lasted five years, the earlier of them so prosperous that
-the proprietors thought they were going to be millionaires.
-But Reporter Attree went to Texas with the
-land-boomers, and Lynde, who wrote the paragraphs,
-died. When the paper failed, in 1839, Hayward went
-to the <i>Herald</i>, where he worked as a compositor all the
-rest of his life.</p>
-
-<p>The other penny papers that sprang up in New York
-to give battle—while the money lasted—to the <i>Sun</i>, the
-<i>Transcript</i>, and the <i>Herald</i>, were the <i>True Sun</i>, started
-by some of Day’s discharged employees; the <i>Morning
-Star</i>, run by Major Noah, of the <i>Evening Star</i>; the <i>New
-Era</i>, already mentioned, which Richard Adams Locke
-started in 1836 in company with Jared D. Bell and
-Joseph Price; the <i>Daily Whig</i>, of which Horace Greeley
-was Albany correspondent in 1838; the <i>Bee</i>, the <i>Serpent</i>,
-the <i>Light</i>, the <i>Express</i>, the <i>Union</i>, the <i>Rough Hewer</i>,
-the <i>News Times</i>, the <i>Examiner</i>, the <i>Morning Chronicle</i>,
-the <i>Evening Chronicle</i>, the <i>Daily Conservative</i>, the
-<i>Censor</i>, and the <i>Daily News</i>. All these bobbed up, in
-one city alone, in the five years during which Ben Day
-owned the <i>Sun</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Most of them were mushrooms in origin and morning-glories
-by nature. They could not stand the <i>Sun’s</i>
-rays.</p>
-
-<p>Notable exceptions were two evening papers, the
-<i>Express</i> and the <i>Daily News</i>. The <i>Express</i> was established
-in June, 1836, under the editorship of James<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">135</span>
-Brooks and his brother Erastus, graduates of the <i>Advertiser</i>,
-of Portland, Maine. It was devoted to Whig
-politics and the shipping of New York. The <i>Daily News</i>
-took no considerable part in journalism until twenty-five
-years later, when Benjamin Wood bought it.</p>
-
-<p>In other parts of the country the one-cent newspaper,
-properly conducted, met with the favour which the public
-had showered upon Ben Day. William M. Swain,
-who has been mentioned as a fellow compositor with
-Ben Day, and who tried to dissuade his friend from the
-folly of starting the <i>Sun</i>, saw the wisdom of the penny
-paper, and saw, also, that the New York field was filled.
-He went to Philadelphia and established the <i>Public
-Ledger</i>, the first issue appearing on March 25, 1836.
-The <i>Ledger</i> was not the first penny sheet to be published
-in Philadelphia, the <i>Daily Transcript</i> having preceded
-it by a few days. These two newspapers soon
-consolidated, however.</p>
-
-<p>Swain’s <i>Ledger</i> was at once sensational and brave.
-It came out for the abolition of slavery, and its office
-was twice mobbed. It was mobbed again in 1844, during
-the Native American riots. Swain was a big,
-hard-working man. George W. Childs, his successor
-as proprietor of the <i>Ledger</i>, wrote of him that for
-twenty years it was his habit to read every paragraph
-that went into the paper. Swain made three million
-dollars out of the <i>Ledger</i>; but when, during the
-Civil War, the cost of paper compelled nearly all the
-newspapers to advance prices, he tried to keep the
-<i>Ledger</i> at one cent, and lost a hundred thousand dollars
-within a year. Childs, who had been a newsdealer and
-book-publisher, bought the paper from Swain in 1864,
-and raised its price to two cents.</p>
-
-<p>When Swain went to Philadelphia he had two partners,
-Arunah S. Abell and Azariah H. Simmons, both<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">136</span>
-printers, and, like Swain, former associates of Day.
-Simmons remained with Swain on the <i>Ledger</i> until his
-death in 1855, but Abell—the man who poked more fun
-than anybody else at Day for his penny <i>Sun</i> idea—went
-to Baltimore and there established a <i>Sun</i> of his
-own, the first copy coming out on May 17, 1837.
-It was a success from the start. How well it paid
-Abell to follow Ben Day’s scheme may be judged by
-the fact that thirty years later Abell bought Guilford,
-a splendid estate near Baltimore, and paid $475,000
-for it.</p>
-
-<p>Both Swain and Abell were friends of S. F. B. Morse,
-and they helped him to finance the electric telegraph.
-The Baltimore <i>Sun</i> published the famous message—“What
-hath God wrought?”—sent over the wire from
-Washington to Baltimore on May 24, 1844, when the telegraph
-first came into practical use. Abell was the sole
-proprietor of the Baltimore <i>Sun</i> from 1837 to 1887.
-He died in 1888 at the age of eighty-two.</p>
-
-<p>Other important newspapers started in the ten years
-that followed Day’s founding of the <i>Sun</i> were the Detroit
-<i>Free Press</i>, the St. Louis <i>Republic</i>, the New
-Orleans <i>Picayune</i>, the Burlington <i>Hawkeye</i>, the Hartford
-<i>Times</i>, the New York <i>Tribune</i>, the Brooklyn <i>Eagle</i>,
-the Cincinnati <i>Enquirer</i>, and the Cleveland <i>Plain
-Dealer</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In 1830 there were only 852 newspapers in the United
-States, which then had a population of 12,866,020, and
-these newspapers had a combined yearly circulation of
-68,117,000 copies. Ten years later the population was
-17,069,453, and there were 1,631 newspapers with a combined
-yearly circulation of 196,000,000 copies. In other
-words, while the population increased 32 per cent. in
-a decade, the total sale of newspapers increased 187
-per cent. The inexpensive paper had found its readers.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_136a" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 34em;">
- <img src="images/i_136a.jpg" width="1618" height="1200" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
- <p>AN EXTRA OF “THE SUN”</p>
-
-<p class="subhead">These Special Editions Were Issued on the Arrival of Every Mail Ship from England.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<div id="ip_136b" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 38em;">
- <img src="images/i_136ab.jpg" width="1805" height="1075" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
- <p>THE THIRD HOME OF “THE SUN”</p>
-
-<p class="subhead">Beach and Bennett, Rival Publishers, Had Offices Opposite Each Other at Fulton and
-Nassau Streets.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">137</span></p>
-
-<p>In his report on newspapers for the Census of 1880,
-S. N. D. North says that from 1830 to <span class="locked">1840—</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>By the sheer force of its superior circulation, the
-penny press exerted the most powerful newspaper influence
-that was felt in the United States, and during
-this interval its beneficial influence was the most apparent.
-It taught the higher-priced papers that political
-connection was properly subordinated to the
-other and higher function of the public journal—the
-function of gathering and presenting the news as it
-is, without reference to its political or other effect upon
-friend or foe.</p>
-
-<p>The advent of the penny press concluded the transition
-period in American journalism, and had three
-effects which are easily traceable. It increased the circulation,
-decreased the price of daily newspapers, and
-changed the character of the reading-matter published.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>As Charles H. Levermore wrote in an article on the
-rise of metropolitan journalism in the <i>American Historical
-Review</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Independent journalism, as represented first by the
-<i>Sun</i> and the <i>Herald</i>, won a complete victory over old-fashioned
-partizan journalism. The time had forever
-departed when an Albany regency could tune the press
-of the State as easily and simply as Queen Elizabeth
-used to tune the English pulpits. As James Parton
-said, “An editorial is only a man speaking to men;
-but the news is Providence speaking to men.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Thus Ben Day’s <i>Sun</i> remade American journalism—more
-by accident than design, as he himself remarked
-at a dinner to Robert Hoe in 1851.</p>
-
-<p>It is evident that Day soon regretted the sale of the
-<i>Sun</i>, for in 1840 he established a penny paper called the
-<i>True Sun</i>. This he presently sold for a fair price, but
-his itch for journalism did not disappear. He started<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">138</span>
-the <i>Tatler</i>, but it was not a success. In 1842, in conjunction
-with James Wilson, he founded the monthly
-magazine, <i>Brother Jonathan</i>, which reprinted English
-double-decker novels complete in one issue. This later
-became a weekly, and Day brought out illustrated editions
-semi-annually.</p>
-
-<p>This was a new thing, at least in America, and Day
-may be called the originator of our illustrated periodicals
-as well as of our penny papers. His right-hand
-men in the editing of <i>Brother Jonathan</i> were Nathaniel
-P. Willis, the poet, and Horatio H. Weld, who was
-first a printer, next an editor, and at last a minister.</p>
-
-<p>Day sold <i>Brother Jonathan</i> for a dollar a year.
-When the paper famine hit the publishing business in
-1862, he suspended his publication and retired from
-business. He was well off, and he spent the remaining
-twenty-seven years of his life in ease at his New York
-home. He died on December 21, 1889. His son Benjamin
-was the inventor of the Ben Day process used in
-making engravings.</p>
-
-<p>Day always watched the fortunes of the <i>Sun</i> with
-interest, but he did not believe that his immediate successors
-ran it just the right way. When the paper
-passed into the hands of Charles A. Dana, in 1868, Day—then
-not yet threescore—said:</p>
-
-<p>“He’ll make a newspaper of it!”</p>
-
-<p>And it was then he added that the silliest thing he
-himself ever did was to sell the <i>Sun</i>.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_139" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">139</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">MOSES Y. BEACH’S ERA OF HUSTLE</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>“The Sun” Uses Albany Steamboats, Horse Expresses, Trotting
-Teams, Pigeons, and the Telegraph to Get News.—Poe’s
-Famous Balloon Hoax and the Case of Mary Rogers.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> second owner of the <i>Sun</i>, Moses Yale Beach,
-was, like Ben Day, a Yankee. He was born in
-the old Connecticut town of Wallingford on January 7,
-1800. He had a little education in the common schools,
-but showed more interest in mechanics than in books.
-When he was fourteen he was bound out to a cabinet-maker
-in Hartford. His skill was so fine that he saw
-the needlessness of serving the customary seven years,
-and his industry so great that he was able, by doing
-extra work in odd times, to get together enough money
-to buy his freedom from his master. He set up a cabinet-shop
-of his own at Northampton, Massachusetts.</p>
-
-<p>When Beach was twenty, he made the acquaintance
-of Miss Nancy Day, of Springfield, the sister of Benjamin
-was the inventor of the Ben Day process used in
-Day were married in 1821, and as the business at
-Northampton was not prospering, they settled down in
-Springfield.</p>
-
-<p>The young man was a good cabinet-maker, but his
-mind ran to inventions rather than to chests and high-boys.
-Steamboat navigation had not yet attained a
-commercial success, but Beach was a close student of
-the advance made by Robert Fulton and Henry Bell.
-First, however, he devoted his talents as an inventor<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">140</span>
-to a motor in which the power came from explosions of
-gunpowder. He tried this on a boat which he intended
-to run on the Connecticut River between Springfield
-and Hartford. When it failed, he turned back to steam,
-and he undoubtedly would have made a success of this
-boat line if his money resources had been adequate.</p>
-
-<p>Beach then invented a rag-cutting machine for use
-in paper-mills, and he might have had a fortune out of
-it if he had taken a patent in time, for the process is
-still used. As it was, the device enabled him to get an
-interest in a paper-mill at Saugerties, New York, where
-he removed in 1829. This mill was prosperous for some
-years, but in 1835 Beach found it more profitable to go
-to work for his young brother-in-law, Mr. Day, who had
-by this time brought the <i>Sun</i> to the point of assured
-success.</p>
-
-<p>Beach was a great help to Day, not only as the
-manager of the <i>Sun’s</i> finances, but as general supervisor
-of the mechanical department. In the three years of
-his association with Day he picked up a good working
-knowledge of the newspaper business. He recognized
-the features that had made the <i>Sun</i> successful—chiefly
-the presentation of news that interested the ordinary
-reader—and saw the neglect of this policy was keeping
-the old-fashioned sixpenny papers at a standstill.</p>
-
-<p>He did not underestimate other news. “Other news,”
-in that day, meant the proceedings of Congress and the
-New York State Legislature, the condensed news of
-Europe, as received from a London correspondent or rewritten
-from the English journals, and such important
-items as might be clipped from the newspapers of the
-South and West. Many of these American papers sent
-proof-sheets of news articles to the <i>Sun</i> by mail.</p>
-
-<p>When Beach bought the paper there was no express
-service. There had been, in fact, no express service in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">141</span>
-America except the one which Charles Davenport and
-N. S. Mason operated over the Boston and Taunton
-Railway. But in March, 1839, about a year after Beach
-got the <i>Sun</i>, William F. Harnden began an express
-service—later the Adams Express Company—between
-New York and Boston, using the boats from New York
-to Providence and the rail from Providence to Boston.</p>
-
-<p>This was a big help to the New York papers, for with
-the aid of the express the English papers brought by
-ships landing at Boston were in the New York offices
-the next day. To a city which still lacked wire communication
-of any kind this was highly important, and
-there was hardly an issue of the <i>Sun</i> in the spring of
-1839 that did not contain a paragraph laudatory of
-Mr. Harnden’s enterprise.</p>
-
-<p>The steamship, still a novelty, was the big thing in
-newspaperdom. While the <i>Sun</i> did not neglect the
-police-court reports and the animal stories so dear to
-its readers, the latest news from abroad usually had
-the place of honour on the second page. The first page
-remained the home of the advertisement and the haunt
-of the miscellaneous article. It was by ship that <i>Sun</i>
-readers learned of Daguerre and his picture-taking device;
-of Cobden and the Anti-Corn-Law League; of the
-war between Abd-el-Kader and the French; of Don
-Carlos and his ups and downs—mostly downs; of the
-first British invasion of Afghanistan. There was the
-young queen, Victoria, always interesting, and there
-were the doings of actors known to America:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>At the queen’s desire, her tutor, Dr. Davys—father to
-the Miss Davys whose ears the queen boxed—has been
-appointed Bishop of Marlborough.</p>
-
-<p>Charles Kean’s friends say he has been offered the
-sum of sixty pounds a night for sixty nights in New
-York.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">142</span></p>
-
-<p>On June 1, 1839, the <i>Sun</i> got out an extra on the
-arrival, at three o’clock that morning, of the Great
-Western, after a passage of thirteen days—the fastest
-trip up to that time—and fifty-seven thousand copies
-of the paper were sold. The <i>Sun’s</i> own sailing vessels
-met the incoming steamships down the bay. The <i>Sun</i>
-boasted:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>In consequence of our news-boat arrangements we
-receive our papers more than an hour earlier than any
-other paper in this city. On the arrival of the Liverpool
-[July 1, 1839], we proceeded to issue an extra,
-which will reach Albany with the news twelve hours
-before it will be published in the regular editions of
-their evening papers, and twenty-four hours ahead of
-the morning papers.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> had woodcuts made of all the leading ships,
-and these, with their curly waves, lit up a page wonderfully,
-if not beautifully. When the British Queen arrived
-on July 28, 1839, there was a half-page picture
-of her. She was the finest ship that had ever been built
-in Great Britain, with her total length of two hundred
-and seventy-five feet—less than one-third as much as
-some of the modern giants—and her paddle-wheels with
-a diameter of thirty-one feet. Small wonder that the
-<i>Sun</i> favoured New York with a Sunday paper in honour
-of the event, and that the Monday sale, with the
-same feature, was forty-nine thousand. Quoth the <i>Sun</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Who will wonder, after this, that the lazy, lumbering
-<i xml:lang="it" lang="it">lazaroni</i> of Wall Street stick up their noses at us?</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In January, 1840, when the packet-ships United
-States and England arrived together, the <i>Sun</i> gave the
-story a front-page display, and actually used full-faced
-type for the subheads of the article.</p>
-
-<p>A tragedy is recalled in one paragraph of the <i>Sun’s</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">143</span>
-account of the arrival of the Great Western on April
-26, 1841:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Up to the closing of the mail from Liverpool to London
-on the 7th, the steamer President had not arrived.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The President never arrived, and her fate is one of
-the secrets of the sea. She sailed from New York on
-March 11, 1841, with thirty-one passengers, including
-Tyrone Power, the Irish actor, who had just concluded
-his second American tour. It is conjectured that the
-President sank during the great gale that sprang up her
-second night out.</p>
-
-<p>In getting news from various parts of the United
-States, the <i>Sun</i> took a leaf from the book of Colonel
-Webb and other journalists who had used the horse express.
-In January, 1841, on the occasion of Governor
-William H. Seward’s message to the Legislature, the
-<i>Sun</i> beat the town. The Legislature received the message
-at 11 <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span> on January 5:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>An express arriving exclusively for the <i>Sun</i> then
-started, it being one o’clock, and at six this morning
-reached our office, thus enabling us to repeat the triumph
-achieved by us last year over the whole combined
-press of New York, large and small. It is but just to
-say that our express was brought on by the horses of
-the Red Bird Line with unparalleled expedition, in
-spite of wind, hail, and rain.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Nowadays a Governor’s message is in the newspaper-offices
-days before it is sent to the Legislature, and
-there, treated in the confidence that is never betrayed
-by a decent newspaper, it is prepared for printing, so
-that it may be on the street five minutes after it is delivered,
-if its importance warrants. In the old days
-the message, borne by relays of horse vehicles down
-the snow-covered post-road from Albany to New York,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">144</span>
-was more important to the newspapers than the messages
-of this period appear to be. With newspapers,
-as with humans, that which is easy to get loses value.</p>
-
-<p>In October, 1841, the <i>Sun</i> spent money freely to
-secure a quick report of the momentous trial of Alexander
-McLeod for the murder of Amos Durfee. War
-between the United States and Great Britain hinged
-on the outcome. During the rebellion in Upper Canada,
-in 1837, the American steamer Caroline was used by
-the insurgents to carry supplies down the Niagara River
-to a party of rebels on Navy Island. A party of loyal
-Canadians seized and destroyed the Caroline at Grand
-Island, and in the fight Durfee and eleven others were
-killed. The Canadian, McLeod, who boasted of being
-a participant, was arrested when he ventured across the
-American border in 1840.</p>
-
-<p>The British government made a demand for his release,
-insisting that what McLeod had done was an act
-of war, performed under the orders of his commanding
-officer, Captain Drew. President Van Buren replied
-that the American government had several times asked
-the British government whether the destruction of the
-Caroline was an act of war, and had never received a
-reply; and further, that the Federal government had
-no power to prevent the State of New York from trying
-persons indicted within its jurisdiction.</p>
-
-<p>The whole country realized the hostile attitude of
-the British ministry, and accepted its threat that war
-would be declared if McLeod were not released. The
-trial took place at Utica, New York, and the <i>Sun</i> printed
-from two to five columns a day about it. It ran a
-special train from Utica to Schenectady. There a
-famous driver, Otis Dimmick, waited with a fine team
-of horses to take the story to the Albany boat, the fastest
-means of transportation between the State capital<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">145</span>
-and the metropolis. The <i>Sun</i> declared that one day
-Dimmick and his horses made the sixteen miles between
-Schenectady and Albany in forty-nine minutes.</p>
-
-<p>And the end of it all was proof that McLeod, who had
-boasted of killing “a damned Yankee,” had been asleep
-in Chippewa on the night of the Caroline affair, and
-was nothing worse than a braggart. So the war-cloud
-blew over.</p>
-
-<p>Beach was a man of great faith in railroads and all
-other forms of progress. When the Boston and Albany
-road was finished, the <i>Sun</i> related how a barrel of flour
-was growing in the field in Canandaigua on a Monday—the
-barrel in a tree and the flour in the wheat—and on
-Wednesday, transformed and ready for the baker, it
-was in Boston.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Sperm candles manufactured by Mr. Penniman at
-Albany on Wednesday morning were burning at Faneuil
-Hall and at the Tremont, in Boston, on the evening of
-the same day.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> had faith in Morse and his telegraph from
-the outset. The invention was born in Nassau Street,
-only a block or two from the <i>Sun’s</i> office. Morse put
-the wire into practical use between Baltimore and Washington
-on May 24, 1844. That was a Friday. The <i>Sun</i>
-said nothing about it the next day, and had no Sunday
-paper; but on Monday it said editorially:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>MAGNETIC TELEGRAPH—The new invention is
-completed from Baltimore to Washington. The wire,
-perfectly secured against the weather by a covering of
-rope-yarn and tar, is conducted on the top of posts
-about twenty feet high and one hundred yards apart.
-The nominations of the convention this day are to be
-conveyed to Washington by this telegraph, where they
-will arrive in a few seconds. On Saturday morning the
-batteries were charged and the regular transmission of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">146</span>
-intelligence between Washington and Baltimore commenced....
-At half past 11 <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span>, the question being
-asked, what was the news at Washington, the answer
-was almost instantaneously returned: “Van Buren
-stock is rising.” This is indeed the annihilation of
-space.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is hardly necessary to say that the convention referred
-to was the Democratic national convention at
-Baltimore, that Van Buren’s stock, high early in the
-proceedings, fell again, and that James K. Polk was the
-nominee.</p>
-
-<p>But as New York was not fortunate enough to have
-the first commercial telegraph-line, the <i>Sun</i> had to rely
-on its own efforts for speedy news from the convention.
-It ran special trains from Baltimore, “beating the
-United States mail train and locomotive an hour or
-two.”</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> soon afterward expressed annoyance at a
-report that it was itself a part of a monopoly which was
-to control the telegraph, and that it had bought a telegraph-line
-from New York to Springfield, Massachusetts.
-It insisted that there should be no monopoly,
-and that the use of the telegraph must be open to all.
-There was no suggestion that Morse intended to control
-his invention improperly, but the <i>Sun</i> was not quite
-satisfied with the government’s lassitude. Morse had
-offered his rights to the government for one hundred
-thousand dollars, and Congress had sneered.</p>
-
-<p>It was not until 1846 that the telegraph was extended
-to New York, and in the meantime the New York papers
-used such other means as they could for the collection
-of news. Besides trains, ships, horses, and the
-fleet foot of the reporter, there were pigeons. Beach
-went in for pigeons extensively. When the <i>Sun</i> moved
-from 156 Nassau Street, in the summer of 1842, it took<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">147</span>
-a six-story building at the southwest corner of Nassau
-and Fulton Streets, securing about three times as much
-room as it had in the two-story building at Spruce
-Street. On the top of the new building Beach built a
-pigeon-house, which stood for half a century.</p>
-
-<p>The strange, boxlike cote attracted not only the attention
-of Mr. Bennett, whose <i>Herald</i> was quartered
-just across the street, but of all the folk who came and
-went in that busy region. So many were the queries
-from friends and the quips from enemies concerning the
-pigeon-house that the <i>Sun</i> (December 14, 1843), vouchsafed
-to explain:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Why, we have had a school of carrier-pigeons in the
-upper apartments of the <i>Sun</i> office since we have occupied
-the building. Did our contemporaries believe that
-we ever could be at fault in furnishing the earliest news
-to our readers? Or did they indulge the hope that in
-newspaper enterprise they could ever catch us napping?</p>
-
-<p>Carrier-pigeons have long been remarked for their
-sagacity and admired for their usefulness. They are,
-of all birds, the most invaluable, and as auxiliary to a
-newspaper cannot be too highly prized. Part of the
-flock in our possession were employed by the London
-<i>Morning Chronicle</i> in bringing intelligence from Dublin
-to London, and from Paris to London, crossing both
-channels; therefore they are not novices in the newspaper
-express.</p>
-
-<p>If there was delay in the arrival of the Boston
-steamer, and the weather clear, we despatched our choice
-pigeon, Sam Patch, down the Sound, and he invariably
-came back with a slip of delicate tissue-paper tied under
-his wing, containing the news. We thus are apprised
-of the arrival of the steamer some two hours before any
-one else hears of her. Our men are at their cases; the
-steam is up in our pressroom, and our extras are always
-out first.</p>
-
-<p>We sometimes let one of our carriers fly to the Narrows,
-and in twenty minutes or so we know what is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">148</span>
-coming in, thirty miles from Sandy Hook Light. We
-despatch them as far as Albany, on any important mission;
-frequently to New Jersey, and in the summer-time
-they sometimes look in at Rockaway and let us know
-what is going on at the pavilion. We have a small
-sliding door in our observatory, on the top of the <i>Sun</i>
-office, through which the little aerials pass. By sending
-off one every little while, we ascertain the details of
-whatever is important or interesting at any given point.</p>
-
-<p>They often fly at the rate of sixty miles an hour, easy!
-For example, a half-dozen will leave Washington at daylight
-this morning and arrive here about noon, beating
-the mail generally ten hours or so. They can come
-through from Albany in about two hours and a half,
-solar time. They fly exceedingly high, and keep so until
-they make the spires of the city, and then descend. We
-have not lost one by any accident, and believe ours is
-the only flock of value or importance in the country.</p>
-
-<p>We give this brief detail of “them pigeons” because
-our prying friends and neighbors in the newspaper way
-have such a meager, guesswork account of them; and
-because we dislike any mystery or artifice in our business
-operations.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Speed and more speed was the newspaper demand of
-the hour, particularly among the penny papers. The
-<i>Sun</i> and the <i>Herald</i> had been battling for years, with
-competitors springing up about them, usually to die
-within the twelvemonth. Now the <i>Tribune</i> had come to
-remain in the fray, even if it had not as much money to
-spend on news-gathering as the <i>Sun</i> and the <i>Herald</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Edgar Allan Poe saw the fever that raged among the
-rivals. He had just returned to New York from Philadelphia
-with his sick wife and his mother. He was a
-recognized genius, but his worldly wealth amounted to
-four dollars and fifty cents. He had written “The
-Narrative of A. Gordon Pym,” “The Murders in the
-Rue Morgue,” “The Gold Bug,” and other immortal
-stories, but his livelihood had been precarious. He had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">149</span>
-been in turn connected with the <i>Southern Literary Messenger</i>,
-the <i>Gentleman’s Magazine</i>, and <i>Graham’s Magazine</i>,
-and had twice issued the prospectuses for new
-periodicals of his own, fated never to be born.</p>
-
-<p>His fortunes were at their lowest when he arrived in
-New York on April 6, 1844. He and his family found
-rooms in Greenwich Street, near Cedar, now the thick
-of the business district. “The house is old and looks
-buggy,” he wrote to a friend, but it was the best he
-could do with less than five dollars in his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>He had to have more money. The newspapers seemed
-to be the most available place to get it, and the <i>Sun</i> the
-livest of them. Speed—that was what they wanted.
-They had been having ocean steamers until they were
-almost sick. Railroads were unromantic. Horses were
-an old story. The telegraph was still regarded as
-theory, and it hardly appealed to the imagination.</p>
-
-<p>Pigeons? Perhaps there was inspiration in the sight
-of Sam Patch preening himself on a cornice of the <i>Sun’s</i>
-building. A magnified pigeon would be an air-ship.
-Poe sat him down, wrote the “balloon hoax,” and sold
-it to Mr. Beach. It appeared in the <i>Sun</i> of April 13,
-1844.</p>
-
-<p>Beneath a black-faced heading that was supplemented
-by a woodcut of three race-horses flying under the whips
-of their jockeys and the subtitle “By Express,” was the
-following introduction:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="hang2">ASTOUNDING INTELLIGENCE BY PRIVATE EXPRESS
-FROM CHARLESTON, VIA NORFOLK!—THE
-ATLANTIC OCEAN CROSSED IN THREE
-DAYS!!!—ARRIVAL AT SULLIVAN’S ISLAND OF
-A STEERING BALLOON INVENTED BY MR. MONCK
-MASON.</p>
-
-<p>We stop the press at a late hour to announce that by
-a private express from Charleston, South Carolina, we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">150</span>
-are just put in possession of full details of the most
-extraordinary adventure ever accomplished by man.
-<em>The Atlantic Ocean has actually been traversed in a
-balloon, and in the incredibly brief period of three days!</em>
-Eight persons have crossed in the machine, among
-others Sir Everard Bringhurst and Mr. Monck Mason.
-We have barely time now to announce this most novel
-and unexpected intelligence, but we hope by ten this
-morning to have ready an extra with a detailed account
-of the voyage.</p>
-
-<p>P. S.—The extra will be positively ready, and for sale
-at our counter, by ten o’clock this morning. It will
-embrace all the particulars yet known. We have also
-placed in the hands of an excellent artist a representation
-of the “Steering Balloon,” which will accompany
-the particulars of the voyage.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The promised extra bore a head of stud-horse type,
-six banks in all, and as many inches deep.</p>
-
-<p>“Astounding News by Express, <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">via</i> Norfolk!” it announced.
-“The Atlantic Crossed in Three Days!—Signal
-Triumph of Mr. Monck Mason’s Flying-Machine!!!—Arrival
-at Sullivan’s Island, Near Charleston, of
-Mr. Mason, Mr. Robert Holland, Mr. Henson, Mr. Harrison
-Ainsworth, and Four Others in the Steering Balloon
-Victoria, after a Passage of Seventy-Five Hours
-from Land to Land—Full Particulars of the Voyage!!!”</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The great problem is at length solved. The air, as well
-as the earth and the ocean, has been subdued by science,
-and will become a common and convenient highway for
-mankind. The Atlantic has been actually crossed in a
-balloon! And this, too, without difficulty—without any
-great apparent danger—with thorough control of the
-machine—and in the inconceivably brief period of
-seventy-five hours from shore to shore!</p>
-
-<p>By the energy of an agent at Charleston, South Carolina,
-we are enabled to be the first to furnish the public
-with a detailed account of this most extraordinary voyage,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">151</span>
-which was performed between Saturday, the 6th
-instant, at 11 <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span> and 2 <span class="allsmcap">P.M.</span> on Tuesday, the 9th instant,
-by Sir Everard Bringhurst, Mr. Osborne, a
-nephew of Lord Bentinck; Mr. Monck Mason, and Mr.
-Robert Holland, the well-known aeronauts; Mr. Harrison
-Ainsworth, author of “Jack Sheppard,” <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">et cetera</i>,
-and Mr. Henson, the projector of the late unsuccessful
-flying-machine—with two seamen from Woolwich—in
-all, eight persons.</p>
-
-<p>The particulars furnished below may be relied on as
-authentic and accurate in every respect, as with a slight
-exception they are copied verbatim from the joint diaries
-of Mr. Monck Mason and Mr. Harrison Ainsworth, to
-whose politeness our agent is indebted for much verbal
-information respecting the balloon itself, its construction,
-and other matters of interest. The only alteration
-in the MS. received has been made for the purpose of
-throwing the hurried account of our agent, Mr. Forsyth,
-into a connected and intelligible form.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The story that followed was about five thousand
-words in length. To summarize it, Monck Mason had
-applied the principle of the Archimedean screw to the
-propulsion of a dirigible balloon. The gas-bag was an
-ellipsoid thirteen feet long, with a car suspended from
-it. The screw propeller, which was attached to the car,
-was operated by a spring. A rudder shaped like a
-battledore kept the air-ship on its course.</p>
-
-<p>The voyagers, according to the story, started from
-Mr. Osborne’s home near Penstruthal, in North Wales,
-intending to sail across the English Channel. The
-mechanism of the propeller broke, and the balloon,
-caught in a strong northeast wind, was carried across
-the Atlantic at the speed of sixty or more miles an hour.
-Mr. Mason kept a journal, to which, at the end of each
-day, Mr. Ainsworth added a postscript. The balloon
-landed safely on the coast of South Carolina, near Fort
-Moultrie.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">152</span></p>
-
-<p>The names of the supposed voyagers were well chosen
-by Poe to give verisimilitude to the hoax. Monck
-Mason and Robert Holland, or Hollond, were of the
-small party which actually sailed from Vauxhall Gardens,
-London, on the afternoon of November 7, 1836,
-in the balloon Nassau and landed at Weilburg, in Germany,
-five hundred miles away, eighteen hours later.
-Harrison Ainsworth, the novelist, was then one of the
-shining stars of English literary life. The others named
-by Poe were familiar figures of the period.</p>
-
-<p>Poe adopted the plan, used so successfully by Locke
-in the moon hoax, of having real people do the thing
-that they would like to do; but there the resemblance
-of the two hoaxes ends, except for the technical bits that
-Poe was able to inject into his narrative. The moon
-hoax lasted for weeks; the balloon hoax for a day.
-Even the <i>Sun</i> did not attempt to bolster it, for it said
-the second day afterward:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>BALLOON—The mails from the South last Saturday
-night not having brought confirmation of the balloon
-from England, the particulars of which from our
-correspondent we detailed in our extra, we are inclined
-to believe that the intelligence is erroneous. The description
-of the balloon and the voyage was written with
-a minuteness and scientific ability calculated to obtain
-credit everywhere, and was read with great pleasure and
-satisfaction. We by no means think such a project impossible.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>About a week later, when the <i>Sun</i> was still being
-pounded by its contemporaries, a few of which had been
-gulled into rewriting the story, another editorial article
-on the hoax appeared:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>BALLOON EXPRESS—We have been somewhat
-amused with the comments of the press upon the balloon
-express. The more intelligent editors saw its object<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">153</span>
-at once. On the other hand, many of our esteemed
-contemporaries—those who are too ignorant to appreciate
-the pleasant satire—have ascribed to us the worst
-and basest motives. We expected as much.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The “pleasant satire” of which the <i>Sun</i> spoke was
-evidently meant to hold up to view the craze of the day
-for speed in the transmission of news and men. Yet
-the <i>Sun</i> itself, as the leader of penny journalism, had
-been to a great extent the cause of this craze. It had
-taught the people to read the news and to hanker for
-more.</p>
-
-<p>There was another story which Poe and the <i>Sun</i>
-shared—one that will outlive even the balloon hoax.
-Almost buried on the third page of the <i>Sun</i> of July 28,
-1841, was this advertisement in agate type:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Left her home on Sunday morning, July 25, a young
-lady; had on a white dress, black shawl, blue scarf,
-Leghorn hat, light-colored shoes, and parasol light-colored;
-it is supposed some accident has befallen her.
-Whoever will give information respecting her at 126
-Nassau shall be rewarded for their trouble.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The next day the <i>Sun</i> said in its news columns:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="in0"><span class="xlarge bold tpadhand">☞</span> The body of a young lady some eighteen or twenty
-years of age was found in the water at Hoboken. From
-the description of her dress, fears are entertained that
-it is the body of Miss Mary C. Rogers, who is advertised
-in yesterday’s paper as having disappeared from her
-home, 126 Nassau Street, on Sunday last.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The fears were well grounded, for the dead girl was
-Mary Cecilia Rogers, the “beautiful cigar-girl” who
-had been the magnet at John Anderson’s tobacco-shop
-at Broadway and Duane Street; the tragic figure of
-Poe’s story, “The Mystery of Marie Roget,” a tale which
-served to keep alive the features of that unsolved riddle<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">154</span>
-of the Elysian Fields of Hoboken. To the <i>Sun</i>, which
-had then no Poe, no <i>Sherlock Holmes</i>, the murder was
-the text for a moral lesson:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>There can be no question that she had fallen a victim
-to the most imprudent and reprehensible practise,
-which has recently obtained to a considerable extent
-in this city, of placing behind the counters and at the
-windows of stores for the sale of articles purchased exclusively
-by males—especially of cigar-stores and drinking-houses—young
-and beautiful females for the purpose
-of thus attracting the attention, exciting the interest
-(or worse still), and thus inducing the visits and
-consequent custom, of the other sex—especially of the
-young and thoughtless.</p>
-
-<p>It was by being placed in such a situation, in one of
-the most public spots in the city, that this unfortunate
-girl was led into a train of acquaintances and associations
-which has eventually proved not only her ruin,
-but an untimely and violent death in the prime of youth
-and beauty. From being used as an instrument of
-cupidity—as a sort of “man-trap” to lure by her
-charms the gay and giddy into the path of the spendthrift
-and of constant dissipation—she has become the
-victim of the very passions and vices which her exposure
-to the public gaze for mercenary gain was so well
-calculated to engender and encourage.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> and the other papers might have pursued
-the Mary Rogers mystery further than they did had it
-not been that in a few weeks a more tangible tragedy
-presented itself, when John C. Colt, a teacher of bookkeeping,
-and the brother of Samuel Colt, the inventor,
-killed Samuel Adams, one of the leading printers of
-New York. Adams had gone to Colt’s lodgings at
-Broadway and Chambers Street to collect a bill, and
-Colt, who had a furious temper, murdered him with a
-hammer, packed the body in a box, and hired an innocent
-drayman to haul it down to the ship Kalamazoo,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">155</span>
-for shipment to New Orleans. This affair drove the
-Rogers murder out of the types, and left it for Poe to
-preserve in fiction with the names of the characters
-thinly veiled and the scene transferred to Paris.</p>
-
-<p>The great social event of the town in 1842 was the
-visit of Charles Dickens. He had been expected for
-several years. In fact, as far back as October 13, 1838,
-the <i>Sun</i> remarked:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Boz is coming to America. We hope he will not make
-a fool of himself here, like a majority of his distinguished
-countrymen who preceded him.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> got out an extra on the day when Dickens
-landed, but it was not in honour of Boz, but rather because
-of the arrival of the Britannia with a budget of
-foreign news. Buried in a mass of Continental paragraphs
-was this one:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Among the passengers are Mr. Charles Dickens, the
-celebrated author, and his lady.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The ship-news man never even thought to ask Dickens
-how he liked America. But society was waiting for
-Boz, and he was tossed about on a lively sea of receptions
-and dinners. The <i>Sun</i> presently thought that the
-young author was being exploited overmuch:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Mr. Dickens, we have no doubt, is a very respectable
-gentleman, and we know that he is a very clever and
-agreeable author. He has written several books that
-have put the reading world in most excellent good
-humor. In this way he has done much to promote the
-general happiness of mankind, and honestly deserves
-their gratitude.</p>
-
-<p>Having crossed the water for the purpose of traveling
-in America, where his works have been extensively read
-and admired, he is, of course, received and treated with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">156</span>
-marked civility, attention, and respect. We should be
-ashamed of our countrymen if it were otherwise. During
-his stay at Boston the citizens gave him a public
-dinner. At New Haven he received a similar token of
-kind regard. In this city a ball has been given him.
-All these attentions were right and proper, and as far
-as we can learn they have been uniformly conducted in
-a gentlemanly and respectable manner, becoming alike
-to the characters of those who gave and him who received
-them.</p>
-
-<p>But a few penny-catchers of the press are determined
-to make money out of Boz. The shop-windows are
-stuffed with lithograph likenesses of him, which resemble
-the original just about as much as he resembles
-a horse. His own wife would not recognize them in
-any other way than by the word “Boz” written under
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Then a corps of sneaking reporters, most of them
-fresh from London, are pursuing him like a pack of
-hounds at his heels to catch every wink of his eye, every
-motion of his hands, and every word that he speaks, to
-be dished up with all conceivable embellishments by
-pen and pencil, and published in extras, pamphlets, and
-handbills. To make all this trash sell well in the market,
-the greatest possible hurrah must be made by the papers
-interested in the speculations, and therefore the
-whole American people are basely caricatured by them,
-and represented as one vast mob following Dickens from
-place to place, and striving even to touch the hem of
-his garment.</p>
-
-<p>That our readers at a distance may not be induced to
-suppose that the good people of New York are befooling
-themselves in this way, we beg leave to assure them that
-all these absurd reports are ridiculous caricatures,
-hatched from the prolific brains of a few reckless reporters
-for a few unprincipled papers. They do in truth
-make as great fools of themselves as they represent the
-public to be generally. But beyond their narrow and
-contemptible circle we are happy to know that Mr.
-Dickens is treated with that manly and sincere respect
-which is so justly his due, and which must convince him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">157</span>
-that he is amongst a warm-hearted people, who know
-both how to respect their guest and themselves.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>When Dickens sailed for home, in June, the <i>Sun</i> bade
-him <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">bon voyage</i> with but a paragraph. It was more
-than a year afterward that it came to him again; and
-meanwhile he had trodden on the toes of America:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The appearance of the current number of “The Life
-and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit” will not add
-to the happiness of retrospections. Where is that Boston
-committee, where the renowned getters-up of the
-City Hotel dinner and the ball at the Park Theater,
-with its <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">tableaux vivants</i>, its splendid decorations, and
-tickets at ten dollars each?</p>
-
-<p>The scene is passing now before our memory—the
-crammed theater, full up to its third tier, the dense
-crowd opening a passage for Mr. Dickens and the proud
-and happy committee while he passes up the center of
-the stage amid huzzas and the waving of handkerchiefs,
-while the band is playing “God Save the Queen” and
-“See, the Conquering Hero Comes.” And <em>our</em> Irving,
-<em>our</em> Halleck, <em>our</em> Bryant passed around in the crowd,
-unnoticed and almost unknown. Shame! Let our
-cheeks crimson, as they ought.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> itself was doing very nicely. On its tenth
-birthday, September 3, 1843, it announced that it employed
-eight editors and reporters, twenty compositors,
-sixteen pressmen, twelve folders and counters, and one
-hundred carriers. The circulation of the daily paper
-was thirty-eight thousand, of the <i>Weekly Sun</i> twelve
-thousand.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Beach owned the <i>Sun’s</i> new home at Fulton and
-Nassau Streets and the building at 156 Nassau Street
-which he had recently vacated, and which was burned
-down in the fire of February 6, 1845. He had a London
-correspondent who ran a special horse express to carry<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">158</span>
-the news from London to Bristol. A <i>Sun</i> reporter went
-to report Webster’s speech on the great day when the
-Bunker Hill Monument was finished. He got down
-correctly at least the last sentence: “Thank God, I—I
-also—am an American!”</p>
-
-<p>With a circulation by far the largest in the world,
-the <i>Sun</i> was obliged to buy a new dress of type every
-three months, for the day of the curved stereotype plate
-was still far off. Early in 1846 two new presses, each
-capable of six thousand <i>Suns</i> an hour, were put in at a
-cost of twelve thousand dollars.</p>
-
-<p>The size of the paper grew constantly, although Beach
-stuck to a four-page sheet because of the limitations of
-the presses. Instead of adding pages, he added columns.
-From Day’s little three-column <i>Sun</i> the paper
-had grown, by April of 1840, to a width of seven columns.
-Of the total of twenty-eight columns in an issue
-twenty-one and a half were devoted to advertising,
-three to mixed news and editorials, two and a half to
-the court reports, and one column to reprint.</p>
-
-<p>With the page seven columns wide, Beach thought
-that the two words—“<i>The Sun</i>”—looked lonely, and
-to fill out the heading he changed it to read “<i>The New
-York Sun</i>.” This continued from April 13 to September
-29, 1840, when the proprietor saw how much more
-economical it would be to cut out “New York” and
-push the first and seventh columns of the first page up
-to the top of the paper. Then it was “<i>The Sun</i>” once
-more in head-line as well as body.</p>
-
-<p>The paper is never the <i>New York Sun</i>, Eugene Field’s
-poem to the contrary notwithstanding. It is the <i>Sun</i>,
-universal in its spirit, and published in New York by
-the accident of birth.</p>
-
-<p>Three years after that the <i>Sun</i> became an eight-column
-paper, and there were no more sneers at the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">159</span>
-blanket sheets, for the <i>Sun</i> itself was getting pretty
-wide.</p>
-
-<p>It was in the reign of Moses Y. Beach as owner of
-the <i>Sun</i>, that Horace Greeley came to stay in New York
-journalism. He had been fairly successful as editor
-of the <i>New Yorker</i>, and his management of the campaign
-paper called the <i>Log Cabin</i>, issued in 1840 in the interest
-of General Harrison, was masterly. With the prestige
-thus obtained, he was able, on April 10, 1841, to
-start the <i>Tribune</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In the first number he announced his intention of
-excluding the police reports which had been so valuable
-to “our leading penny papers”—meaning the
-<i>Sun</i> and the <i>Herald</i>—and of making the <i>Tribune</i>
-“worthy of the hearty approval of the virtuous and refined.”
-It was a week before the <i>Sun</i> mentioned its
-former friend, and then it was only to say:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>A word to Horace Greeley—if he wishes us to write
-him or any of his sickly brood of newspapers into notice,
-he must first go to school and learn a little decency. He
-must further retract the dirty, malignant, and wholesale
-falsehood which he procured to be published in the
-Albany <i>Evening Journal</i> a year ago last winter, with
-the hope of injuring the <i>Sun</i>. He must then deal in
-something besides misstatements of facts.... Until
-he does all this we shall feel very indifferent to any
-thrusts that he can make at us with his dagger of lath.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Soon afterward the <i>Sun</i> rubbed it in by quoting the
-Albany <i>Evening Journal</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Galvanize a large New England squash, and it would
-make as capable an editor as Horace.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>But Greeley was a lively young man, in spite of his
-eccentric ways and his habit of letting one leg of his
-trousers hang out of his unpolished boots. Only thirty<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">160</span>
-when he started the <i>Tribune</i>, he had had a lot of experience,
-particularly with politicians and with fads.
-He still believed in some of the fads, including temperance—which
-was then considered a fad—vegetarianism,
-and Abolition. He had been, too, a poet; and his verses
-lived to haunt his mature years. He had to give away
-most of the five thousand copies that were printed of
-the first number of the <i>Tribune</i>, but in a month he had
-a circulation of six thousand, and in two months he
-doubled this.</p>
-
-<p>Greeley had the instinct for getting good men, but
-not always the knack of holding them. One of his early
-finds was Henry J. Raymond, who attracted his attention
-as a boy orator for the Whig cause. Raymond
-worked for Greeley’s <i>New Yorker</i> and later for the
-<i>Tribune</i>. He was a good reporter, using a system of
-shorthand of his own devising.</p>
-
-<p>On one occasion, at least, he enabled the <i>Tribune</i> to
-beat the other papers. He was sent to Boston to report
-a speech, and he took with him three printers and
-their cases of type. After the speech Raymond and
-his compositors boarded the boat for New York, and
-as fast as the reporter transcribed his notes the printers
-put the speech into type. On the arrival of the boat
-at New York the type was ready to be put into the forms,
-and the <i>Tribune</i> was on the street hours ahead of its
-rivals.</p>
-
-<p>Greeley paid Raymond eight dollars a week until
-Raymond threatened to leave unless he received twenty
-dollars a week. He got it, but Greeley made such a
-fuss about the matter that Raymond realized that further
-increases would be out of the question. Presently
-he went to the <i>Courier and Enquirer</i>, and from 1843 to
-1850 he tried to restore some of the glory that once had
-crowned Colonel Webb’s paper.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">161</span></p>
-
-<p>In this period Raymond and his former employer,
-Greeley, fought their celebrated editorial duel—with
-pens, not mahogany-handled pistols—on the subject of
-Fourierism, that theory of social reorganization which
-Greeley seemed anxious to spread, and which was
-zealously preached by another of his young men, Albert
-Brisbane, now perhaps better remembered as the father
-of Arthur Brisbane. But Colonel Webb’s paper would
-not wake wide enough to suit the ambitious Raymond,
-who seized the opportunity of becoming the first editor
-of the New York <i>Times</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Other men who worked for Greeley’s <i>Tribune</i> in its
-young days were Bayard Taylor, who wrote articles
-from Europe; George William Curtis, the essayist;
-Count Gurowski, an authority on foreign affairs; and
-Charles A. Dana.</p>
-
-<p>Beach soon recognized Greeley as a considerable
-rival in the morning field, and there was a long tussle
-between the <i>Sun</i> and the <i>Tribune</i>. It did not content
-itself with words, and there were street battles between
-the boys who sold the two papers. Stung by one of
-Beach’s articles, Greeley called the <i>Sun</i> “the slimy and
-venomous instrument of Locofocoism, Jesuitical and
-deadly in politics and grovelling in morals.” The term
-Locofoco had then lost its original application to the
-Equal Rights section of the Democratic party and was
-applied—particularly by the Whigs—to any sort of
-Democrat.</p>
-
-<p>Moses Y. Beach had no such young journalists about
-him as Dana or Raymond, but he had two sons who
-seemed well adapted to take up the ownership of the
-<i>Sun</i>. He took them in as partners on October 22, 1845,
-under the title of “M. Y. Beach &amp; Sons.” The elder
-son, Moses Sperry Beach, was then twenty-three years
-old, and had already been well acquainted with the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">162</span>
-newspaper business, particularly with the mechanical
-side of it. Before his father took him as a partner,
-young Moses had joined with George Roberts in the
-publication of the Boston <i>Daily Times</i>, but he was glad
-to drop this and devote himself to the valuable property
-at Fulton and Nassau Streets.</p>
-
-<p>If a genius for invention is inheritable, both the
-Beach boys were richly endowed by their father. Moses
-S. invented devices for the feeding of rolls of paper,
-instead of sheets, to flat presses; for wetting news-print
-paper prior to printing; for cutting the sheets after
-printing; and for adapting newspaper presses to print
-both sides of the sheet at the same time.</p>
-
-<p>Alfred Ely Beach was only nineteen when he became
-partner in the <i>Sun</i>. After leaving the academy at Monson,
-Massachusetts, where he had been schooled, he
-worked with his father in the <i>Sun</i> office, and learned
-every detail of the business. The inventive vein was
-even deeper in him than in his brother. When he was
-twenty he formed a partnership with his old schoolmate,
-Orson D. Munn, of Monson, and they bought the <i>Scientific
-American</i> from Rufus Porter and combined its
-publishing business with that of soliciting patents.</p>
-
-<p>Alfred Beach retained his interest in the <i>Sun</i> for
-several years, but he is best remembered for his inventions
-and for his connection with scientific literature.
-In 1853 he devised the first typewriter which printed
-raised letters on a strip of paper for the blind. He
-invented a pneumatic mail-tube, and a larger tube on
-the same principle, by which he hoped passengers could
-be carried, the motive power being the exhaustion of
-air at the far end by means of a rotating fan.</p>
-
-<p>He was the first subway-constructor in New York.
-In 1869 he built a tunnel nine feet in diameter under
-Broadway from Warren Street to Murray Street, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">163</span>
-the next year a car was sent to and fro in this by pneumatic
-power. A more helpful invention, however, was
-the Beach shield for tunnel-digging—a gigantic hogs-head
-with the ends removed, the front circular edge
-being sharp and the rear end having a thin iron hood.
-This cylinder was propelled slowly through the earth by
-hydraulic rams, the dislodged material being removed
-through the rear.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Beach was connected with the <i>Scientific American</i>
-until his death in 1896. His son, Frederick Converse
-Beach, was one of the editors of that periodical,
-and his grandson, Stanley Yale Beach, is still in the
-same field of endeavour.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_164" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">164</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">“THE SUN” IN THE MEXICAN WAR</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>Moses Y. Beach as an Emissary of President Polk.—The Associated
-Press Founded in the Office of “The Sun.”—Ben
-Day’s Brother-in-Law Retires with a Small Fortune.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> Beaches, father and sons, owned the <i>Sun</i>
-throughout the Mexican War, a period notable for
-the advance of newspaper enterprise; and Moses Yale
-Beach proved more than once that he was the peer of
-Bennett in the matter of getting news.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly before war was declared—April 24, 1846—the
-telegraph-line was built from Philadelphia to Fort
-Lee, New Jersey, opposite New York. June found a
-line opened from New York to Boston; September, a
-line from New York to Albany. The ports and the capitals
-of the nation were no longer dependent on horse expresses,
-or even upon the railroads, for brief news of
-importance. Morse had subdued space.</p>
-
-<p>For a little time after the Mexican War began there
-was a gap in the telegraph between Washington and
-New York, the line between Baltimore and Philadelphia
-not having been completed; but with the aid of special
-trains the <i>Sun</i> was able to present the news a few hours
-after it left Washington. It was, of course, not exactly
-fresh news, for the actual hostilities in Mexico were not
-heard of at Washington until May 11, more than two
-weeks after their accomplishment.</p>
-
-<p>The good news from the battle-fields of Palo Alto
-and Resaca de la Palma was eighteen days in reaching<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">165</span>
-New York. All Mexican news came by steamer to New
-Orleans or Mobile, and was forwarded from those ports,
-by the railroad or other means, to the nearest telegraph-station.
-Moses Y. Beach was instrumental in whipping
-up the service from the South, for he established a
-special railroad news service between Mobile and Montgomery,
-a district of Alabama where there had been
-much delay.</p>
-
-<p>On September 11, 1846, the <i>Sun</i> uttered halleluiahs
-over the spread of the telegraph. The line to Buffalo
-had been opened on the previous day. The invention
-had been in every-day use only two years, but more than
-twelve hundred miles of line had been built, as follows:</p>
-
-<table id="t165" class="tnarrow30" summary="miles of telegraph lines in 1846">
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">New York to Boston</td>
- <td class="tdr">265</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">New York to Albany and Buffalo</td>
- <td class="tdr">507</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">New York to Philadelphia, Baltimore, and Washington</td>
- <td class="tdr">240</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Philadelphia to Harrisburg</td>
- <td class="tdr">105</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Boston to Lowell</td>
- <td class="tdr">26</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Boston toward Portland</td>
- <td class="tdr">55</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Ithaca to Auburn</td>
- <td class="tdr">40</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Troy to Saratoga</td>
- <td class="tdr">31</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="in2">Total</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><span class="bt">1,269</span></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>England had then only one hundred and seventy-five
-miles of telegraph. “This,” gloated the <i>Sun</i>, “is
-American enterprise!”</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> did not have a special correspondent in
-Mexico, and most of its big stories during the war, including
-the account of the storming of Monterey, were
-those sent to the New Orleans <i>Picayune</i> by George W.
-Kendall, who is supposed to have put in the mouth of
-General Taylor the <span class="locked">words—</span></p>
-
-<p>“A little more grape, Captain Bragg!”</p>
-
-<p>Moses Yale Beach himself started for Mexico as a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">166</span>
-special agent of President Polk, with power to talk
-peace, but the negotiations between Beach and the
-Mexican government were broken off by a false report
-of General Taylor’s defeat by Santa Anna, and Mr.
-Beach returned to his paper.</p>
-
-<p>The more facilities for news-getting the papers enjoyed,
-the more they printed—and the more it cost them.
-Each had been doing its bit on its own hook. The <i>Sun</i>
-and the <i>Courier and Enquirer</i> had spent extravagant
-sums on their horse expresses from Washington. The
-<i>Sun</i> and the <i>Herald</i> may have profited by hiring express-trains
-to race from Boston to New York with the latest
-news brought by the steamships, but the outflow of
-money was immense. The news-boats—clipper-ships,
-steam-vessels, and rowboats—which went down to Sandy
-Hook to meet incoming steamers cost the <i>Sun</i>, the
-<i>Herald</i>, the <i>Courier and Enquirer</i>, and the <i>Journal of
-Commerce</i> a pretty penny.</p>
-
-<p>With the coming of the Mexican War there were special
-trains to be run in the South. And now the telegraph,
-with its expensive tolls, was magnetizing money
-out of every newspaper’s till. Not only that, but there
-was only one wire, and the correspondent who got to
-it first usually hogged it, paying tolls to have a chapter
-from the Bible, or whatever was the reporter’s favourite
-book, put on the wire until his story should be ready
-to start.</p>
-
-<p>It was all wrong, and at last, through pain in the
-pocket, the newspapers came to realize it. At a conference
-held in the office of the <i>Sun</i>, toward the close of
-the Mexican War, steps were taken to lessen the waste
-of money, men, and time.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_166" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 34em;">
- <img src="images/i_166a.jpg" width="1637" height="1924" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
-
-<p>MOSES SPERRY BEACH</p>
-
-<p class="subhead">A Nephew of Benjamin H. Day and a Son of Moses Yale Beach. He Held
-“The Sun” Until Dana’s Time. This Picture is Reproduced from the First
-Edition of Mark Twain’s “Innocents Abroad.” Mr. Beach Was One of Clemens’s
-Fellow Voyagers.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>At this meeting, presided over by Gerard Hallock,
-the veteran editor of the <i>Journal of Commerce</i>, there
-were represented the <i>Sun</i>, the <i>Herald</i>, the <i>Tribune</i>—the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">167</span>
-three most militant morning papers—the <i>Courier
-and Enquirer</i>, the <i>Express</i>, and Mr. Hallock’s own
-paper. The conference formed the Harbour Association,
-by which one fleet of news-boats would do the work
-for which half a dozen had been used, and the New
-York Associated Press, designed for cooperation in the
-gathering of news in centres like Washington, Albany,
-Boston, Philadelphia, and New Orleans. Alexander
-Jones, of the <i>Journal of Commerce</i>, became the first
-agent of the new organization. He had been a reporter
-on both sides of the Atlantic, and it was he who invented
-the first cipher code for use in the telegraph, saving
-time and tolls.</p>
-
-<p>Thus in the office where some of the bitterest invective
-against newspaper rivals had been penned, there
-began an era of good feeling. So busy had the world
-become, and so full of news, through the new means of
-communication afforded by Professor Morse, that the
-invention of opprobrious names for Mr. Bennett ceased
-to be a great journalistic industry.</p>
-
-<p>As an example of the change in the personal relations
-of the newspaper editors and proprietors, the guests
-present at a dinner given by Moses Y. Beach in December,
-1848, when he retired from business and turned the
-<i>Sun</i> over to his sons Moses and Alfred, were the venerable
-Major Noah, then retired from newspaper life;
-Gerard Hallock, Horace Greeley, Henry J. Raymond,
-of the <i>Courier and Enquirer</i>, and James Brooks, of the
-<i>Express</i>. All praised Beach and his fourteen years of
-labour on the <i>Sun</i>, but there was never a word about
-Benjamin H. Day. Evidently that gentleman’s re-entry
-into the newspaper field as the proprietor of the
-<i>True Sun</i> had put him out of tune with his brother-in-law.
-Richard Adams Locke was there, however—the
-only relic of the first régime.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">168</span></p>
-
-<p>What the <i>Sun</i> thought of itself then is indicated in
-an editorial printed on December 4, when the Beach
-brothers relieved their father, who was in bad health:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>We ask those under whose eyes the <i>Sun</i> does not
-shine from day to day—our <i>Sun</i>, we mean; this large
-and well-printed one-cent newspaper—to look it over
-and say whether it is not one of the wonders of the age.
-Does it not contain the elements of all that is valuable
-in a diurnal sheet? Where is more effort or enterprise
-expended for so small a return?</p>
-
-<p>Of this effort and enterprise we feel proud; and a
-circulation of over fifty thousand copies of our sheet
-every day among at least five times that number of
-readers, together with the largest cash advertising
-patronage on this continent, convinces us that our pride
-is widely shared.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> that Ben Day had turned over to Moses Y.
-Beach was no longer recognizable. Fifteen years
-had wrought many changes from the time when the
-young Yankee printer launched his venture on the tide
-of chance. The steamship, the railroad, and the telegraph
-had made over American journalism. The police-court
-items, the little local scandals, the animal stories—all
-the trifles upon which Day had made his way to
-prosperity—were now being shoved aside to make room
-for the quick, hot news that came in from many quarters.
-The <i>Sun</i> still strove for the patronage of the
-People, with a capital P, but it had educated them away
-from the elementary.</p>
-
-<p>The elder Beach was enterprising, but never rash.
-He made the <i>Sun</i> a better business proposition than
-ever it was under Day. Ben Day carried a journalistic
-sword at his belt; Beach, a pen over his ear. Perhaps
-Day could not have brought the <i>Sun</i> up to a circulation
-of fifty thousand and a money value of a quarter of a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">169</span>
-million dollars; but, on the other hand, it is unlikely
-that Beach could ever have started the <i>Sun</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Once it was started, and once he had seen how it was
-run, the task of keeping it going was fairly easy for
-him. He was a good publisher. Not content with getting
-out the <i>Sun</i> proper, he established the <i>Weekly Sun</i>,
-issued on Saturdays, and intended for country circulation,
-at one dollar a year. In 1848 he got out the <i>American
-Sun</i>, at twelve shillings a year, which was shipped
-abroad for the use of Europeans who cared to read of
-our rude American doings. Another venture of Beach’s
-was the <i>Illustrated Sun and Monthly Literary Journal</i>,
-a sixteen-page magazine full of woodcuts.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Beach had for sale at the <i>Sun</i> office all the latest
-novels in cheap editions. He wrote a little book himself—“The
-Wealth of New York: A Table of the
-Wealth of the Wealthy Citizens of New York City Who
-Are Estimated to Be Worth One Hundred Thousand
-Dollars or Over, with Brief Biographical Notices.” It
-sold for twenty-five cents.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps Beach was the father of the newspaper syndicate.
-In December, 1841, when the <i>Sun</i> received
-President Tyler’s message to Congress by special messenger,
-he had extra editions of one sheet printed for
-twenty other newspapers, using the same type for the
-body of the issue, and changing only the title-head. In
-this way such papers as the <i>Vermont Chronicle</i>, the
-Albany <i>Advertiser</i>, the Troy <i>Whig</i>, the Salem <i>Gazette</i>,
-and the Boston <i>Times</i> were able to give the whole text
-of the message to their readers without the delay and expense
-of setting it in type.</p>
-
-<p>Here is Dana’s own estimate of the second proprietor
-of the <i>Sun</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Moses Y. Beach was a business man and a newspaper
-manager rather than what we now understand as a journalist—that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">170</span>
-is to say, one who is both a writer and a
-practical conductor and director of a newspaper. Mr.
-Beach was a man noted for enterprise in the collection
-of news. In the latter days when he owned and managed
-the <i>Sun</i> in New York, the telegraph was only
-established between Washington and Boston, though
-toward the end of his career it was extended, if I am
-not mistaken, as far towards the South as Montgomery
-in Alabama. The news from Europe was then brought
-to Halifax by steamers, just as the news from Mexico
-was brought to New Orleans. Mr. Beach’s energy found
-a successful field in establishing expresses brought by
-messengers on horseback from Halifax to Boston and
-from New Orleans to Montgomery, thus bringing the
-news of Europe and the news of the Mexican War to
-New York much earlier than they could have arrived
-by the ordinary public conveyance. With him were
-associated, sooner or later, two or three of the other
-New York papers; but the energy with which he carried
-through the undertaking made him a conspicuous and
-distinguished figure in the journalism of the city. The
-final result was the organization of the New York Associated
-Press, which has now become a world-embracing
-establishment for the collection of news of every description,
-which it furnishes to its members in this city and
-to other newspapers in every part of the country. Under
-the stimulus of Mr. Beach’s energetic intellect, aided
-by the cheapness of its price, the <i>Sun</i> became in his
-hands an important and profitable establishment. Yet
-he is scarcely to be classed among the prominent journalists
-of his day.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Through conservatism, good business sense, and
-steady work, Moses Y. Beach amassed from the <i>Sun</i>
-what was then a handsome fortune, and when he retired
-he was only forty-eight. His last years were spent at
-the town of his birth, Wallingford, where he died on
-July 19, 1868, six months after the <i>Sun</i> had passed out
-of the hands of a Beach and into the hands of a Dana.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_170" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 27em;">
- <img src="images/i_170a.jpg" width="1285" height="1687" alt="" />
- <div class="captionm">
-
-<p>(<i>From Photo in the Possession of
-Mrs. Jennie Beach Gasper</i>)</p></div>
- <div class="captionl">
-
-<p>ALFRED ELY BEACH</p>
-
-<p class="subhead">A Son of Moses Y. Beach; He Left “The Sun” to Conduct the “Scientific
-American.”</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Beach Brothers, as the new ownership of the <i>Sun</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">171</span>
-was entitled, made but one important change in the
-appearance and character of the paper during the next
-few years.</p>
-
-<p>Up to the coming of the telegraph the <i>Sun</i> had devoted
-its first page to advertising, with a spice of reading-matter
-that usually was in the form of reprint—miscellany,
-as some newspapermen call it, or bogus, as most
-printers term it. But when telegraphic news came to
-be common but costly, newspapers began to see the importance
-of attracting the casual reader by means of
-display on the front page. The Beaches presently used
-one or two columns of the latest telegraph-matter on
-the first page; sometimes the whole page would be so
-occupied.</p>
-
-<p>In 1850, from July to December, they issued an
-<i>Evening Sun</i>, which carried no advertising.</p>
-
-<p>On April 6, 1852, Alfred Ely Beach, more concerned
-with scientific matters than with the routine of daily
-publication, withdrew from the <i>Sun</i>, which passed into
-the sole possession of Moses S. Beach, then only thirty
-years old. It was reported that when the partnership
-was dissolved the division was based on a total valuation
-of two hundred and fifty thousand dollars for the paper
-which, less than nineteen years before, Ben Day had
-started with an old hand-press and a hatful of type.
-Horace Greeley, telling a committee of the British parliament
-about American newspapers, named that sum
-as the amount for which the <i>Sun</i> was valued in the sale
-by brother to brother.</p>
-
-<p>“It was very cheap,” he added.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_172" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">172</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">“THE SUN” DURING THE CIVIL WAR</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>One of the Few Entirely Loyal Newspapers of New York.—Its
-Brief Ownership by a Religious Coterie.—It Returns
-to the Possession of M. S. Beach, Who Sells It to Dana.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">In</span> 1852, when Moses Sperry Beach came into the sole
-ownership of the <i>Sun</i>, it was supposed that the
-slavery question had been settled forever, or at least
-with as much finality as was possible in determining
-such a problem. The Missouri Compromise, devised by
-Henry Clay, had acted as a legislative mandragora
-which lulled the United States and soothed the spasms
-of the extreme Abolitionists. Even Abraham Lincoln,
-now passing forty years, was losing that interest in
-politics which he had once exhibited, and was devoting
-himself almost entirely to his law practice in Springfield,
-Illinois.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> had plenty of news to fill its four wide pages,
-and its daily circulation was above fifty thousand. The
-Erie Railroad had stretched itself from Piermont, on
-the Hudson River, to Dunkirk, on the shore of Lake
-Erie. The Hudson River Railroad was built from New
-York to Albany. The steamship Pacific, of the Collins
-Line, had broken the record by crossing the Atlantic
-in nine days and nineteen hours. The glorious yacht
-America had beaten the British Titania by eight miles
-in a race of eighty miles.</p>
-
-<p>Kossuth, come as the envoy plenipotentiary of a
-Hungary ambitious for freedom, was New York’s hero.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">173</span>
-Lola Montez, the champion heart-breaker of her century,
-danced hither and yon. The volunteer firemen of
-New York ran with their engines and broke one another’s
-heads. The Young Men’s Christian Association,
-designed to divert youth to gentler practices, was organized,
-and held its first international convention at
-Buffalo in 1854. Lieutenant Ulysses S. Grant, of the
-United States army, was in California, recently the
-scene of the struggle between outlawry and the Vigilantes,
-and was not very sure that he liked the life of a
-soldier.</p>
-
-<p>Messrs. Heenan, Morrissey, and Yankee Sullivan furnished,
-at frequent intervals, inspiration to American
-youth. The cholera attacked New York regularly, and
-as regularly did the <i>Sun</i> print its prescription for
-cholera medicine, which George W. Busteed, a druggist,
-had given to Moses Yale Beach in 1849, and which is
-still in use for the subjugation of inward qualms. The
-elder Beach, enjoying himself in Europe with his son
-Joseph Beach, sent articles on French and German life
-to his son Moses Sperry Beach’s paper.</p>
-
-<p>Literature was still advancing in New England. Persons
-of refinement were reading Hawthorne’s “Scarlet
-Letter” and “The House of Seven Gables,” Ik Marvel’s
-“Reveries of a Bachelor,” Irving’s “Mahomet,”
-and Parkman’s “Conspiracy of Pontiac.” Marion Harland
-had written “Alone.” Down in Kentucky young
-Mary Jane Holmes was at work on her first novel,
-“Tempest and Sunshine.” But brows both high and
-low were bent over the instalments in the <i>National Era</i>
-of the most fascinating story of the period, Harriet
-Beecher Stowe’s “Uncle Tom’s Cabin.”</p>
-
-<p>The writing of news had not gone far ahead in quality.
-Most of the reporters still wrote in a groove a century
-old. Every chicken-thief who was shot, “clapped<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">174</span>
-his hand to his heart, cried out that he was a dead man,
-and presently expired.” But the editorial articles were
-well written. On the <i>Sun</i> John Vance, a brilliant Irishman,
-was turning out most of the leaders and getting
-twenty dollars a week. In the <i>Tribune</i> office Greeley
-pounded rum and slavery, while his chief assistant,
-Charles A. Dana, did such valuable work on foreign and
-domestic political articles that his salary grew to the
-huge figure of fifty dollars a week.</p>
-
-<p>Bennett was working harder than any other newspaper-owner,
-and was doing big things for the <i>Herald</i>.
-Southern interests and scandal were his long suits.
-“We call the <i>Herald</i> a very bad paper,” said Greeley
-to a Parliamentary committee which was inquiring
-about American newspapers. He meant that it was
-naughty; but naughtiness and all, its circulation was
-only half as big as the <i>Sun’s</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Henry J. Raymond was busy with his new venture,
-the <i>Times</i>, launched by him and George Jones, the
-banker. With Raymond were associated editorially
-Alexander C. Wilson and James W. Simonton. William
-Cullen Bryant, nearing sixty, still bent “the good grey
-head that all men knew” over his editor’s desk in the
-office of the <i>Evening Post</i>. With him, as partner and
-managing editor, was that other great American, John
-Bigelow.</p>
-
-<p>J. Watson Webb, fiery as ever in spirit, still ran the
-<i>Courier and Enquirer</i>, “the Austrian organ in Wall
-Street,” as Raymond called it because of Webb’s hostile
-attitude toward Kossuth. Webb had been minister to
-Austria, a post for which Raymond was afterward to
-be nominated but not confirmed. The newspapers and
-the people were all pretty well satisfied with themselves.
-And then Stephen A. Douglas put his foot in it, and
-Kansas began to bleed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">175</span></p>
-
-<p>Douglas had been one of the <i>Sun’s</i> great men, for the
-<i>Sun</i> listed heavily toward the Democratic party nationally;
-but it did not disguise its dislike of the Little
-Giant’s unhappily successful effort to organize the Territories
-of Kansas and Nebraska on the principle of
-squatter sovereignty. After the peace and quiet that
-had followed the Missouri Compromise, this attempt to
-bring slavery across the line of thirty-six degrees and
-thirty minutes by means of a local-option scheme looked
-to the <i>Sun</i> very much like kicking a sleeping dragon in
-the face.</p>
-
-<p>After Douglas had been successful in putting his bill
-through Congress, the <i>Sun</i> still rejected its principles.
-Commenting on the announcements of certain Missourians
-that they would take their slaves into the new
-Territory, the <i>Sun</i> said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>They may certainly take their slaves with them into
-the new Territory, but when they get them there they
-will have no law for holding the slaves. Slavery is a
-creation of local law, and until a Legislature of Kansas
-or Nebraska enacts a law recognizing slavery, all slaves
-taken into the Territory will be entitled to their freedom.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It was at this time that the germs of Secession began
-to show themselves on the culture-plates of the continent.
-The <i>Sun</i> was hot at the suggestion of a division
-of the Union:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>It can only excite contempt when any irate member
-of Congress or fanatical newspaper treats the dissolution
-of the Union as an event which may easily be
-brought about. There is moral treason in this habit of
-continually depreciating the value of the Union.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> saw that Douglas’s repeal of the Missouri
-Compromise was a smashing blow delivered by a Northern<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">176</span>
-Democrat to the Democracy of the North; but the
-sectional hatred was not revealed in all its intensity
-until 1856, when Representative Preston S. Brooks, of
-South Carolina, made his murderous attack on Senator
-Charles Sumner, of Massachusetts, in the Senate Chamber.
-This and its immediate consequences were well
-covered by the <i>Sun</i>, not only through its Associated
-Press despatches, but also in special correspondence
-from its Washington representative, “Hermit.” It had
-a report nearly a column long of Sumner’s speech,
-“The Crime Against Kansas,” which caused Brooks to
-assault the great opponent of slavery.</p>
-
-<p>That year was also the year of the first national convention
-of the Republican party, conceived by the Abolitionists,
-the Free Soilers, and the Know-nothings, and
-born in 1854. The <i>Sun</i> had a special reporter at Philadelphia
-to tell of the nomination of John C. Frémont,
-but the paper supported Buchanan. Its readers were
-of a class naturally Democratic, and although the paper
-was not a party organ, and had no liking for slavery or
-Secession, the new party was too new, perhaps too much
-colored with Know-nothingism, to warrant a change of
-policy.</p>
-
-<p>On the subject of the Dred Scott decision, written by
-Chief Justice Taney and handed down two days after
-Buchanan’s inauguration, the <i>Sun</i> was blunt:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>We believe that the State of New York can confer
-citizenship on men of whatever race, and that its citizens
-are entitled, by the Constitution, to be treated in
-Missouri as citizens of New York State. To treat them
-otherwise is to discredit our State sovereignty.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>John Brown’s raid at Harper’s Ferry was found
-worthy of a column in the <i>Sun</i>, but space was cramped
-that morning, for four columns had to be given to a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">177</span>
-report of the New York firemen’s parade. The firemen
-read the <i>Sun</i>.</p>
-
-<p>But Mr. Beach sent a special man to report Brown’s
-trial at Charlestown, Virginia. The editorial columns
-echoed the sense of the correspondence—that the old
-man was not having a fair show. Besides, the <i>Sun</i> believed
-that Brown was insane and belonged in a madhouse
-rather than on the gallows. It printed a five-thousand-word
-sermon by Henry Ward Beecher on
-Brown’s raid. Beecher and the Beaches were very
-friendly, and there is still in Beecher’s famous Plymouth
-Church, Brooklyn, a pulpit made of wood brought from
-the Mount of Olives by Moses S. Beach.</p>
-
-<p>When John Brown was hanged, December 2, 1859,
-the <i>Sun</i> remarked:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The chivalry of the Old Dominion will breathe easier
-now.... But, while Brown cannot be regarded as a
-common murderer, it is only the wild extravagance of
-fanatical zeal that will attempt to elevate him to the
-rank of a martyr.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the Illinois campaign of 1858 the <i>Sun</i> was slow
-to recognize Abraham Lincoln’s prowess as a speaker,
-although Lincoln was then recognized as the leading exponent
-of Whig doctrine in his State. Referring to the
-debates between Lincoln and Douglas in their struggle
-for the Senatorship, the <i>Sun</i> said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>An extraordinary interest is attached by the leading
-men of all parties to the campaign which Senator
-Douglas is conducting in the State of Illinois. His
-rival for the Senatorial nomination, Mr. Lincoln, being
-no match for the Little Giant in campaign oratory,
-Senator Trumbull has taken the stump on the Republican
-side.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Two years later, when Lincoln was nominated for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">178</span>
-President, the <i>Sun</i> saw him in a somewhat different
-light:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Mr. Lincoln is an active State politician and a good
-stump orator. As to the chances of his election, that is a
-matter upon which we need not at present speculate.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>But the time for the <i>Sun</i> to speculate came only three
-days later (May 22, 1860), when it frankly stated:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>It is now admitted that Mr. Lincoln’s nomination is
-a strong one.... He is, emphatically, a man of the
-people.... That he would, if elected, make a good
-President, we do not entertain a doubt. His chances
-of election are certainly good. The people are tired of
-being ruled by professional politicians.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>That was written before the Democratic national convention.
-The <i>Sun</i> wanted the Democrats to nominate
-Sam Houston. It saw that Douglas had estranged the
-anti-slavery Democrats of the North. When Douglas
-was nominated, the <i>Sun</i> remarked:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Of the six candidates in the field—Lincoln, Bell,
-Houston, Douglas, Breckinridge, and Gerrit Smith—Lincoln
-has unquestionably the best chance of an election
-by the people.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> had no illusions as to the candidacy of John
-C. Breckinridge, the Vice-President under Buchanan,
-when he was nominated for President by the Democrats
-of the South, who refused to flock to the colours of
-Douglas:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The secessionists do not expect that Breckinridge will
-be elected. Should Lincoln and Hamlin be elected by
-the votes of the free States, then the design of the conspirators
-is to come out openly for a disruption of the
-Union and the erection of a Southern confederacy.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">179</span></p>
-
-<p>“The Union cannot be dissolved,” the <i>Sun</i> declared
-on August 4, “whosoever shall be elected President!”</p>
-
-<p>And on the morning of Election Day the <i>Sun</i>, which
-had taken little part except to criticise the conduct of
-the Democratic campaign, said prophetically: “History
-turns a leaf to-day.” Its comment on the morning after
-the election was characteristic of its attitude during
-the canvass:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Mr. Lincoln appears to have been elected, and yet the
-country is safe.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In a paragraph of political gossip printed a week later
-the <i>Sun</i> said that Horace Greeley could have the collectorship
-of the port of New York if he resigned his
-claims to a seat in the Cabinet, and <span class="locked">that—</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>For the postmastership Charles A. Dana of the
-<i>Tribune</i>, Daniel Ullman, Thomas B. Stillman, and
-Armor J. Williamson are named. Either Mr. Dana
-or Mr. Williamson would fill the office creditably.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>That was probably the first time that Charles A.
-Dana got his name into the <i>Sun</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Although unqualifiedly opposed to Secession, the
-<i>Sun</i> did not believe that military coercion was the best
-way to prevent it. It saw the temper of South Carolina
-and other Southern States, but thought that it saw,
-too, a diplomatic way of curing the disorder. South
-Carolina, it said, had a greater capacity for indignation
-than any other political body in the world. Here was
-the way to stop its wrath:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Open the door of the Union for a free and inglorious
-egress, and you dry up the machine in an instant.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>This was somewhat on a plane with Horace Greeley’s
-advice in the <i>Tribune</i>—“Let the erring sisters go in
-peace.” The <i>Sun</i>, however, was more Machiavellian:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">180</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Our proposition is that the Constitution be so
-amended as to permit any State, within a limited period,
-and upon her surrender of her share in the Federal
-property, to retire from the confederacy [the Union] in
-peace. It is a plan to emasculate Secession by depriving
-it of its present stimulating illegality. Does any
-one suppose that even South Carolina would withdraw
-from the Union if her withdrawal were normal?</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>This was printed on December 8, 1860, some weeks
-before the fate of the Crittenden Compromise, beaten
-by Southern votes, showed beyond doubt that the South
-actually preferred disunion.</p>
-
-<p>With mingled grief and indignation the <i>Sun</i> watched
-the Southern States march out of the Union. It poured
-its wrath on the head of the mayor of New York, Fernando
-Wood, when that peculiar statesman suggested,
-on January 7, 1861, that New York City should also
-secede. “Why may not New York disrupt the bonds
-which bind her to a venal and corrupt master?” Wood
-had inquired.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> had more faith in Lincoln than most of its
-Democratic contemporaries exhibited. Of his inaugural
-speech it said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>There is a manly sincerity, geniality, and strength to
-be felt in the whole address.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The day after the fall of Fort Sumter the <i>Sun</i> found
-a moment to turn on the South-loving <i>Herald</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>We state only what the proprietor of the <i>Herald</i> undoubtedly
-believes when we say that if the national
-ensign had not been hung out yesterday from its windows,
-as a concession to the gathering crowd, the issue
-of that paper for another day would have been more
-than doubtful.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Shortly afterward the <i>Sun</i> charged that the <i>Herald</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">181</span>
-had had in its office a full set of Confederate colours,
-“ready to fling to the breeze of treason which it and the
-mayor hoped to raise in this city.” Later in the same
-year the <i>Sun</i> accused the <i>Daily News</i> and the <i>Staats-Zeitung</i>
-of disloyalty, and intimated that the <i>Journal
-of Commerce</i> and the <i>Express</i> were not what they should
-be. The owner of the <i>Daily News</i> was Ben Wood, a
-brother of Fernando Wood. In its youth the <i>News</i> had
-been a newspaper of considerable distinction. It was
-an offshoot of the <i>Evening Post</i>, and one of its first
-editors was Parke Godwin, son-in-law of William Cullen
-Bryant. Another of its early editors was Samuel J.
-Tilden.</p>
-
-<p>Wood, who was a Kentuckian by birth, made the
-<i>News</i> a Tammany organ and used it to get himself
-elected to Congress, where he served as a Representative
-from 1861 to 1865, constantly opposing the continuation
-of the war. The <i>Sun’s</i> accusation of disloyalty against
-the <i>News</i> was echoed in Washington, and for eighteen
-months, early in the war, the <i>News</i> was suppressed.
-The <i>Staats-Zeitung</i>, also included in the <i>Sun’s</i> suspicion,
-was then owned by Oswald Ottendorfer, who had come
-into possession of the great German daily in 1859, by
-his marriage to Mrs. Jacob Uhl, widow of the man who
-established it as a daily.</p>
-
-<p>Presence in the ranks of the copperhead journalists
-was disastrous to the owner of the <i>Journal of Commerce</i>,
-Gerard Hallock, who had been one of the great
-figures of American journalism for thirty years. In
-the decade before the war Hallock bought and liberated
-at least a hundred slaves, and paid for their transportation
-to Liberia; yet he was one of the most uncompromising
-supporters of a national proslavery policy.
-When the American Home Missionary Society withdrew
-its support from slave-holding churches in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">182</span>
-South, Hallock was one of the founders of the Southern
-Aid Society, designed to take its place.</p>
-
-<p>In August, 1861, the <i>Journal of Commerce</i> was one
-of several newspapers presented by the grand jury of
-the United States Circuit Court for “encouraging rebels
-now in arms against the Federal government, by expressing
-sympathy and agreement with them.” Hallock’s
-paper was forbidden the use of the mails. He sold
-his interest in the <i>Journal of Commerce</i>, retired from
-business, never wrote another line for publication, and
-died four years later.</p>
-
-<p>Another contemporary of the <i>Sun</i> which suffered during
-the war was the <i>World</i>, then a very young paper.
-It had first appeared in June, 1860, as a highly moral
-daily sheet. Its express purpose was to give all the
-news that it thought the public <em>ought</em> to have. This
-meant that it intended to exclude from its staid columns
-all thrilling police reports, slander suits, divorce cases,
-and details of murders. It refused to print theatrical
-advertising.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>World</i> had a fast printing-press and obtained an
-Associated Press franchise. It hired some good men,
-including Alexander Cummings, who had made his mark
-on the Philadelphia <i>North American</i>, James R. Spalding,
-who had been with Raymond on the <i>Courier and
-Enquirer</i>, and Manton Marble. But the <i>World</i>,
-stripped of lively human news, was a failure. After
-two hundred thousand dollars had been sunk in a footless
-enterprise, the religious coterie retired, and left the
-<i>World</i> to the worldly.</p>
-
-<p>Its later owners were variously reported to be August
-Belmont, Fernando Wood, and Benjamin Wood; but it
-finally passed entirely into the hands of Manton Marble,
-who made it a free-trade Democratic organ. Marble
-had learned the newspaper business on the <i>Journal</i> and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">183</span>
-the <i>Traveler</i> in Boston, and in 1858 and 1859 he was
-on the staff of the <i>Evening Post</i>. In July, 1861, the
-<i>World</i> and the <i>Courier and Enquirer</i> were consolidated,
-and Colonel J. Watson Webb, who had owned and
-edited the latter paper for thirty-four years, retired
-from newspaper life.</p>
-
-<p>During the Civil War the <i>World</i> was strongly opposed
-to President Lincoln’s administration. Perhaps
-this fact accounts for the punishment which befell it
-through the misdeed of an outsider.</p>
-
-<p>In May, 1864, there was sent to most of the morning-newspaper
-offices what purported to be a proclamation
-by the President, appointing a day of fasting and
-prayer, and calling into military service, by volunteering
-and draft, four hundred thousand additional troops.
-This was a fake, engineered by Joseph Howard, Jr., a
-newspaperman who had been employed on the <i>Tribune</i>,
-and who put out the hoax for the purpose of influencing
-the stock-market. The <i>Sun</i>, the <i>Tribune</i>, and the <i>Times</i>
-did not fall for the hoax, but the <i>Herald</i>, the <i>World</i>, and
-the <i>Journal of Commerce</i> printed it, stopping their
-presses when they learned the truth.</p>
-
-<p>General John A. Dix seized the offices of the <i>Herald</i>,
-the <i>World</i>, and the <i>Journal of Commerce</i>, put soldiers
-to guard them, and suppressed the papers for several
-days—all this by order of the President. Howard, the
-forger, was arrested, and on his confession was sent to
-Fort Lafayette, where he was a prisoner for several
-weeks. Manton Marble wrote a bitter letter to Lincoln
-in protest against what he considered an outrage on the
-<i>World</i>. Marble remained at the head of the paper until
-1876.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> took the setback of Bull Run with better
-grace than most of the papers—far better than Horace
-Greeley, who yelled for a truce. It seemed to see that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">184</span>
-this was only the beginning of a long conflict, which
-must be fought to the end, regardless of disappointments.
-On August 15, 1861, it declared:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Let there be but one war. Better it should cost millions
-of lives than that we should live in hourly dread of
-wars, contiguous to a people who could make foreign
-alliances and land armies upon our shores to destroy
-our liberties.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>On the subject of the war’s cost it said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>No more talk of carrying on the war economically!
-The only economy is to make short and swift work of
-it, and the people are ready to bear the expense, if it
-were five hundred millions of dollars, to-day.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>This was printed when the war was very young; when
-no man dreamed that it would cost the Federal government
-six times five hundred millions.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun’s</i> editorial articles were not without criticism
-of the conduct of the war. It was one of the many papers
-that demanded the resignation of Seward at a time
-when the Secretary of State was generally blamed for
-what seemed to be the dilly-dallying of the government.
-Lincoln himself was still regarded as a politician as
-well as a statesman—a view which was reflected in the
-<i>Sun’s</i> comment on the preliminary proclamation of
-emancipation, September 22, 1862:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>As the greatest and most momentous act of our nation,
-from its foundation to the present time, we would
-rather have seen this step disconnected from all lesser
-considerations and from party influences.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The inference in this was that Lincoln had deliberately
-made his great stroke on the eve of the Republican
-State convention in New York.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Tribune</i> declared that the proclamation was “the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">185</span>
-beginning of the end of the rebellion.” “The wisdom of
-the step is unquestionable,” said the <i>Times</i>; “its necessity
-indisputable.” The businesslike <i>Herald</i> remarked
-that it inaugurated “an overwhelming revolution in
-the system of labour.” The <i>World</i> said that it regretted
-the proclamation and doubted the President’s power to
-free the slaves. “We regard it with profound regret,”
-said the <i>Journal of Commerce</i>. “It is usurpation of
-power!” shouted the <i>Staats-Zeitung</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the general tone of the New York morning
-newspapers during the war. Only three—the <i>Sun</i>, the
-<i>Tribune</i>, and the <i>Times</i>—could be described as out-and-out
-loyalists. The <i>Sun</i> was for backing up Lincoln
-whenever it believed him right, and that was most of the
-time; yet it was free in its criticism of various phases of
-the conduct of the war.</p>
-
-<p>Like most of the Democrats of New York, the <i>Sun</i>
-was an admirer of General McClellan, and it believed
-that his removal from the command of the army was due
-to politics. But when the election of 1864 came around,
-the <i>Sun</i> refused to join its party contemporaries in wild
-abuse of Lincoln and Johnson. On the morning after
-the Republican nominations it said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>It is no time to quarrel with those men who honestly
-wish to crush the rebellion on the ground that they have
-nominated a rail-splitter and a tailor. It would be
-more consistent with true democracy if these men were
-honored for rising from an humble sphere.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> supported McClellan, praising him for his
-repudiation of the plank in the Democratic platform
-which declared the war a failure; but in the last days
-of the campaign it was frank in its predictions that
-Lincoln would be elected. On the morning after election
-it had this to say:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">186</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The reelection of Abraham Lincoln announces to the
-world how firmly we have resolved to be a free and
-united people.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>After the assassination of President Lincoln the <i>Sun</i>
-said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>In the death of Mr. Lincoln the Southern people have
-lost one of the best friends they had at the North. He
-would have treated them with more gentleness than any
-other statesman. From him they would have obtained
-concessions it is now almost impossible for our rulers
-and people to grant.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun’s</i> attitude toward the copperheads and
-deluded pacifists of the North is reflected in an editorial
-article published on June 5, 1863. The North was then
-in its worst panic. Only a month previously Lee had
-defeated Hooker at Chancellorsville, and the victorious
-Confederates were marching through Maryland into
-Pennsylvania. At a mass-meeting in Cooper Union,
-George Francis Train and other copperheads denounced
-the war, praised Vallandigham, of Ohio, who had been
-banished into the South for his unpatriotic conduct, and
-declared for “peace and reunion.” It was largely a
-Democratic meeting, but the <i>Sun</i> would not stomach the
-disloyal outburst:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The fact that over ten thousand people assembled in
-and about Cooper Union on Thursday evening to listen
-to speeches and adopt an address and resolutions prepared
-under that “eye single to the public welfare,”
-discloses the ease with which a few political tricksters
-may present false issues to the unthinking and, in the
-excitement of the moment, induce their hearers to applaud
-sentiments that, when calmly considered, are unworthy
-of a great and free people. Taking advantage
-of the blunders of the present administration, these self-styled
-Democrats raise their banners and, under the
-guise of proclaiming peace, in reality proclaim a war<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">187</span>
-upon those very principles it is the highest boast of every
-true Democrat to acknowledge.</p>
-
-<p>The Democratic party is essentially the peace party
-of the present rebellion; but it will sanction no peace
-that is obtained by compromising the vital principles
-that give force to our form of government. They will
-not ask for peace at the expense of the Union, and desire
-no Democratic victories that do not legitimately
-belong to them as an expression of the confidence of the
-people in their fidelity to the Union and the Constitution.</p>
-
-<p>The late meeting, then, should not be sanctioned by
-any true Democrat. It was in no sense Democratic;
-it was in reality an opposition meeting, and only as
-such will it be looked upon as having any important
-bearing upon the great questions of the hour, and if
-rightly interpreted by the administration will exert no
-evil influence upon the future destinies of this great
-nation.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The methods of gathering war news, early in the conflict,
-were haphazard. The first reports to reach New
-York from Southern fields were usually the government
-bulletins, but they were not as trustworthy as the official
-bulletins of the European war.</p>
-
-<p>On the morning after the first battle of Bull Run, the
-<i>Sun’s</i> readers were treated to joyous head-lines:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>A GREAT BATTLE—SEVENTY THOUSAND REBELS
-IN IT—OUR ARMY VICTORIOUS—GREAT LOSS OF
-LIFE—TWELVE HOURS’ FIGHTING—RETREAT OF
-THE REBELS—UNITED STATES FORCES PRESSING
-FORWARD.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>But on the following morning the tune changed:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>RETREAT OF OUR TROOPS—OUR ARMY SCATTERED—ONLY
-TWENTY-TWO THOUSAND UNION
-TROOPS ENGAGED—ENEMY NINETY THOUSAND
-STRONG—OUR CANNON LEFT BEHIND.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">188</span></p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact, only about eighteen thousand
-troops were engaged on each side.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> had no famous correspondents at the front.
-It sent three reporters to Virginia in 1861, and these
-sent mail stories and some telegraph matter, which was
-of value in supplementing the official bulletins, the Associated
-Press service, the specials from “Nemo” and
-“Hermit,” the <i>Sun</i> correspondents in Washington, and
-the matter rewritten from the Philadelphia and Western
-newspapers.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> was still a local paper, with a constituency
-hungry for news of the men of the New York regiments.
-To the <i>Sun</i> readers the doings of General Meagher, of
-the Irish Brigade, or Colonel Michael Corcoran, of the
-Sixty-Ninth Regiment, were more important than the
-strategic details of a large campaign.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i>, like all the Northern papers, was frequently
-deceived by false reports of Union victories.
-Federal troops were in Fredericksburg—on the front
-page—weeks before they were in it in reality; in Richmond,
-years too soon. But there was no doubt about
-Gettysburg, although the North did not get the news
-until the 5th of July. The <i>Sun</i> came out on Monday,
-the 6th, with these head-lines:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>VICTORY!—INVASION COMES TO GRIEF—LEE
-UTTERLY ROUTED—HIS DISASTROUS RETREAT—ALL
-FEDERAL PRISONERS RECAPTURED—EIGHTEEN
-THOUSAND PRISONERS CAPTURED—MEANS
-OF ESCAPE DESTROYED.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>On April 10, 1865, the head-lines were sprinkled with
-American flags and cuts of Columbia, and the types
-carried the welcome news for which the North had
-waited for four long years:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">189</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>OUR NATION REDEEMED—SURRENDER OF LEE
-AND HIS WHOLE ARMY—THE TERMS—OFFICERS
-AND MEN PAROLED AND TOLD TO GO HOME—THE
-COUNTRY WILD WITH JOY, ETC., ETC., ETC.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The “etc., etc., etc.,” suggests that the head-writer
-was too wild with joy to go into more details.</p>
-
-<p>It was not until May, 1862, that the <i>Sun</i> abandoned
-the ancient custom of giving a large part of the first
-page to advertising. This reform came late, perhaps
-because Moses S. Beach was out of the <i>Sun</i> in the early
-months of the war.</p>
-
-<p>On August 6, 1860, the control of the paper had passed
-from Mr. Beach to Archibald M. Morrison, a rich young
-man of religious fervour, who was prompted by other religious
-enthusiasts to get the <i>Sun</i> and use it for evangelical
-purposes. Mr. Morrison gave Mr. Beach one hundred
-thousand dollars for the good-will of the paper, and
-agreed to pay a rental for the material. Mr. Beach retained
-the ownership of the building, of the presses,
-and, indeed, of every piece of type.</p>
-
-<p>The new proprietors of the <i>Sun</i> held a prayer-meeting
-at noon every day in the editorial rooms. They also
-injected a bit of religion into the columns by printing
-on the first page reports of prayer-meetings in the
-Sailors’ Home and of the doings of missionaries in
-Syria and elsewhere. In spite of the new spirit that
-pervaded the office, however, it was still possible for
-the unregenerate old subscriber to find some little space
-devoted to the fistic clashes of Heenan and Morrissey.
-Flies are not caught with vinegar.</p>
-
-<p>The new management made a sort of department paper
-of the <i>Sun</i>, the front page being divided with the
-headings “Financial,” “Religious,” “Criminal,”
-“Calamities,” “Foreign Items,” “Business Items,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">190</span>
-and “Miscellaneous.” It was not a bad newspaper, and
-it was quite possible that some business men would prefer
-it to the Beach kind of sheet; but it is certain that
-the advertisers were not attracted and that some readers
-were repelled. One of the latter climbed the stairs of
-the building at Fulton and Nassau Streets early one
-morning and nailed to the door of the editorial rooms a
-placard which read: “Be ye not righteous overmuch!”</p>
-
-<p>During the Morrison régime the <i>Sun</i> refused to accept
-advertisements on Sunday. Of course, the printers
-worked on Sunday night, getting out Monday’s paper,
-but that was something else. The <i>Sun</i> went so far
-(July 23, 1861) as to urge that the Union generals
-should be forbidden to attack the enemy on Sundays.
-“Our troops must have rest, and need the Sabbath,” it
-said.</p>
-
-<p>William C. Church, one of the rising young newspapermen
-of New York, was induced to become the
-publisher under the <i>Sun’s</i> new management. He was
-only twenty-four years old, but he had had a good deal
-of newspaper experience in assisting his father, the
-Rev. Pharcellus Church, to edit and publish the New
-York <i>Chronicle</i>. After a few weeks in the <i>Sun</i> office,
-however, Mr. Church saw that the paper, though daily
-treated with evangelical serum, was not likely to be a
-howling success; and on December 10, 1860, four months
-after he took hold as publisher, it was announced that
-Mr. Church had “withdrawn from the publication of
-the <i>Sun</i> for the purpose of spending some months in
-European travel and correspondence for the paper.”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Church wrote a few letters from Europe, but
-when the Civil War started he hurried home and went
-with the joint military and naval expedition headed by
-General T. W. Sherman and Admiral S. F. Dupont.
-He was present at the capture of Port Royal, and wrote<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">191</span>
-for the <i>Evening Post</i> the first account of it that appeared
-in the North. Later he acted as a war-correspondent of
-the <i>Times</i>, writing under the pseudonym “Pierrepont.”
-In October, 1862, he was appointed a captain of volunteers,
-and toward the close of the war he received the
-brevets of major and lieutenant-colonel.</p>
-
-<p>During the war Mr. Church and his brother, Francis
-Pharcellus Church, established the <i>Army and Navy
-Journal</i>, and in 1866 they founded that brilliant magazine,
-the <i>Galaxy</i>—later merged with the <i>Atlantic
-Monthly</i>—which printed the early works of Henry
-James. Colonel Church owned the <i>Army and Navy
-Journal</i>, and was its active editor, until his death, May
-23, 1917, at the age of eighty-one. He was the biographer
-and literary executor of John Ericsson, the inventor,
-and he wrote also a biography of General Grant.
-He and his brother Francis were the most distinguished
-members of a family which, in its various branches, gave
-no less than seventeen persons to literature.</p>
-
-<p>Francis P. Church’s connection with the <i>Sun</i> was
-longer and more pleasant than William’s. His writings
-for it ranged over a period of forty years. He was one
-of the <i>Sun’s</i> greatest editorial writers, and was the
-author of the most popular editorial article ever written—“Is
-There a Santa Claus?” But that comes in
-a later and far more brilliant period than the one in
-which William C. Church served the <i>Sun</i> all too
-briefly.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of 1861, what with the expense of getting
-war news, and perhaps with the reluctance of the readers
-to absorb piety, the <i>Sun’s</i> cash-drawer began to
-warp from lack of weight, and Mr. Beach, who had
-never relinquished his rights to all the physical part of
-the paper, took it back. This is the way he announced
-his resumption of control on New Year’s morning, 1862:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">192</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Once more I write myself editor and sole proprietor
-of the New York <i>Sun</i>. My day-dream of rural enjoyment
-is broken, and I am again prisoner to pen and
-types. For months I sought to avoid the surrender, but
-only to find resistance without avail.... But I congratulate
-myself on my surroundings. Never was prisoner
-more royally treated.</p>
-
-<p>What, then, to the readers of the <i>Sun</i>? Nothing save
-the announcement that I am henceforth its publisher
-and manager. They require no other prospectus, program,
-or platform.</p>
-
-<p class="p0 sigright"><span class="smcap">Moses S. Beach.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>John Vance, who is said to have worked twelve years
-without a vacation, left the <i>Sun</i> about that time because
-Mr. Beach refused to name him as editor-in-chief.
-Vance was a good writer, but he and Beach
-were often at odds over the <i>Sun’s</i> policies. It probably
-was Vance’s influence that kept the paper in line
-for Douglas in the Presidential campaign of 1860—a
-campaign in which the <i>Sun</i> was run for two months by
-Beach and for three months by the Morrisonites.
-Vance, in spite of his leaning toward Douglas, was an
-intimate friend of Elihu Burritt, the Learned Blacksmith,
-who was an Abolitionist and an advocate of universal
-brotherhood.</p>
-
-<p>On Beach’s return to the <i>Sun</i> he set out to recover its
-lost advertising and to restore some of the livelier news
-features that had been suppressed by the Morrison
-group. Early in the summer of 1862 he began to shift
-advertising from the front page, to make room for the
-big war head-lines that had been run on the second
-page. He also used maps and woodcuts of cities, ships,
-and generals. The <i>Sun’s</i> pictures of the Monitor and
-the Merrimac were printed in one column by deftly
-standing the gallant iron-clads on their sterns.</p>
-
-<p>It was in this summer that Beach reduced expenses<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">193</span>
-and speeded up the issue of the paper by adopting the
-stereotyping process, one of the greatest advances in
-newspaper history:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>About a week ago we commenced printing the <i>Sun</i> by
-a new process—that of stereotyping and printing with
-two presses. We are much gratified to-day in being
-able to say that the process has proved eminently successful.
-From this time forth we may expect to present
-a clean face to our many readers every day. We have
-completed one stereotype within seventeen minutes and
-a quarter, and two within nineteen minutes and a half.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>That was rapid work for 1862, but the stereotypers
-of the present day will take a form from the composing-room,
-make the papier-mâché impression, pour in the
-molten metal, and have the curved plate ready for the
-press in twelve minutes.</p>
-
-<p>The new process saved Beach a lot of money as well
-as much precious time. Before its coming, when the
-paper was printed directly from the face of the type,
-the <i>Sun</i> had to buy a full new set of type six or eight
-times a year, at an annual cost of six thousand dollars.</p>
-
-<p>The war played havoc with newspaper finances. The
-price of news-print paper rose to twenty-four cents a
-pound. All the morning papers except the <i>Sun</i> raised
-their prices to three or four cents in 1862. The <i>Sun</i>
-stayed at its old penny.</p>
-
-<p>On January 1, 1863, in order to meet advancing costs
-and still sell the <i>Sun</i> for one cent, Beach found it necessary
-to “remove one column from each side of the
-page”—a more or less ingenuous way of saying that the
-<i>Sun</i> was reduced from seven columns to five. The columns
-were shortened, too, and the whole paper was set
-in agate type. The <i>Sun</i> then looked much as it had
-appeared twenty years before.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">194</span></p>
-
-<p>With these economies Beach was able to keep the
-price at one cent until August 1, 1864, when the <i>Sun</i>
-slyly said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>We shall require the one cent for the <i>Sun</i> to be paid
-in gold, or we will receive as an equivalent two cents
-in currency.</p>
-
-<p>Apologies or explanations are needless. An inflated
-currency has raised the price of white paper nearly
-threefold.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Of course nobody had one cent in gold, so the <i>Sun</i>
-readers grinned and paid two cents in copper.</p>
-
-<p>From that day on the price of the <i>Sun</i> was two cents
-until July 1, 1916, when Frank A. Munsey bought the
-<i>Sun</i>, combined his one-cent newspaper, the New
-York <i>Press</i>, with it, and reduced the price to one
-cent. On January 26, 1918, by reason of heavy expenses
-incidental to the war, the <i>Sun</i>, with all the other large
-papers of New York, increased its price to two cents
-a copy. In its eighty-five years the <i>Sun</i> has been a
-penny paper thirty-two years, a two-cent paper fifty-three
-years.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> was constantly profitable in the decade before
-the Civil War. The average annual profits from
-1850 to 1860 were $22,770. The high-water mark in that
-period was reached in 1853, when the advertising receipts
-were $89,964 and the net profits $42,906. Its circulation
-in September, 1860, was fifty-nine thousand
-copies daily, of which forty-five thousand were sold on
-the island of Manhattan.</p>
-
-<p>One of the secrets of the <i>Sun’s</i> popularity in the years
-when it had no such news guidance as Bennett gave to
-the <i>Herald</i>, no such spirited editorials as Greeley put
-into the <i>Tribune</i>, no such political prestige as Raymond
-brought to the <i>Times</i>, was Moses S. Beach’s belief that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">195</span>
-his public wanted light fiction. The appetite created by
-Scott and increased by Dickens was keen in America.
-True, the penny <i>Sun’s</i> literary standards were not of
-Himalayan height. Hawthorne was too spiritual for
-its readers, Poe too brief. They wanted wads of adventure
-and dialogue, dour squires, swooning ladies, hellish
-villains, handsome heroes, and comic character folk.
-The young mechanic had to have something he could
-understand without knitting his brows. For him,
-“The Grocer’s Apprentice; a Tale of the Great
-Plague,” and “Dick Egan; or, the San Francisco
-Bandits,” written for the <i>Sun</i> by H. Warren Trowbridge.</p>
-
-<p>In the days before the Civil War, wives snatched
-the <i>Sun</i> from husbands to read “Maggie Miller; or,
-Old Hagar’s Secret,” “written expressly for the <i>Sun</i>”
-by Mary J. Holmes, already famous through “Lena
-Rivers” and “Dora Deane.” Ephemeral? They are
-still reading “Lena Rivers” in North Crossing,
-Nebraska.</p>
-
-<p>Horatio Alger, Jr., wrote several of his best tales
-for Mr. Beach, who printed them serially in the <i>Sun</i>
-and the <i>Weekly Sun</i>. To the New York youth of 1859,
-who dreamed not that in three years he would be clay
-on the slope at Fredericksburg, it was the middle of a
-perfect day to pick up the <i>Sun</i>, read a thrilling news
-story about Blondin cooking an omelet while crossing
-the Niagara gorge on a tight rope, and then, turning
-to the last page, to plunge into “The Discarded
-Son; or, the Cousin’s Plot,” by the author of
-“The Secret Drawer,” “The Cooper’s Ward,” “The
-Gipsy Nurse,” and “Madeline the Temptress”—for all
-these were written expressly for the <i>Sun</i> by young Mr.
-Alger. He was only twenty-five then, with the years
-ahead when, a Unitarian minister, he should see fiction<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">196</span>
-material in the New York street-boy and write the epics
-of <i>Ragged Dick</i> and <i>Tattered Tom</i>.</p>
-
-<p>What did the women readers of the <i>Sun</i> care about
-the discovery of oil in Pennsylvania or the wonderful
-trotting campaign of Flora Temple, when they could
-devour daily two columns of “Jessie Graham; or, Love
-and Pride”? The <i>Sun</i> might condense A. T. Stewart’s
-purchase of two city blocks into a paragraph, but there
-must be no short measure of “Gerald Vane’s Lost One,”
-by Walter Savage North.</p>
-
-<p>When the religious folk held the reins of the <i>Sun</i>
-they tried to compromise by printing “Great Expectations”
-as a serial, but the wise Mr. Beach, on getting
-the paper back, quickly flung to his hungry readers
-“Hunted Down,” by Ann S. Stephens. Later in the
-war he catered to the martial spirit with “Running
-the Blockade,” by Captain Wheeler, United States
-army.</p>
-
-<p>One column of foreign news, one of city paragraphs,
-one of editorial articles, one of jokes and miscellany, one
-of fiction, and nineteen of advertising—that was about
-the make-up of Beach’s <i>Sun</i> before the Civil War; that
-was the prescription which enabled the <i>Sun</i> to sell
-nearly sixty thousand copies in a city of eight hundred
-thousand people. It was a fairly well condensed paper.
-In February, 1857, when it printed one day two and a
-half columns about the mysterious murder of Dr.
-Harvey Burdell, the rich dentist of Bond Street, it
-broke its record for length in a police story.</p>
-
-<p>It was in Moses S. Beach’s time that the Atlantic
-cable, second only to the telegraph proper as an aid to
-newspapers, was laid. On August 6, 1858, when Cyrus
-W. Field telegraphed to the Associated Press from Newfoundland
-that the ends of the cables had reached both
-shores of the sea, the <i>Sun</i> said that it was “the greatest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">197</span>
-triumph of the age.” Eleven days later the <i>Sun</i> contained
-this article:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>We received last night and publish to-day what purports
-to be the message of Queen Victoria, congratulating
-the President of the United States on the successful
-completion of the Atlantic telegraph. We are
-assured that the message is genuine, and that it came
-through the Atlantic cable. It is not surprising, however,
-that the President, on receiving it, doubted its
-genuineness, as among the hundreds who crowded our
-office last evening the doubters largely preponderated.</p>
-
-<p>The message, accepting it as the queen’s, is, in style
-and tone, utterly unworthy of the great event which it
-was designed to celebrate.</p>
-
-<p>The message is so shabbily like royalty that we cannot
-believe it to be a fabrication.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Perhaps that was written by John Vance, the Irish
-exile. And perhaps the editorial article which appeared
-the following day was written by Beach himself:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Victoria’s message ... in its complete form, as it
-appears in our columns to-day, is friendly and courteous,
-though rather commonplace in expression and
-style.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>New York had a great celebration over the laying of
-the cable that week. The <i>Sun’s</i> building bore a sign
-illuminated by gaslight:</p>
-
-<p class="p1 b1 center wspace">
-S. F. B. MORSE AND CYRUS W. FIELD,<br />
-WIRE-PULLERS OF THE NINETEENTH<br />
-CENTURY.
-</p>
-
-<p>The first piece of news to come by cable was printed
-in the <i>Sun</i> of August 27, 1858, and ran:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>A treaty of peace has been concluded with China, by
-which England and France obtain all their demands,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">198</span>
-including the establishment of embassies at Peking and
-indemnification for the expenses of the war.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It will be remembered that this first cable was not a
-success, and that permanent undersea telegraph service
-did not come until 1866; but the results produced in
-1858 convinced the world that Field and his associates
-were right, and that perseverance and money would
-bring perfect results.</p>
-
-<p>After the war, when paper became cheaper, Beach
-preferred to enlarge the <i>Sun</i> rather than reduce its price
-to one cent. He never printed more than four pages,
-but the lost columns were restored, with interest, so
-that there were eight to a page. Even at two cents a
-copy it was still the cheapest of the morning papers;
-still the beloved of the working classes and the desired
-of the politicians. Just after the war ended the <i>Sun</i>
-declared that it was read by half a million people.</p>
-
-<p>On January 25, 1868, when the <i>Sun</i> had been in the
-possession of the Beaches for about thirty of its thirty-five
-years, a new editor and manager, speaking for a new
-ownership of the <i>Sun</i>, made this announcement at the
-head of the editorial column:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p1 center wspace larger">THE SUN</p>
-
-<p class="b1 center wspace"><span class="smcap">The Oldest Cheap Paper in New York.</span></p>
-
-<p>Notice is hereby given that the <i>Sun</i> newspaper, with
-its presses, types, and fixtures, has become the property
-of an association represented by the undersigned,
-and including among its prominent stockholders Mr.
-M. S. Beach, recently the exclusive owner of the whole
-property. It will henceforth be published in the
-building known for the last half-century as Tammany
-Hall, on the corner of Nassau and Frankfort
-Streets. Its price will remain as heretofore at two
-cents a copy, or six dollars per annum to mail subscribers.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">199</span>
-It will be printed in handsome style on a folio
-sheet, as at present; but it will contain more news and
-other reading matter than it has hitherto given.</p>
-
-<p>In changing its proprietorship, the <i>Sun</i> will not in
-any respect change its principles or general line of conduct.
-It will continue to be an independent newspaper,
-wearing the livery of no party, and discussing public
-questions and the acts of public men on their merits
-alone. It will be guided, as it has been hitherto, by uncompromising
-loyalty to the Union, and will resist every
-attempt to weaken the bonds that unite the American
-people into one nation.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> will support General Grant as its candidate
-for the Presidency. It will advocate retrenchment and
-economy in the public expenditures, and the reduction
-of the present crushing burdens of taxation. It will
-advocate the speedy restoration of the South, as needful
-to revive business and secure fair wages for labor.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> will always have all the news, foreign, domestic,
-political, social, literary, scientific, and commercial.
-It will use enterprise and money freely to make
-the best possible newspaper, as well as the cheapest.</p>
-
-<p>It will study condensation, clearness, point, and will
-endeavor to present its daily photograph of the whole
-world’s doings in the most luminous and lively manner.</p>
-
-<p>It will not take as long to read the <i>Sun</i> as to read the
-London <i>Times</i> or Webster’s Dictionary, but when you
-have read it you will know about all that has happened
-in both hemispheres. The <i>Sun</i> will also publish a semiweekly
-edition at two dollars a year, containing the
-most interesting articles from the daily, and also a condensed
-summary of the news prepared expressly for this
-edition.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Weekly Sun</i> will continue to be issued at one
-dollar a year. It will be prepared with great care, and
-will also contain all the news in a condensed and readable
-form. Both the weekly and semiweekly will have
-accurate reports of the general, household, and cattle
-markets. They will also have an agricultural department,
-and will report the proceedings of the Farmers’
-Club. This department will be edited by Andrew S.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">200</span>
-Fuller, Esq., whose name will guarantee the quality of
-his contributions.</p>
-
-<p>We shall endeavor to make the <i>Sun</i> worthy the confidence
-of the people in every part of the country. Its
-circulation is now more than fifty thousand copies
-daily. We mean that it shall soon be doubled; and in
-this, the aid of all persons who want such a newspaper
-as we propose to make will be cordially welcomed.</p>
-
-<p class="p0 sigright">
-<span class="l2"><span class="smcap">Charles A. Dana</span>,</span><br />
-Editor and Manager.</p>
-
-<p class="p0">New York, January 25, 1868.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Beneath this announcement was a farewell message
-from Moses Sperry Beach to the readers whom he had
-served for twenty years:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>With unreserved confidence in the ability of those
-who are to continue this work of my life, I lay aside an
-armor which in these latter years has been too loosely
-borne.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>So Moses S. Beach retired from journalism at forty-five.
-With the $175,000 paid to him for the <i>Sun</i>, and
-the profits he had made in his many years of ownership,
-he was easily rich enough to realize his dream of quiet
-rural life—a realization that lasted until his death in
-1892.</p>
-
-<p>But who was this Dana who was taking up at forty-eight
-the burden that a younger man was almost wearily
-laying down?</p>
-
-<p>It is very likely that he was not well known to the
-readers of the <i>Sun</i>. The newspaper world knew him as
-one who had been the backbone of Greeley’s <i>Tribune</i>
-in the turbulent period before the Civil War and for a
-year after the war was on. The army world knew him
-as the man who had been chosen by Lincoln and Stanton
-for important and confidential missions. Students<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">201</span>
-knew him as one of the editors of the “New American
-Encyclopedia.” By many a fireside his name was
-familiar as the compiler of the “Household Book of
-Poetry.” Highbrows remembered him as one of the
-group of geniuses in the Brook Farm colony.</p>
-
-<p>In none of these categories were many of the men
-who ran with the fire-engines, voted for John Kelly, and
-bought the <i>Sun</i>. But the <i>Sun</i> was the <i>Sun</i>; it was their
-paper, and they would have none other; and they would
-see what this Dana would do with it.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_202" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">202</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">THE EARLIER CAREER OF DANA</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>His Life at Brook Farm and His Tribune Experience.—His
-Break with Greeley, His Civil War Services and His
-Chicago Disappointment.—His Purchase of “The Sun.”</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Day</span> and Dana each did a great thing for the <i>Sun</i>
-and incidentally for journalism and for America.
-Day made humanity more intelligent by making newspapers
-popular. Dana made newspapers more intelligent
-by making them human.</p>
-
-<p>Day started the <i>Sun</i> at twenty-three and left it at
-twenty-eight. Dana took the <i>Sun</i> at forty-eight and
-kept it for thirty years. Each, in his time, was absolute
-master of the paper.</p>
-
-<p>“The great idea of Day’s time,” wrote E. P. Mitchell
-on the <i>Sun’s</i> fiftieth birthday, fifteen years after Dana
-took hold, “was cheapness to the buyer. The great idea
-of the <i>Sun</i> as it is, was and is interest to the reader.”</p>
-
-<p>Of the nine men who have been owners of the <i>Sun</i>,
-seven were of down-east Yankee stock, and six of the
-seven were born in New England. Of the editors-in-chief
-of the <i>Sun</i>—except in that brief period of the
-lease by the religious coterie—all have been New Englanders
-but one, and he was the son of a New Englander.</p>
-
-<p>Dana was born in Hinsdale, New Hampshire, on
-August 8, 1819. His father was Anderson Dana, sixth
-in descent from Richard Dana, the colonial settler; and
-his mother, Ann Denison, came of straight Yankee stock.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">203</span>
-The father failed in business at Hinsdale when Charles
-was a child, and the family moved to Gaines, a village
-in western New York, where Anderson Dana became a
-farmer. Here the mother died, leaving four children—Charles
-Anderson, aged nine; Junius, seven; Maria,
-three, and David, an infant. The widower went to the
-home of Mrs. Dana’s parents near Guildhall, Vermont,
-and there the children were divided among relatives.
-Charles was sent to live with his uncle, David Denison,
-on a farm in the Connecticut River Valley.</p>
-
-<p>There was a good teacher at the school near by, and
-at the age of ten Charles was considered as proficient in
-his English studies as many boys of fifteen. When he
-was twelve he had added some Latin to the three R’s.
-In the judgment of that day he was fit to go to work.
-His uncle, William Dana, was part owner of the general
-store of Staats &amp; Dana, in Buffalo, New York, whither
-the boy was sent by stage-coach. He made himself
-handy in the store and lived at his uncle’s
-house.</p>
-
-<p>Buffalo, a distributing place for freight sent West on
-the Erie Canal, had a population of only fifteen thousand
-in 1831. Many of Staats &amp; Dana’s customers were
-Indians, and young Charles added to the store’s efficiency
-by learning the Seneca language. At night he
-continued his pursuit of Latin, tackled Greek, read what
-volumes of Tom Paine he could buy at a book-shop
-next door, and followed the career, military and political,
-of the strenuous Andrew Jackson. When he had a
-day off he went fishing in the Niagara River or visited
-the Indian reservation.</p>
-
-<p>He was a normal, healthy lad, even if he knew more
-Latin than he should. When war threatened with Great
-Britain over the Caroline affair, Dana joined the City
-Guard and had a brief ambition to be a soldier. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">204</span>
-was of slender build, but strong. He belonged to the
-Coffee Club, a literary organization, and he made a talk
-to it on early English poetry.</p>
-
-<p>“The best days of my life,” he called this period.</p>
-
-<p>Staats &amp; Dana failed in the panic of 1837, and
-Charles, then eighteen, and the possessor of two hundred
-dollars saved from his wages, decided to go to
-Harvard. He left Buffalo in June, 1839, although his
-father did not like the idea of letting him go to Harvard.</p>
-
-<p>“I know it ranks high as a literary institution, but
-the influence it exerts in a religious way is most horrible—even
-worse than Universalism.”</p>
-
-<p>Anderson Dana had a horror of Unitarianism, and
-had heard that Charles was attending Unitarian meetings.</p>
-
-<p>“Ponder well the paths of thy feet,” he wrote in
-solemn warning to his perilously venturesome son, “lest
-they lead down to the very gates of hell.”</p>
-
-<p>Dana entered college without difficulty, and devoted
-much of his time to philosophy and general literature.
-He wrote to his friend, Dr. Austin Flint, whom he had
-met in Buffalo, and who had advised him to go to Harvard.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>I am in the focus of what Professor Felton calls
-“supersublimated transcendentalism,” and to tell the
-truth, I take to it rather kindly, though I stumble sadly
-at some notions.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>This was not strange, for besides hearing Unitarian
-discourse, young Dana was attending Emerson’s lectures
-at Harvard and reading Carlyle.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_204" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 26em;">
- <img src="images/i_204a.jpg" width="1249" height="2418" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
-
-<p>CHARLES A. DANA AT THIRTY-EIGHT</p>
-
-<p class="subhead">A Photograph Taken in 1857 When He Was Managing Editor
-of the New York “Tribune.”</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>In his first term Dana stood seventh in a class of
-seventy-four. In the spring of 1840 he left Cambridge,
-but pursued the university studies at the home of his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">205</span>
-uncle in Guildhall, Vermont. Here, at an expense of
-about a dollar a week, he put in eight hours a day at
-his books, and for diversion went shooting or tinkered
-in the farm shop. His sister, then fifteen years old, was
-there, and he helped her with her studies.</p>
-
-<p>Dana returned to Harvard in the autumn, but not
-for long. His purse was about empty, and he found no
-means of replenishing it at Cambridge. In November
-the faculty gave him permission to be absent during the
-winter to “keep school.” Dana went to teach at Scituate,
-Massachusetts, getting twenty-five dollars a month
-and his board.</p>
-
-<p>His regret at leaving college was keen, for it meant
-that he would miss Richard Henry Dana’s lectures on
-poetry, and George Ripley’s on foreign literature.</p>
-
-<p>Young Dana’s mind was full in those days. There
-was the eager desire for education, with poverty in the
-path. He thought he saw a way around by going to
-Germany, where he could live cheaply at a university
-and be paid for teaching English. There was also a
-religious struggle.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>I feel now an inclination to orthodoxy, and am trying
-to believe the real doctrine of the Trinity. Whether I
-shall settle down in Episcopacy, Swedenborgianism, or
-Goethean indifference to all religion, I know not. My
-only prayer is, “God help me!”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>But the immediate reality was teaching school in a
-little town where most of the pupils were unruly sailors,
-and Dana faced it with good-natured philosophy. At
-the end of a day’s struggle to train some sixty or seventy
-Scituate youths, he went back to the home of Captain
-Webb, with whose family he boarded, and read Coleridge
-for literary quality, Swedenborg for religion, and
-“Oliver Twist” for diversion. Candles and whale-oil<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">206</span>
-lamps were the only illuminants, and Dana’s eyes, never
-too strong, began to weaken.</p>
-
-<p>He returned to college in the spring of 1841, but his
-eyes would stand no more. He was about to find work
-as an agricultural labourer when Brook Farm attracted
-him. Through George Ripley he was admitted to that
-association, which sought to combine labour and intellect
-in a beautiful communistic scheme. He agreed to
-teach Greek and German and to help with the farm
-work.</p>
-
-<p>Dana subscribed for three of the thirty shares—at
-five hundred dollars a share—of the stock of the Brook
-Farm Institute of Agriculture and Education, as the
-company was legally titled. Brook Farm was a fine
-place of a hundred and ninety-two acres, in the town of
-Roxbury, about nine miles from Boston. It cost $10,500
-and, as most of the shareholders had no money to pay on
-their stock, mortgages amounting to eleven thousand
-dollars were immediately clapped on the place—a feat
-rare in the business world, at once to mortgage a place
-for more than its cost. Dana, now twenty-three years
-old, was elected recording secretary, one of the three
-trustees, and a member of the committees on finance
-and education.</p>
-
-<p>He remained as a Brook Farmer to the end of the
-five years that the experiment lasted. There he met
-Hawthorne, who lingered long enough to get much of
-the material for his “Blithedale Romance”; Thoreau,
-who had not yet gone to Walden Pond; William Ellery
-Channing, second, the author and journalist; Albert
-Brisbane, the most radical of the group of socialists
-of his day; and Margaret Fuller, who believed in Brook
-Farm, but did not live there.</p>
-
-<p>Brook Farm was the perfect democracy. The members
-did all the work, menial and otherwise, and if there<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">207</span>
-was honour it fell to him whose task was humblest. The
-community paid each worker a dollar a day, and
-charged him or her about two dollars and fifty cents a
-week for board. It sold its surplus produce, and it educated
-children at low rates. George Ripley, the Unitarian
-minister, was chief of the cow-milking group,
-and Dana helped him. Dana, as head waiter, served
-food to John Cheever, valet to an English baronet then
-staying in Boston.</p>
-
-<p>“And it was great fun,” Dana said, in a lecture delivered
-at the University of Michigan forty years afterward.
-“There were seventy people or more, and at
-dinner they all came in and we served them. There was
-more entertainment in doing the duty than in getting
-away from it.”</p>
-
-<p>It was at Brook Farm that Dana first made the acquaintance
-of Horace Greeley, who, himself a student
-of Fourier, was interested in the Roxbury experiment,
-so much more idealistic than Fourierism itself.</p>
-
-<p>Dana took Brook Farm seriously, but he was not one
-of the poseurs of the colony. No smocks for him, no
-long hair! He wore a full, auburn beard, but he wore
-a beard all the rest of his life. He was a handsome,
-slender youth, and he got mental and physical health
-out of every minute at the farm. By day he was busy
-teaching, keeping the association’s books, milking, waiting
-on table, or caring for the fruit-trees. He was the
-most useful man on the farm. At night, when the others
-danced, he was at his books or his writings.</p>
-
-<p>He wrote articles for the <i>Harbinger</i>, and for the <i>Dial</i>,
-which succeeded the <i>Harbinger</i> as the official organ of
-the Transcendentalists. Dr. Ripley was the editor of
-the <i>Harbinger</i>, and he had such brilliant contributors
-as James Russell Lowell and George William Curtis;
-but Dana was his mainstay. He wrote book-reviews,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">208</span>
-editorial articles and notes, and not a little verse. His
-“Via Sacra” is typical of the thoughtful youth:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Slowly along the crowded street I go,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Marking with reverent look each passer’s face,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Seeking, and not in vain, in each to trace</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That primal soul whereof he is the show.</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">For here still move, by many eyes unseen,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The blessed gods that erst Olympus kept;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Through every guise these lofty forms serene</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Declare the all-holding life hath never slept;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">But known each thrill that in man’s heart hath been,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And every tear that his sad eyes have wept.</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Alas for us! The heavenly visitants—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">We greet them still as most unwelcome guests,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Answering their smile with hateful looks askance,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Their sacred speech with foolish, bitter jests;</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">But oh, what is it to imperial Jove</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">That this poor world refuses all his love?</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>A Mrs. Macdaniel, a widow, came to Brook Farm
-from Maryland with her son and two daughters. One
-of the daughters brought with her an ambition for the
-stage, but her destiny was to be Mrs. Dana. On March
-2, 1846, in New York, Charles A. Dana and Eunice Macdaniel
-were married. That day, coincidentally, the fire
-insurance on the main building at Brook Farm lapsed,
-perhaps through the preoccupation of the recording
-secretary; and the next day this building, called the
-Phalanstery, was burned.</p>
-
-<p>That was the beginning of the end of Brook Farm
-and of Dana’s secluded life. He went to work on the
-Boston <i>Daily Chronotype</i> for five dollars a week. It
-was a Congregational paper, owned and edited by
-Elizur Wright. When Wright was absent, Dana acted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">209</span>
-as editor, and on one of these occasions he caused
-the <i>Chronotype</i> to come out so “mighty strong
-against hell,” that Mr. Wright declared, years afterward,
-that he had to write a personal letter to
-every Congregational minister in Massachusetts, explaining
-that the apparent heresy was due to his having
-left the paper in the charge of “a young man without
-journalistic experience.”</p>
-
-<p>In February, 1847, Dana went to New York, and
-Horace Greeley made him city editor of the <i>Tribune</i> at
-ten dollars a week. Later in that year Dana insisted
-on an increase of salary, and Greeley agreed to pay him
-fourteen dollars a week—a dollar less than his own
-stipend; but in consideration of this huge advance Dana
-was obliged to give all his talents to the <i>Tribune</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Dana still nursed his desire to see Europe, but he had
-given up the idea of teaching in a German university.
-Newspaper work had captured him. Germany was still
-attractive, but now as a place of news, for the rumblings
-against the rule of Metternich were being heard in central
-Europe. And in France there was a sweep of
-socialism, a subject which still held the idealistic Dana,
-and the beginning of the revolution in Paris (February
-24, 1848).</p>
-
-<p>Dana told Greeley of his European ambition, but
-Greeley threw cold water on it, saying that Dana—not
-yet thirty—knew nothing about foreign politics. Dana
-asked how much the <i>Tribune</i> would pay for a letter a
-week if he went abroad “on his own,” and Greeley
-offered ten dollars, which Dana accepted. He made a
-similar agreement with the New York <i>Commercial Advertiser</i>
-and the Philadelphia <i>North American</i>, and contracted
-to send letters to the <i>Harbinger</i> and the <i>Chronotype</i>
-for five dollars a week.</p>
-
-<p>“That gave me forty dollars a week for five letters,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">210</span>
-said Dana afterward; “and when the <i>Chronotype</i> went
-up, I still had thirty-five dollars. On this I lived in
-Europe nearly eight months, saw plenty of revolutions,
-supported myself there and my family in New York,
-and came home only sixty-three dollars out for the
-whole trip.” Not a bad outcome for what was probably
-the first correspondence syndicate ever attempted.</p>
-
-<p>The trip did wonders for Dana. He saw the foreign
-“improvers of mankind” in action, more violent than
-visionary; saw theory dashed against the rocks of
-reality. He came back a wiser and better newspaperman,
-with a knowledge of European conditions and men
-that served him well all his life. There is seen in some
-of his descriptions the fine simplicity of style that was
-later to make the <i>Sun</i> the most human newspaper.</p>
-
-<p>Social experiments still interested Dana after his return
-to New York in the spring of 1849, but he was
-able to take a clearer view of their practicability than
-he had been in the Brook Farm days. He still favoured
-association and cooperation, and every sane effort toward
-the amelioration of human misery, but he now
-knew that there was no direct road to the millennium.</p>
-
-<p>Once home, however, and settled, not only as managing
-editor, but as a holder of five shares of stock in the
-<i>Tribune</i>, Dana was kept busy with things other than
-socialistic theories. Slavery and the tariff were the
-overshadowing issues of the day.</p>
-
-<p>Greeley was the great man of the <i>Tribune</i> office, but
-Dana, in the present-day language of Park Row, was the
-live wire almost from the day of his return from Europe.
-When Greeley went abroad, Dana took charge. Greeley
-now drew fifty dollars a week; Dana got twenty-five,
-Bayard Taylor twenty, George Ripley fifteen. Dana’s
-five shares of stock netted him about two thousand dollars
-a year in addition to his salary.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">211</span></p>
-
-<p>Here is a part of a letter which Dana wrote in 1852
-to James S. Pike, the Washington correspondent of the
-<i>Tribune</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="in0"><span class="smcap">Keenest of Pikes</span>:</p>
-
-<p>What a desert void of news you keep at Washington!
-For goodness’ sake, kick up a row of some sort. Fight
-a duel, defraud the Treasury, set fire to the fueling-mill,
-get Black Dan [Webster] drunk, or commit some other
-excess that will make a stir.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The solemn phrases of transcendentalism had vanished
-from the tip of Dana’s pen.</p>
-
-<p>In the fight over slavery in the fifties, the effort of
-Greeley and Dana was against the further spread of
-the institution over new American territory, rather than
-for its complete overthrow. When Greeley was at the
-helm, the <i>Tribune</i> appeared to admit the possibility of
-secession, a forerunner of “Let the erring sisters depart
-in peace.” But when Dana was left in charge, the editorials
-pleaded for the integrity of the Union at any cost.
-Greeley was heart and soul for liberty, but his fist was
-not in the fight. Of the political situation in 1854,
-Henry Wilson wrote, in his “Rise and Fall of the
-Slave Power”:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>At the outset Mr. Greeley was hopeless, and seemed
-disinclined to enter the contest. He told his associates
-that he would not restrain them; but, as for himself, he
-had no heart for the strife. They were more hopeful;
-and Richard Hildreth, the historian; Charles A. Dana,
-the veteran journalist; James S. Pike, and other able
-writers, opened and continued a powerful opposition in
-its columns, and did very much to rally and assure the
-friends of freedom and nerve them for the fight.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Dana went farther than Greeley cared to go, particularly
-in his attacks on the Democrats; so far, in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">212</span>
-fact, that Greeley often pleaded with him to stop.
-Greeley wrote to James S. Pike:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Charge Dana not to slaughter anybody, but be mild
-and meek-souled like me.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Greeley wrote to Dana from Washington, where
-Dana’s radicalism was making his colleague uncomfortable:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Now I write once more to entreat that I may be
-allowed to conduct the <i>Tribune</i> with reference to the
-mile wide that stretches either way from Pennsylvania
-Avenue. It is but a small space, and you have all the
-world besides. I cannot stay here unless this request
-is complied with. I would rather cease to live at all.</p>
-
-<p>If you are not willing to leave me entire control with
-reference to this city, I ask you to call the proprietors
-together and have me discharged. I have to go to this
-and that false creature—Lew Campbell, for instance—yet
-in constant terror of seeing him guillotined in the
-next <i>Tribune</i> that arrives, and I can’t make him believe
-that I didn’t instigate it. So with everything here. If
-you want to throw stones at anybody’s crockery, aim at
-my head first, and in mercy be sure to aim well.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Again Greeley wrote to Dana:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>You are getting everybody to curse me. I am too sick
-to be out of bed, too crazy to sleep, and am surrounded
-by horrors.... I can bear the responsibilities that
-belong to me, but you heap a load on me that will kill
-me.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>With all Dana’s editorial work—and he and Greeley
-made the <i>Tribune</i> the most powerful paper of the fifties,
-with a million readers—he found time for the purely
-literary. He translated and published a volume of
-German stories and legends under the title “The Black
-Ant.” He edited a book of views of remarkable places<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">213</span>
-and objects in all countries. In 1857 was published his
-“Household Book of Poetry,” still a standard work of
-reference. He was criticised for omitting Poe from the
-first edition, and at the next printing he added “The
-Raven,” “The Bells,” and “Annabel Lee.” Poe and
-Cooper were among the literary gods whom Dana refused
-to worship in his youth, but in later life he
-changed his opinion of the poet.</p>
-
-<p>With George Ripley, his friend in Harvard, at Brook
-Farm, and in the <i>Tribune</i> office, Dana prepared the
-“New American Encyclopedia,” which was published
-between 1858 and 1863. It was a huge undertaking and
-a success. Dana and Ripley carefully revised it ten
-years afterward. In 1882, with Rossiter Johnson, Dana
-edited and published a collection of verse under the title
-“Fifty Perfect Poems.”</p>
-
-<p>Although Dana persisted that the Union must not
-fall, Greeley still believed, as late as December, 1860,
-that it would “not be found practical to coerce” the
-threatening States into subjection. When war actually
-came, however, Greeley at last adopted the policy of
-“No compromise, no concessions to traitors.”</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Tribune’s</i> cry, “Forward to Richmond!” sounded
-from May, 1861, until Bull Run, was generally attributed
-to Dana. Greeley himself made it plain that it was
-not his:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>I wish to be distinctly understood as not seeking to
-be relieved from any responsibility for urging the advance
-of the Union army in Virginia, though the precise
-phrase, “Forward to Richmond!” was not mine, and I
-would have preferred not to reiterate it. Henceforth I
-bar all criticism in these columns on army movements.
-Now let the wolves howl on! I do not believe they can
-goad me into another personal letter.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact, “Forward to Richmond!” was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">214</span>
-phrased by Fitz-Henry Warren, then head of the
-<i>Tribune’s</i> correspondence staff in Washington. He
-came from Iowa, where in his youth he was editor of the
-Burlington <i>Hawkeye</i>. He resigned from the <i>Tribune</i>
-late in 1861 to take command of the First Iowa Cavalry,
-which he organized. In 1862 he became a brigadier-general,
-and he was later brevetted a major-general.
-In 1869 he was the American minister to Guatemala.
-From being one of the men around Greeley he became
-one of the men with Dana, and in 1875–1876 he did
-Washington correspondence for the <i>Sun</i>, and wrote
-many editorial articles for it.</p>
-
-<p>In 1861 Dana was an active advocate of Greeley’s
-candidacy for the United States Senate, and almost got
-him nominated. If Greeley had gone to the Senate,
-Dana might have continued on the <i>Tribune</i>; but it became
-evident, before the war was a year old, that one
-newspaper was no longer large enough for both men.
-The sprightly, aggressive, unhesitating, and practical
-Dana, and the ambitious, but eccentric and somewhat
-visionary Greeley found their paths diverging. The circumstances
-under which they parted were thus described
-by Dana in a letter to a friend:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>On Thursday, March 27, I was notified that Mr.
-Greeley had given the stockholders notice that I must
-leave, or he would, and that they wanted me to leave
-accordingly. No cause of dissatisfaction being alleged,
-and H. G. having been of late more confidential and
-friendly than ever, not once having said anything betokening
-disaffection to me, I sent a friend to him to
-ascertain if it was true, or if some misunderstanding
-was at the bottom of it. My friend came and reported
-that it was true, and that H. G. was immovable.</p>
-
-<p>On Friday, March 28, I resigned, and the trustees at
-once accepted it, passing highly complimentary resolutions
-and voting me six months’ salary after the date of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">215</span>
-my resignation. Mr. Ripley opposed the proceedings in
-the trustees, and, above all, insisted on delay in order
-that the facts might be ascertained; but all in vain.</p>
-
-<p>On Saturday, March 29, Mr. Greeley came down,
-called another meeting of the trustees, said he had never
-desired me to leave, that it was a damned lie that he
-had presented such an alternative as that he or I must
-go, and finally sent me a verbal message desiring me to
-remain as a writer of editorials; but has never been near
-me since to meet the “damned lie” in person, nor written
-one word on the subject. I conclude, accordingly,
-that he is glad to have me out, and that he really set on
-foot the secret cabal by which it was accomplished. As
-soon as I get my pay for my shares—ten thousand dollars
-less than I could have got for them a year ago—I
-shall be content.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>That was the undramatic and somewhat disappointing
-end of Dana’s fourteen years on the <i>Tribune</i>. He
-was forty-three years old and not rich. All he had was
-what he got from the sale of his <i>Tribune</i> stock and what
-he had saved from the royalties on his books.</p>
-
-<p>From the literary view-point he was doubtless the
-best-equipped newspaperman in America, but there was
-no great place open for him then.</p>
-
-<p>Dana’s work on the <i>Tribune</i> had attracted the attention
-of most of the big men of the North, including
-Edwin M. Stanton, who in January, 1862, was appointed
-Secretary of War in place of Simon Cameron.
-Stanton asked Dana to come into the War Department,
-and assigned him to service upon a commission to audit
-unsettled claims against the quartermaster’s department.
-While in Memphis on this work he first met
-General Grant, then prosecuting the war in the West.</p>
-
-<p>In the autumn of 1862, Stanton offered to Dana a
-post as second Assistant Secretary of War, and Dana,
-having accepted, told a newspaperman of his appointment.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">216</span>
-When the news was printed, the irascible Stanton
-was so much annoyed—although without any
-apparent reason—that he withdrew the appointment.
-Dana then became a partner with George W. Chadwick,
-of New York, and Roscoe Conkling, of Utica, in an
-enterprise for buying cotton in that part of the Mississippi
-Valley which the Union army occupied.</p>
-
-<p>Dana and Chadwick went to Memphis in January,
-1863, armed with letters from Secretary Stanton to
-General Grant and other field commanders. But no
-sooner had their cotton operations begun than Dana saw
-the evil effect that this traffic was having. It had
-aroused a fever of speculation. Army officers were forming
-partnerships with cotton operators, and even privates
-wanted to buy cotton with their pay. The Confederacy
-was being helped rather than hindered.</p>
-
-<p>Disregarding his own fortunes, Dana called upon
-General Grant and advised him to “put an end to an
-evil so enormous, so insidious and so full of peril to the
-country.” Grant at once issued an order designed to
-end the traffic, but the cotton-traders succeeded in having
-it nullified by the government.</p>
-
-<p>Then Dana went to Washington, saw President Lincoln
-and Secretary Stanton, and convinced them that
-the cotton trade should be handled by the Treasury
-Department. As a result of Dana’s visit, Lincoln issued
-his proclamation declaring all commercial intercourse
-with seceded States to be unlawful. Thus Dana
-patriotically worked himself out of a paying business.</p>
-
-<p>Yet his unselfishness was not without a reward. It
-reestablished his friendly relations with Stanton, and
-won for him the President’s confidence.</p>
-
-<p>Just then there was an important errand to be done.
-Many complaints had been made against General Grant.
-Certain temperance people had told Lincoln that Grant<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">217</span>
-was drinking heavily, and although Lincoln jested—“Can
-you tell me where Grant buys his liquor? I
-would like to distribute a few barrels of the same brand
-among my other major-generals”—he really wished to
-have all doubts settled.</p>
-
-<p>The President and Mr. Stanton chose Dana for the
-mission. It was an open secret. If Grant did not know
-that Dana was coming to make a report on his conduct,
-all the general’s staff knew it. General James
-Harrison Wilson, biographer of Dana—and, with Dana,
-biographer of Grant—wrote of this situation:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>It was believed by many that if he [Dana] did not
-bring plenary authority to actually displace Grant, the
-fate of that general would certainly depend upon the
-character of the reports which the special commissioner
-might send to Washington in regard to him.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Wilson was at this time the inspector-general of
-Grant’s army. He consulted with John A. Rawlins,
-Grant’s austere young adjutant-general and actual chief
-of staff, and the two officers agreed that Dana must be
-taken into complete confidence. Wilson wrote:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>We sincerely believed that Grant, whatever might
-be his faults and weaknesses, was a far safer man to
-command the army than any other general in it, or than
-any that might be sent to it from another field.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Dana and Wilson and Rawlins made the best of a
-delicate, difficult situation. Dana was taken into headquarters
-“on the footing of an officer of the highest
-rank.” His commission was that of a major of volunteers,
-but his functions were so important that he was
-called “Mr. Dana” rather than “Major Dana.” Dana
-himself never used the military title.</p>
-
-<p>Dana sent his first official despatches to Stanton in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">218</span>
-March, 1863, from before Vicksburg. Grant’s staff made
-clear to him the plan of the turning movement by which
-the gunboats and transports were to be run past the
-Vicksburg batteries while the army marched across the
-country, and Dana made most favourable reports to
-Washington on the general’s strategy.</p>
-
-<p>Dana saw not only real warfare, but a country that
-was new to him. After a trip into Louisiana he wrote
-to his friend, William Henry Huntington:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>During the eight days that I have been here, I have
-got new insight into slavery, which has made me no
-more a friend of that institution than I was before....
-It was not till I saw these plantations, with their
-apparatus for living and working, that I really felt the
-aristocratic nature of it.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Under a flag of truce Dana went close to Vicksburg,
-where he was met by a Confederate major of artillery:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Our people entertained him with a cigar and a drink
-of whisky, of course, or, rather, with two drinks. This
-is an awful country for drinking whisky. I calculate
-that on an average a friendly man will drink a gallon
-in twenty-four hours. I wish you were here to do my
-drinking for me, for I suffer in public estimation for
-not doing as the Romans do.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Dana was with Grant on the memorable night of
-April 16, 1863, when the squadron of gunboats, barges,
-and transports ran the Vicksburg forts. From that
-time on until July he accompanied the great soldier.
-It was Dana who received and communicated Stanton’s
-despatch giving to Grant “full and absolute authority to
-enforce his own commands, and to remove any person
-who, by ignorance, inaction, or any cause, interferes
-with or delays his operations.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">219</span></p>
-
-<p>Dana was in many marches and battles. Like the
-officers of Grant’s staff, he slept in farmhouses, and ate
-pork and hardtack or what the land provided. The
-move on Vicksburg was a brilliant campaign, and in ten
-days Dana saw as much of war as most men of the
-Civil War saw in three years. Dana sent despatches to
-Washington describing the battles at Champion’s Hill
-and the Big Black Bridge, the investment of Vicksburg,
-and the establishment of a line of supply from the
-North. Through Dana’s eyes the government began to
-see Grant as he really was.</p>
-
-<p>Dana, with either Grant or Wilson, rode over all the
-country of the Vicksburg campaign, often under fire.
-He was present at Grant’s councils, and rode into Vicksburg
-with him after its surrender. Dana’s view of the
-great soldier’s personality is given in something he
-wrote many years later, long after their friendship was
-ended:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Grant was an uncommon fellow—the most modest,
-the most disinterested, and the most honest man I ever
-knew, with a temper that nothing could disturb, and a
-judgment that was judicial in its comprehensiveness and
-wisdom. Not a great man, except morally; nor an
-original or brilliant man, but sincere, thoughtful, deep,
-and gifted with courage that never faltered. When the
-time came to risk all, he went in like a simple-hearted,
-unaffecting, unpretending hero, whom no ill omens
-could deject and no triumph unduly exalt. A social,
-friendly man, too; fond of a pleasant joke and also
-ready with one; but liking above all a long chat of an
-evening, and ready to sit up with you all night talking
-in the cool breeze in front of his tent. Not a man of
-sentimentality, not demonstrative in friendship; but
-always holding to his friends and just even to the
-enemies he hated.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Here is Dana’s picture of Rawlins, sent to Stanton<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">220</span>
-on July 12, 1863—eight days after the fall of Vicksburg:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>He is a lawyer by profession, a townsman of Grant,
-and has great influence over him, especially because he
-watches him day and night, and whenever he commits
-the folly of tasting liquor, hastens to remind him that
-at the beginning of the war he gave him [Rawlins] his
-word of honor not to touch a drop as long as it lasted.
-Grant thinks Rawlins a first-rate adjutant, but I think
-this is a mistake. He is too slow, and can’t write the
-English language correctly without a great deal of careful
-consideration.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In spite of this criticism, Dana admired Rawlins.
-Without him, he said, Grant would not have been the
-same man.</p>
-
-<p>After Vicksburg and Gettysburg, Dana returned to
-Washington. He was now an Assistant Secretary of
-War, and his success as an official reporter on the conduct
-of the Army of the Tennessee had been so great
-that Stanton sent him to cover, in the same way, the
-operations of the Army of the Cumberland, going first
-to General Rosecrans at Chattanooga. Dana saw the
-hottest of the great fight at Chickamauga, and galloped
-twelve miles to send his despatches about it to Stanton.
-He made blunt reports to the government on the unfitness
-of Rosecrans:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>I consider this army to be very unsafe in his hands,
-but I know of no one except Thomas who could now be
-safely put in his place.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>After a conference at Louisville between Stanton and
-Grant, Rosecrans was relieved and Thomas became commander
-of the Army of the Cumberland. A fine soldier
-and a modest man, Thomas was disinclined to supplant
-a superior.</p>
-
-<p>“You have got me this time,” he said to Dana, “but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">221</span>
-there is nothing for a man to do in such a case but
-obey orders.”</p>
-
-<p>Dana’s despatches had made Stanton realize the importance
-of holding Chattanooga, and the Secretary of
-War ordered Thomas to defend it at all hazards.</p>
-
-<p>“I will hold the town till we starve!” replied
-Thomas.</p>
-
-<p>Dana was not only a useful eye for the government,
-but he was a valued companion for General Wilson and
-other officers who went with him on his missions. He
-knew more poetry than any other man in the army except
-General Michael Lawler, an Illinois farmer, whose
-boast it was that on hearing any line of standard English
-verse he could repeat the next line. Dana, the compiler
-of the “Household Book of Poetry,” would try to
-catch Lawler, but in vain. Dana was not so literal
-as the Illinois general, but General Wilson says that
-he “seemed never to forget anything he had ever
-read.”</p>
-
-<p>The great advantage of Dana’s despatches to Stanton
-was that they gave a picture of the doings in his
-field of work that was not biased by military pride or
-ambition. He wrote what he saw and knew, without
-counting the effect on the generals concerned. For one
-illuminating example, there was his story of the final
-attack in the battle of Missionary Ridge. To read
-Grant or Sherman, one would suppose that the triumphant
-assault was planned precisely as it was executed;
-but Dana’s account of that fierce day is the one that
-must be relied upon:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The storming of the ridge by our troops was one of the
-greatest miracles in military history. No man that
-climbs the ascent by any of the roads that wind along
-its front could believe that eighteen thousand men were
-moved up its broken and crumbling face, unless it was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">222</span>
-his fortune to witness the deed. It seems as awful as
-the visible interposition of God. Neither Grant nor
-Thomas intended it. Their orders were to carry the
-rifle-pits along the base of the ridge and capture their
-occupants; but when this was accomplished, the unaccountable
-spirit of the troops bore them bodily up
-those impracticable steeps, over bristling rifle-pits on
-the crest, and thirty cannon enfilading every gully. The
-order to storm appears to have been given simultaneously
-by Generals Sheridan and Wood, because the
-men were not to be held back, dangerous as the attempt
-appeared to military prudence. Besides, the generals
-had caught the inspiration of the men, and were ready
-themselves to undertake impossibilities.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>No wonder that even when Lincoln was confined to his
-chamber by illness, Dana’s despatches were brought
-to him; “not merely because they are reliable,” as
-Assistant Secretary of War Watson wrote to Dana,
-“but for their clearness of narrative and their graphic
-pictures of the stirring events they describe.” A conservative
-tribute to the best reporter of the Civil War.</p>
-
-<p>Dana returned to Washington about the beginning of
-1864 to take up office tasks, and particularly the reorganization
-of the Cavalry Bureau. Dishonest horse-dealers
-were plundering the government, and Dana
-never rested until he had sent enough of these rogues
-to prison to frighten the rest of the band. Dana was a
-good office man; he worked, says James Harrison Wilson,
-“like a skilful bricklayer.” And as he relieved
-Stanton of much of the routine of the War Department,
-the Secretary supported him in his assaults on dishonest
-contractors, even when the political pressure brought to
-bear for their protection was at its highest.</p>
-
-<p>Lincoln sent Dana to report Grant’s progress in the
-Virginia campaign that opened in May, 1864. On the
-26th, three weeks after the march began, he was able<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">223</span>
-to notify Washington of an entire change in the morale
-of the contending armies:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The rebels have lost all confidence, and are already
-morally defeated. This army has learned to believe
-that it is sure of victory. Even our officers have ceased
-to regard Lee as an invincible military genius....
-Rely upon it, the end is near as well as sure.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the eventful weeks of that early summer Dana
-became an observer for Grant as well as for the government.
-It was evident to Dana that the great soldier,
-and not Washington, must decide what was to be done.
-In a despatch from Washington, whither he had returned
-at Grant’s request, Dana said to the general:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Until you direct positively and explicitly what is to
-be done, everything will go on in the fatal way in which
-it has gone on for the past week.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Longstreet’s Confederates were coming down the
-Shenandoah Valley, and Grant, taking heed of Dana’s
-significant message, sent Sheridan to dispose of them.
-Then, as Grant himself was stationed in front of Petersburg,
-Dana resumed his activities in the office at Washington.</p>
-
-<p>“It has fallen to the lot of no other American,” says
-General Wilson, “to serve as the confidential medium
-of communication between the army and the government
-and between the government and the general-in-chief,
-as it did to Dana during the War of the Rebellion.”</p>
-
-<p>One pleasant errand which fell to Dana was the delivery
-to Sheridan, after his victory over Early at Cedar
-Creek, of his promotion to major-general. This entailed
-a journey on horseback through the Valley of Virginia,
-and the constant danger of capture by Mosby’s guerrillas;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">224</span>
-but Dana, who greatly admired Sheridan, was
-glad to take the chance.</p>
-
-<p>When the news came to Washington of the fall of
-Richmond, in April, 1865, Secretary Stanton sent Dana
-to the Confederate capital to gather up its archives.
-Many of these historically valuable papers had been
-removed and scattered, but Dana collected what he
-could and sent them to Washington. He wanted to be
-present with Grant at Lee’s surrender, but fate kept
-him in Richmond, for Lincoln was there, and needed
-him. When at last he got away, Grant had left Appomattox.
-Dana joined him <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">en route</i>, and together they
-reached Washington on the day before the President’s
-assassination.</p>
-
-<p>It was on the day of his arrival that Dana went to
-the President to ask him whether it would be well to
-order the arrest of Jacob Thompson, a Confederate
-commissioner who was trying to go from Canada to
-Europe through Maine. Lincoln returned the historic
-reply:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“No, I rather think not. When you have got an
-elephant by the hind leg, and he is trying to run away,
-it’s best to let him run!”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A few hours after the President’s death, however,
-Stanton ordered Dana to obtain Thompson’s arrest.</p>
-
-<p>Dana was active in unearthing the conspiracy that
-led to the assassination. A month later, acting under
-Stanton’s injunctions, he wrote the order to General
-Miles authorizing him to manacle and fetter Jefferson
-Davis and Clement C. Clay, Jr., whenever he thought
-it advisable, the Secretary of War being in fear that
-some of the prisoners of state might escape or kill
-themselves.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_224" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 34em;">
- <img src="images/i_224a.jpg" width="1607" height="2155" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
-
-<p>MR. DANA AT FIFTY</p>
-
-<p class="subhead">From a Photograph Taken in 1869, a Year After He Obtained Control of “The Sun.”</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Dana then and afterward resented the suggestion that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">225</span>
-the president of the fallen Confederacy had met with
-cruelty or injustice while he was confined in Fortress
-Monroe. In his “Recollections of the Civil War,” he
-said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Medical officers were directed to superintend his
-meals and give him everything that would excite his
-appetite. As it was complained that his quarters in
-the casemate were unhealthy and disagreeable, he was,
-after a few weeks, transferred to Carroll Hall, a building
-still occupied by officers and soldiers. That Davis’s
-health was not ruined by his imprisonment at Fort Monroe
-is proved by the fact that he came out of prison in
-better condition than when he went in, and that he
-lived for twenty years afterward, and died of old age.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A new newspaper, the <i>Daily Republican</i>, was started
-in Chicago, a few weeks after the close of the Civil War,
-by Senator Trumbull and other prominent Illinoisans.
-They asked Dana to become its editor. His work in
-the War Department was done, and he had hoped to go
-into business, for his own estimate of his power as a
-journalist was not as flattering as the opinions of those
-who knew him. Yet the Chicago proposition was attractive
-on paper, for its capital was fixed at the large
-sum of five hundred thousand dollars—an amount sufficient,
-in those days, to carry on any intelligently managed
-journal.</p>
-
-<p>Dana resigned as Assistant Secretary of War on
-July 1, 1865, went to Chicago, and became editor of the
-<i>Republican</i>. No man was more intellectually fit for
-the editorship of a newspaper in that hour of reconstruction.
-He had been a real Republican from the
-founding of the party. He cared little for the new
-President, Andrew Johnson, and the <i>Republican</i> was
-more inclined toward the side of Stanton, who differed
-with Johnson as to the methods which should be used<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">226</span>
-in the remaking of the South. Of Johnson, Dana wrote
-to General Wilson:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The President is an obstinate, stupid man, governed
-by preconceived ideas, by whisky, and by women. He
-means one thing to-day and another to-morrow, but the
-glorification of Andrew Johnson all the time.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The statement that the capital stock of the <i>Republican</i>
-was fixed at half a million dollars must now be qualified.
-It was fixed on paper, but not in the banks. Little of
-the money was actually paid in, and some of the subscribers
-were not solvent. Dana worked hard with his
-pen, but the <i>Republican</i> had not enough backing to
-hold it up. After one year of it Dana resigned and
-came East, determined to start a paper in New York.</p>
-
-<p>He had friends of influence and wealth who were
-glad to be associated with him. These included:</p>
-
-<p class="in0 in4">
-Thomas Hitchcock<br />
-Isaac W. England<br />
-Charles S. Weyman<br />
-John H. Sherwood<br />
-M. O. Roberts<br />
-George Opdyke<br />
-E. D. Smith<br />
-F. A. Palmer<br />
-William H. Webb<br />
-Roscoe Conkling<br />
-A. B. Cornell<br />
-E. D. Morgan<br />
-David Dows<br />
-John C. Hamilton<br />
-Amos R. Eno<br />
-S. B. Chittenden<br />
-Freeman Clarke<br />
-Thomas Murphy<br />
-William M. Evarts<br />
-Cyrus W. Field<br />
-E. C. Cowdin<br />
-Salem H. Wales<br />
-Theron R. Butler<br />
-Marshall B. Blake<br />
-F. A. Conkling<br />
-A. A. Low<br />
-Charles E. Butler<br />
-Dorman B. Eaton
-</p>
-
-<p>The most eminent of this distinguished group was,
-of course, William M. Evarts, then the leader of the
-American bar. He had been counsel for the State of
-New York in the Lemmon slave case, pitted against
-Charles O’Connor, counsel for the State of Virginia.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">227</span>
-He became chief counsel for President Johnson in the
-impeachment proceedings of 1868, and later was Johnson’s
-Attorney-General. He was chief counsel for the
-United States in the Alabama arbitration, senior counsel
-for Henry Ward Beecher in the Tilton case, Secretary
-of State under Hayes, and a United States Senator
-from 1885 to 1891.</p>
-
-<p>Roscoe Conkling was a United States Senator from
-New York at the time when Dana bought the <i>Sun</i>. He
-was one of Grant’s strongest supporters, and led the
-third-term movement in 1880. His brother, Frederick
-Augustus Conkling, was the Republican candidate for
-mayor of New York in the first year that Dana controlled
-the <i>Sun</i>, although later he changed his politics,
-supporting Tilden in 1876, and Hancock in 1880.</p>
-
-<p>Edwin D. Morgan was Conkling’s colleague in the
-Senate, where he served from 1863 to 1869. He was Governor
-of New York from 1858 to 1862. He, like most
-of Dana’s associates, was a Grant man, and it was Morgan
-who managed Grant’s second Presidential campaign.</p>
-
-<p>Alonzo B. Cornell, then only thirty-six years old,
-had risen from being a boy telegrapher to a directorship
-in the Western Union. He was already prominent in
-the Republican politics of New York State, and was
-afterward Governor for three years (1880–1882).</p>
-
-<p>George Opdyke, a loyal Lincoln man, had been mayor
-of New York in the trying years of 1862 and 1863.</p>
-
-<p>Cyrus W. Field had won world-wide distinction as
-the Columbus of modern times, as John Bright called
-him. Two years before Dana bought the <i>Sun</i> Field had
-succeeded, after many reverses, in making the Atlantic
-cable a permanent success.</p>
-
-<p>Amos R. Eno, merchant and banker, was the man
-who had made New York laugh by building the Fifth<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">228</span>
-Avenue Hotel so far north—away up at Twenty-Third
-Street—that it was known as Eno’s Folly. This he did
-nearly ten years before Dana went to the <i>Sun</i>, and in
-1868 the hotel was not only the most fashionable in the
-United States, but the most profitable.</p>
-
-<p>A. A. Low was a merchant and the father of Seth
-Low, later mayor of New York. William H. Webb was
-a big ship-builder. Thomas Murphy was a Republican
-politician whom Grant made collector of the port of
-New York, and who gave Grant his place at Long
-Branch as a summer home.</p>
-
-<p>At least three of the men in the list were active in
-the <i>Sun</i> office. Thomas Hitchcock was a young man
-of wealth and scholarship who had become acquainted
-with Dana when both were interested in Swedenborgianism.
-He wrote, among other books, a catechism of that
-doctrine. For many years he contributed to the <i>Sun</i>,
-under the name “Matthew Marshall,” financial articles
-which appeared on Mondays, and which were regarded
-as the best reviews and criticisms of their kind.</p>
-
-<p>Charles S. Weyman got out the <i>Weekly Sun</i>, and
-edited that delightful column, “Sunbeams.”</p>
-
-<p>Salem H. Wales was a merchant whose daughter became
-Mrs. Elihu Root. Dorman B. Eaton was one of
-the pioneers of civil-service reform. Marshall O. Roberts,
-F. A. Palmer, David Dows, and E. C. Cowdin were
-great names in the business and financial world.</p>
-
-<p>Why Dana and his friends did not start a new paper
-is explained in the following letter, written by Dana to
-General Wilson:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Just as we were about commencing our own paper,
-the purchase of the <i>Sun</i> was proposed to me and accepted.
-It had a circulation of from fifty to sixty thousand
-a day, and all among the mechanics and small
-merchants of this city. We pay a large sum for it—$175,000—but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">229</span>
-it gives us at once a large and profitable
-business.</p>
-
-<p>If you have a thousand dollars at leisure, you had
-better invest it in the stock of our company, which is
-increased to $350,000 in order to pay for the new acquisition.
-Of this sum about $220,000 is invested in the
-Tammany Hall real estate, which is sure to be productive,
-independent of the business of the paper.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The “Tammany Hall real estate” was the building
-at the corner of Nassau and Frankfort Streets, where
-Tammany kept its headquarters from 1811, when it
-moved from Martling’s Long Room, at Nassau and
-Spruce Streets, to 1867, when Dana and his friends
-bought the building with the expectation of starting a
-new paper. If Moses S. Beach had attracted Dana’s
-attention to the <i>Sun</i> in time, he might have sold him,
-as well as the paper, his own building at Nassau and
-Fulton Streets. But the Tammany Hall building was
-a better-placed home for the <i>Sun</i> than its old quarters.
-It faced City Hall Park and was a part of Printing-House
-Square. Dana was right about the productiveness
-of the real estate, for no spot in New York sees
-more pedestrians go by than the Nassau-Frankfort corner.
-The <i>Sun</i> lived there for forty-three years, and its
-present home, taken when the old hall became too small
-and ancient, is only a block away.</p>
-
-<p>The first number of the <i>Sun</i> issued under Dana—Monday,
-January 27, 1868—contained a long sketch of
-Tammany Hall and its former home, concluding:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Peace succeeds to strife. No new Halleck can sing:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">There’s a barrel of porter at Tammany Hall,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And the Bucktails are enjoying it all the night long;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">In the time of my boyhood ’twas pleasant to call</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">For a seat and cigar ’mid the jovial throng.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">230</span></p>
-<p>So far as the corner of Nassau and Frankfort Streets
-is concerned, <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">L’Empire est paix</i>. The <i>Sun</i> shines for
-all; and on the site of old Tammany’s troubles and tribulations
-we turn back the leaves of the past, dispel the
-clouds of discord, and shed our beams far and near over
-the Regenerated Land.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Dana changed the appearance of the <i>Sun</i> overnight.
-He kept it as a folio, for he always believed in a four-page
-paper, even when he was printing ten pages, but
-he reduced the number of columns on a page from eight
-to seven, widening each column a little.</p>
-
-<p>The principal head-lines, which had been irregular in
-size and two to the page, were made smaller and more
-uniform, and four appeared at the top of the front page.
-The editorial articles, which had been printed in minion,
-now appeared a size larger, in brevier, and the heads on
-them were changed to the simple, dignified full-face
-type of the size that is still used.</p>
-
-<p>Dana changed the title-head of the <i>Sun</i> from Roman,
-which it had been from the beginning, to Old English,
-as it stands to-day. He also changed the accompanying
-emblem. It had been a variation of the seal of the
-State of New York, with the sun rising in splendour behind
-mountains; on the right, Liberty with her Phrygian
-cap held on a staff, gazing at an outbound vessel;
-on the left, Justice with scales and sword, so
-facing that if not blindfolded she would see a locomotive
-and a train of cars crossing a bridge. These
-classic figures were kept, but the eagle—the State crest—which
-brooded above the sunburst in Beach’s time,
-was removed, so that the rays went skyward without
-hindrance.</p>
-
-<p>Dana liked “It Shines for All,” the <i>Sun’s</i> old motto—everybody
-liked it, but only one newspaper, the <i>Herald</i>,
-ever had the effrontery to pilfer it—but he took it from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">231</span>
-the scroll in the emblem and replaced there the State
-motto, “Excelsior.”</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i>, under its new master, rose auspiciously—master,
-not masters, for in spite of the number of his
-financial associates, Dana was absolute. The men behind
-him realized the folly of dividing authority. The
-<i>Sun</i>, whether under Day or one of the Beaches, had always
-been a one-man paper. Therefore it succeeded,
-just as the <i>Herald</i>, another journal governed by an
-autocrat, went ahead; but with the <i>Tribune</i>, where the
-stockholders ruled and argued, things were different.</p>
-
-<p>Dana was the boss. As General Wilson wrote in his
-biography:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>From this time forth it may be truthfully said that
-Dana was the <i>Sun</i>, and the <i>Sun</i> Dana. He was the sole
-arbiter of its policy, and it was his constant practice to
-supervise every editorial contribution that came in
-while he was on duty. The editorial page was absolutely
-his, whether he wrote a line in it or not, and he
-gave it the characteristic compactness of form and
-directness of statement which were ever afterward its
-distinguishing features.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Dana was a man whose natural intellectual gifts had
-been augmented by his travels, his experience on the
-<i>Tribune</i>, his exploits in the war, and his association
-with the big men of his time. Add to all this his solid
-financial backing and his acquirement of a paper with
-a large circulation, and the combination seemed an
-assurance of success. Yet, had Dana lacked the peculiarly
-human qualities that were his, the indefinable
-newspaper instinct that knows when a tom-cat on the
-steps of the City Hall is more important than a crisis
-in the Balkans, the <i>Sun</i> would have set.</p>
-
-<p>Only genius could enable a lofty-minded Republican,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">232</span>
-with a Republican aristocracy behind him, to take over
-the <i>Sun</i> and make a hundred thousand mechanics and
-tradesmen, nearly all Democrats, like their paper better
-than ever before. And that is what Dana did, except
-that he added to the <i>Sun’s</i> former readers a new
-army of admirers, recruited by the magic of his pen.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_233" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">233</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">DANA: HIS “SUN” AND ITS CITY</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>The Period of the Great Personal Journalists.—Dana’s
-Avoidance of Rules and Musty Newspaper Conventions.—His
-Choice of Men and His Broad Definition of News.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">When</span> Dana came into control of the <i>Sun</i>, the city
-of New York, which then included only Manhattan
-and the Bronx, had less than a million population,
-yet it supported, or was asked to support, almost
-as many newspapers as it has to-day. That was the
-day of the great personal editor. Bennett had his
-<i>Herald</i>, with James Gordon Bennett, Jr., as his chief
-helper. Horace Greeley was known throughout America
-as the editor of the <i>Tribune</i>. Henry J. Raymond was at
-the head of the <i>Times</i>. Manton Marble—who died in
-England in 1917—was the intellectual chief of the
-highly intellectual <i>World</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The greatest Republican politician of that day, Thurlow
-Weed, was the editor of the <i>Commercial Advertiser</i>.
-He had just changed his political throne from the Astor
-House to the comparatively new Fifth Avenue Hotel.
-Weed was seventy-one years old, but not the Nestor of
-New York editors, for William Cullen Bryant was three
-years his senior and still the active editor of the <i>Evening
-Post</i>. The <i>Evening Express</i>, later to be incorporated
-with the <i>Mail</i>, was ruled by the brothers Brooks, James
-as editor-in-chief and Erastus as manager. David M.
-Stone ran the <i>Journal of Commerce</i>. Ben Wood owned<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">234</span>
-the only penny paper in town—the <i>Evening News</i>.
-Marcus M. Pomeroy, better known as Brick Pomeroy,
-had just started his sensational sheet, the <i>Democrat</i>,
-on the strength of the reputation he had won in the
-West as editor of the La Crosse <i>Democrat</i>. Later he
-changed the title of the <i>Democrat</i> to <i>Pomeroy’s Advance
-Thought</i>.</p>
-
-<p>These were the men who assailed or defended the
-methods of the reconstruction of the South; who stood
-up for President Johnson, or cried for his impeachment;
-who supported the Presidential ambitions of Grant,
-then the looming figure in national politics, or decried
-the elevation of one whose fame had been exclusively
-military; who hammered at the wicked gates of Tammany
-Hall, or tried to excuse its methods.</p>
-
-<p>Tweed had not yet committed his magnificent atrocities
-of loot, but he was practically the boss of the city,
-at the same time a State Senator and the street commissioner.
-John Kelly, then forty-six—two years the
-senior of the boss—was sheriff of New York. Richard
-Croker, who was to succeed Kelly as Kelly succeeded
-Tweed at the head of the wigwam, was then a stocky
-youth of twenty-five, engineer of a fire-department
-steamer and the leader of the militant youth of Fourth
-Avenue. He was already actively concerned in politics,
-allied with the Young Democracy that was rising against
-Tweed. In the year when Dana took the <i>Sun</i>, Croker
-was elected an alderman.</p>
-
-<p>A slender boy of ten played in those days in Madison
-Square Park, hard by his home in East Twentieth
-Street, just east of Broadway. His name was Theodore
-Roosevelt.</p>
-
-<p>New York’s richest man was William B. Astor, with
-a fortune of perhaps fifty million dollars. He was
-then seventy-six years old, but he walked every day<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">235</span>
-from his home in Lafayette Place—from its windows
-he could see the Bowery, which had been a real bouwerie
-in his boyhood—to the little office in Prince Street
-where he worked all day at the tasks that fell upon
-the shoulders of the Landlord of New York. He probably
-never had heard of John D. Rockefeller, a prosperous
-young oil man in the Middle West.</p>
-
-<p>Cornelius Vanderbilt, only two years younger than
-Astor, was president of the New York Central Railroad,
-and was linking together the great railway system that
-is now known by his name, battling the while against
-the strategy of Jay Gould and his sinister associates.
-By far the most imposing figure in financial America,
-Vanderbilt had everything in the world that he wanted—except
-Dexter, and that great trotter was in the
-stable of Robert Bonner, who was not only rich enough
-to keep Dexter, but could afford to pay Henry Ward
-Beecher thirty thousand dollars for a novel, “Norwood,”
-to be printed serially in the <i>Ledger</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Only one other New Yorker of 1868 ranked in wealth
-with Astor and Vanderbilt—Alexander T. Stewart,
-whose yearly income was perhaps greater than either’s.
-He was then worth about thirty million dollars, and he
-had astonished the business world by building a retail
-shop on Broadway, between Ninth and Tenth Streets—now
-half of Wanamaker’s—at a cost of two millions and
-three-quarters.</p>
-
-<p>In Wall Street the big names were August Belmont,
-Larry Jerome, Jay Gould, Daniel Drew, and Jim Fisk.
-Gould and Fisk were doing what they pleased with
-Erie stock. They and the leaders of Tammany Hall,
-like Tweed and Peter B. Sweeny and Slippery Dick
-Connelly, hatched schemes for fortunes as they sat
-either in the Hoffman House, where Fisk sometimes
-lived, or at dinner in the house in West Twenty-Third<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">236</span>
-Street, where the only woman at table was Josie Mansfield.</p>
-
-<p>Of the great hotels of that day not more than one
-or two are left. The Fifth Avenue then took rank not
-only as the finest hostelry in New York, but perhaps
-in the world. The Hoffman House was running as a
-European-plan hotel. It had not yet become a Democratic
-headquarters, for the Democrats still preferred
-the New York, on the American plan. The other big
-“everything included” hotels were the St. Nicholas,
-where Middle West folk stayed, and the Metropolitan,
-where the exploiter of mining-stock held forth. Among
-the smaller and European-plan hotels were the St.
-James, the St. Denis, the Everett, and the Clarendon,
-all more or less fashionable, and the Brevoort and the
-Barcelona, patronized largely by foreigners.</p>
-
-<p>The restaurants were limited in number, for New
-York had not acquired the restaurant habit as strongly
-as it has it now. When you have mentioned Delmonico’s,
-Taylor’s, Curet’s, and the Café de l’Université, you
-have almost a complete list of the places to which fashion
-drove in its brougham after the theatre.</p>
-
-<p>The playhouses were plentiful enough, considering
-the size of the city. None was north of Twenty-Fourth
-Street. Wallack’s, at Broadway and Thirteenth Street,
-was considered the best theatre in America. The Grand
-Opera House, at Eighth Avenue and Twenty-Third
-Street, was called the handsomest. Surely it was costly
-enough, for Jim Fisk, who had his own way with Erie
-finances, paid eight hundred thousand dollars of the
-railroad stockholders’ gold for it, to buy it from the
-railroad later with some of its own stock, of problematical
-value.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_236a" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 38em;">
- <img src="images/i_236a.jpg" width="1802" height="644" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
-
-<p>THE FIRST NUMBER OF “THE SUN” UNDER DANA</p>
-
-<p class="subhead">The Title Heading Has Remained Unchanged for Fifty Years.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<div id="ip_236b" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 38em;">
- <img src="images/i_236ab.jpg" width="1799" height="1934" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
-
-<p>THE HOME OF “THE SUN” FROM 1868 TO 1915</p>
-
-<p class="subhead">The Famous Old Building at Nassau and Spruce Streets.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The Academy of Music, at Fourteenth Street and
-Irving Place, housed Italian opera. The Théâtre Français,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">237</span>
-also on Fourteenth Street, but near Sixth Avenue,
-was the original home in this country of opera bouffe.
-Opera burlesque prevailed at the Fifth Avenue Opera
-House, on West Twenty-Fourth Street. The Olympic,
-on Broadway near Houston, had been built for Laura
-Keene; it was there that Edward A. Sothern first appeared
-under his own name. Barney Williams, the
-<i>Sun’s</i> first newsboy, was managing the Broadway
-Theatre, in Broadway near Broome Street. Edwin
-Booth was building a fine theatre of his own at Sixth
-Avenue and Twenty-Third Street—destined to score an
-artistic but not a financial success.</p>
-
-<p>Club life was well advanced. In the house of the Century
-Club, then in East Fifteenth Street, the member
-would come upon Bayard Taylor, George William Curtis,
-Parke Godwin, William Allen Butler, Edwin Booth,
-Lester Wallack, John Jacob Astor, August Belmont.
-The Union League was young, and was just about to
-move from a rented home at Broadway and Seventeenth
-Street to the Jerome house, at Madison Avenue and
-Twenty-Sixth Street, where it remained until 1881,
-then to go to its present home in Fifth Avenue at
-Thirty-Ninth Street. In the Union League could be
-seen John Jay, Horace Greeley, William E. Dodge, and
-other enthusiastic Republicans. Upon occasion Mr.
-Dana went there, but he was not an ardent clubman.</p>
-
-<p>All in all, the New York of Dana’s first year as an
-absolute editor was an interesting island, with just
-about as much of virtue and vice, wisdom and folly,
-sunlight and drabness, as may be found on any island
-of nine hundred thousand people. He did not set out
-to reform it. He did not try to turn the general journalism
-of that day out of certain deep grooves into
-which it had sunk. He had his own ideas of what news
-was, how it should be written, how displayed; but they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">238</span>
-were ideas, not theories. He was not perturbed because
-the <i>Sun</i> had not handled a big story just the way the
-<i>Herald</i> or the <i>Tribune</i> dished it up; nor was it of the
-slightest consequence to him what Mr. Bennett or Mr.
-Greeley thought of the way the <i>Sun</i> used the story.</p>
-
-<p>Dana made no rules. Other newspapers have printed
-commandments for their writers, but the <i>Sun</i> has never
-wasted a penny’s worth of paper on rules. If there
-ever was a rule in the office, it was “Be interesting,”
-and it was not only an unwritten rule, but generally an
-unspoken one.</p>
-
-<p>Dana’s realization that journalism was a profession
-which could be neither guided nor governed by set rules
-was expressed in a speech made by him before the Wisconsin
-Editorial Association at Milwaukee, in 1888:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>There is no system of maxims or professional rules
-that I know of that is laid down for the guidance of
-the journalist. The physician has his system of ethics
-and that sublime oath of Hippocrates which human wisdom
-has never transcended. The lawyer also has his
-code of ethics and the rules of the courts and the rules
-of practice which he is instructed in; but I have never
-met with a system of maxims that seemed to me to be
-perfectly adapted to the general direction of a newspaperman.
-I have written down a few principles which
-occurred to me, which, with your permission, gentlemen,
-I will read for the benefit of the young newspapermen
-here to-night:</p>
-
-<p>Get the news, get all the news, get nothing but the
-news.</p>
-
-<p>Copy nothing from another publication without perfect
-credit.</p>
-
-<p>Never print an interview without the knowledge and
-consent of the party interviewed.</p>
-
-<p>Never print a paid advertisement as news-matter.
-Let every advertisement appear as an advertisement;
-no sailing under false colors.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">239</span></p>
-
-<p>Never attack the weak or the defenseless, either by
-argument, by invective, or by ridicule, unless there is
-some absolute public necessity for so doing.</p>
-
-<p>Fight for your opinions, but do not believe that they
-contain the whole truth or the only truth.</p>
-
-<p>Support your party, if you have one; but do not think
-all the good men are in it and all the bad ones outside
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>Above all, know and believe that humanity is advancing;
-that there is progress in human life and human
-affairs; and that, as sure as God lives, the future will
-be greater and better than the present or the past.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In other words, don’t loaf, don’t cheat, don’t dissemble,
-don’t bully, don’t be narrow, don’t grouch.
-Mr. Dana’s maxims were as applicable to any other
-business as to his own. In a lecture delivered at Cornell
-University in 1894—three years before his death—Mr.
-Dana uttered more maxims “of value to a newspaper-maker”:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Never be in a hurry.</p>
-
-<p>Hold fast to the Constitution.</p>
-
-<p>Stand by the Stars and Stripes. Above all, stand for
-liberty, whatever happens.</p>
-
-<p>A word that is not spoken never does any mischief.</p>
-
-<p>All the goodness of a good egg cannot make up for
-the badness of a bad one.</p>
-
-<p>If you find you have been wrong, don’t fear to say so.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>All these maxims were quite as useful to the merchant
-as to the newspaperman. They related to the broad
-conduct of life. They counselled against folly, so far as
-the making of newspapers was concerned, but they did
-not convey the mysterious prescription with which Dana
-revived American journalism from that trance in which
-it had forgotten that everybody is human and that the
-English language is alive and fluid.</p>
-
-<p>If there had been rules by which a living newspaper<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">240</span>
-could be made from men and ink and wood-pulp, Dana
-would have known them; but there were none, nor are
-there now. The present editor of the <i>Sun</i>, E. P.
-Mitchell, who knew Dana better than any other man
-knew him, said in an address at the Pulitzer School of
-Journalism a few years ago:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Mr. Dana used to lecture on journalism sometimes,
-when he was invited, but in the bottom of my heart I
-don’t believe he had any theories of journalism other
-than common sense and free play for individual talent
-when discovered and available. And I do remember
-distinctly that when he sent Mr. Joseph Pulitzer, then
-fresh from St. Louis, on to Washington to report in
-semieditorial correspondence the critical stage of the
-electoral controversy of 1876, Mr. Dana did not think
-it necessary to instruct that correspondent to assimilate
-his style to the <i>Sun’s</i> methods and traditions. Never
-was a job of momentous journalistic importance better
-done in the absence of plain sailing directions; but that,
-perhaps, was due partly to the fact that Mr. Pulitzer
-was somewhat of an individualist himself.</p>
-
-<p>For the ancient common law of journalism, as derived
-from England, and perhaps before that from away back
-in Bœotia, Mr. Dana didn’t care one comic supplement.
-If anybody had asked Mr. Dana to compile a set of specific
-directions for running a newspaper, his reply, I
-am sure, would have been something like this:</p>
-
-<p>“Heaven bless you, young man, there aren’t any
-rules! Go ahead and write when you have something to
-say, not when you think you ought to say something.
-I’ll edit out the nonsense. And, by the way, unless
-there happens to have been born into your noddle a
-little bit of the native aptitude, you ought to go and be
-a lawyer or a farmer or a banker or a great statesman.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr. Dana had no regard for typographical gymnastics.
-To him a head-line was something to fill the
-mind rather than the eye. He knew the utter impossibility
-of trying to startle the reader eight times in as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">241</span>
-many adjacent columns—a feat which Mr. Bennett and
-some of his imitators seemed to consider feasible. Surprise
-is not the only emotion upon which a newspaper
-can play. The <i>Sun</i> stretched all the human octaves from
-horror to amusement, but the keys of horror were only
-touched when it was necessary.</p>
-
-<p>Make rules for news? How is it possible to make a
-rule for something the value of which lies in the fact
-that it is the narrative of what never had happened, in
-exactly the same way, before? John Bogart, a city
-editor of the <i>Sun</i> who absorbed the Dana idea of news
-and the handling thereof, once said to a young reporter:</p>
-
-<p>“When a dog bites a man, that is not news, because
-it happens so often. But if a man bites a dog, that is
-news.”</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> always waited for the man to bite the dog.</p>
-
-<p>Here is Mr. Dana’s own definition of news:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The first thing which an editor must look for is news.
-If the newspaper has not the news it may have everything
-else, yet it will be comparatively unsuccessful;
-and by news I mean everything that occurs, everything
-which is of human interest, and which is of sufficient
-interest to arrest and absorb the attention of the public
-or of any considerable part of it.</p>
-
-<p>There is a great disposition in some quarters to say
-that the newspapers ought to limit the amount of news
-that they print; that certain kinds of news ought not to
-be published. I do not know how that is. I am not
-prepared to maintain any abstract proposition in that
-line; but I have always felt that whatever the divine
-Providence permitted to occur I was not too proud to
-report.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A belief has been accepted in some quarters that the
-<i>Sun</i> of Dana’s time preferred college men for its staff.
-This was in a way false, but it is true that a great<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">242</span>
-many of the <i>Sun’s</i> young men came from the colleges.
-Mr. Dana’s views on the matter of educational equipment
-were quite plainly expressed by himself:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>If I could have my way, every young man who is
-going to be a newspaperman, and who is not absolutely
-rebellious against it, should learn Greek and Latin
-after the good old fashion. I had rather take a young
-fellow who knows the “Ajax” of Sophocles, and has
-read Tacitus, and can scan every ode of Horace—I
-would rather take him to report a prize-fight or a spelling-match,
-for instance, than to take one who has never
-had those advantages.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time, the cultivated man is not in every
-case the best reporter. One of the best I ever knew was
-a man who could not spell four words correctly to save
-his life, and his verb did not always agree with the subject
-in person and number; but he always got the fact
-so exactly, and he saw the picturesque, the interesting,
-the important aspect of it so vividly, that it was worth
-another man’s while, who possessed the knowledge of
-grammar and spelling, to go over the report and write
-it out.</p>
-
-<p>Now, that was a man who had genius; he had a
-talent the most indubitable, and he got handsomely
-paid in spite of his lack of grammar, because after his
-work had been done over by a scholar it was really beautiful.
-But any man who is sincere and earnest and not
-always thinking about himself can be a good reporter.
-He can learn to ascertain the truth; he can acquire the
-habit of seeing.</p>
-
-<p>When he looks at a fire, what is the most important
-thing about that fire? Here, let us say, are five houses
-burning; which is the greatest? Whose store is that
-which is burning? And who has met with the greatest
-loss? Has any individual perished in the conflagration?
-Are there any very interesting circumstances about the
-fire? How did it occur? Was it like Chicago, where a
-cow kicked over a spirit-lamp and burned up the city?</p>
-
-<p>All these things the reporter has to judge about. He
-is the eye of the paper, and he is there to see which is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">243</span>
-the vital fact in the story, and to produce it, tell it,
-write it out.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Dana saw the usefulness to a reporter of certain
-qualities which are acquired neither at school nor in
-the office:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>In the first place, he must know the truth when he
-hears it and sees it. There are a great many men who
-are born without that faculty, unfortunately. But there
-are some men that a lie cannot deceive; and that is a
-very precious gift for a reporter, as well as for anybody
-else. The man who has it is sure to live long
-and prosper; especially if he is able to tell the truth
-which he sees, to state the fact or the discovery that he
-has been sent out after, in a clear and vivid and interesting
-manner.</p>
-
-<p>The invariable law of the newspaper is to be interesting.
-Suppose you tell all the truths of science in a
-way that bores the reader; what is the good? The
-truths don’t stay in the mind, and nobody thinks any
-the better of you because you have told the truth
-tediously. The reporter must give his story in such a
-way that you know he feels its qualities and events and
-is interested in them.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Dana was catholic not only in his taste for news, but
-in his idea of the manner of writing it. Nothing gave
-him more uneasiness than to find that a <i>Sun</i> man was
-drifting into a stereotyped way of handling a news
-story or writing an editorial article. Even as he advised
-young men to read everything from Shakespeare
-and Milton down, he repeatedly warned them against
-the imitation, unconscious or otherwise, of another’s
-style:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Do not take any model. Every man has his own
-natural style, and the thing to do is to develop it into
-simplicity and clearness. Do not, for instance, labor<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">244</span>
-after such a style as Matthew Arnold’s—one of the most
-beautiful styles that has ever been seen in any literature.
-It is no use to try to get another man’s style or to imitate
-the wit or the mannerisms of another writer. The
-late Mr. Carlyle, for example, did, in my judgment, a
-considerable mischief in his day, because he led everybody
-to write after the style of his “French Revolution,”
-and it became pretty tedious.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>If a writer could not keep on without aping the literary
-fashion of another, then he was not for the <i>Sun</i>.
-Dana wanted good English always, but a constant spice
-of variety in the treatment of a subject, and in the style
-itself; therefore he chose a variety of men.</p>
-
-<p>If he believed that the best report of a ship-launching
-could be written by a longshoreman, he would have
-hired the hard-handed toiler and assigned him to the
-job. He wanted men who would look at the world with
-open eyes and find the new things that were going on.
-Dana knew that they were going on. His vision had
-not been narrowed by too close application to newspaper
-offices where editors and managing editors had handled
-the stock stories year in and year out in the same wearisome
-way.</p>
-
-<p>To Dana life was not a mere procession of elections,
-legislatures, theatrical performances, murders, and lectures.
-Life was everything—a new kind of apple, a crying
-child on the curb, a policeman’s epigram, the exact
-weight of a candidate for President, the latest style in
-whiskers, the origin of a new slang expression, the
-idiosyncrasies of the City Hall clock, a strange four-master
-in the harbour, the head-dresses of Syrian girls,
-a new president or a new football coach at Yale, a vendetta
-in Mulberry Bend—everything was fish to the
-great net of Dana’s mind.</p>
-
-<p>Human interest! It is an old phrase now, and one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">245</span>
-likely to cause lips to curl along Park Row. But the
-art of picking out the happenings of every-day life that
-would appeal to every reader, if so depicted that the
-events lived before the reader’s eye, was an art that did
-not exist until Dana came along. Ben Day knew the
-importance of the trifles of life and the hold they took
-on the people who read his little <i>Sun</i>, but it remained
-for Dana to bring out in journalism the literary quality
-that made the trifle live. Whether it was an item of
-three lines or an article of three columns, it must have
-life, or it had no place in the <i>Sun</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Dana did not teach his men how to do it. If he
-taught them anything, it was what not to do. His men
-did the work he wanted them to do, not by following
-instructions, but by being unhampered by instructions.
-He set the writer free and let him go his own way to
-glory or failure. There were no conventions except
-those of decency, of respect for the English language.
-Because newspapermen had been doing a certain thing
-in a certain way for a century, Dana could not see why
-he and his men should go in the same wagon-track.
-With a word or an epigram he destroyed traditions
-that had fettered the profession since the days of the
-Franklin press.</p>
-
-<p>One day he held up a string of proofs—a long obituary
-of Bismarck, or Blaine, or some celebrity who had
-just passed away.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Lord,” he said to his managing editor, “isn’t
-that a lot of space to give to a dead man?”</p>
-
-<p>Yet the next day the same Dana came from his office
-to the city editor’s desk to inquire who had written a
-certain story two inches long, and, upon learning, went
-over to the reporter who was the author.</p>
-
-<p>“Very good, young man, very good,” he said, pointing
-to the item. “I wish I could write like that!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">246</span></p>
-
-<p>Names of writers meant nothing to Dana. He judged
-everything that was printed in the <i>Sun</i>, or offered to it
-for publication, on its own merits. He went through
-manuscript with uncanny speed, the gaze that seemed
-to travel only down the centre of the page really taking
-in the whole substance. A dull article from a celebrity
-he returned to its envelope with the note “Respectfully
-declined,” and without a thought of the author’s surprise,
-or possibly rage. But over a poem from an up-State
-unknown he might spend half an hour if the verses
-contained the germ of an idea new to him.</p>
-
-<p>One clergyman who had come into literary prominence
-offered to write some articles for the <i>Sun</i>. Dana
-told him he might try. The clergyman evidently had a
-notion that the <i>Sun’s</i> cleverness was a worldly, reckless
-devilishness, and he adapted the style of his first article
-to what he supposed was the tone of the paper. Dana
-read it, smiled, wrote across the first page “This is too
-damned wicked,” and mailed it back to the misguided
-author.</p>
-
-<p>He was a patient man. A clerk in the New York
-post-office copied by hand Edward Everett Hale’s story,
-“The Man Without a Country,” and offered it to the
-<i>Sun</i>—as original matter—for a hundred dollars. It
-was suggested to Mr. Dana that the poor fool should
-be exposed.</p>
-
-<p>“No,” said Dana, “mark it ‘Respectfully declined,’
-and send it back to him. He has been honest enough to
-enclose postage-stamps.”</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_247" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">247</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">DANA, AS MITCHELL SAW HIM</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>A Picture of the Room Where One Man Ruled for Thirty
-Years.—The Democratic Ways of a Newspaper Autocrat.—W.
-O. Bartlett, Pike, and His Other Early Associates.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> English historian, Kinglake, wrote a description
-of John T. Delane, the most famous editor of
-the London <i>Times</i>, which Mr. Dana’s associate, Mr.
-Mitchell, liked to quote as a picture of what Mr. Dana
-was <em>not</em>. It is a fine limning of the great editor, as great
-editors were supposed to be before Dana showed his disregard
-for the journalistic dust of the ages:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>From the moment of his entering the editor’s room
-until four or five o’clock in the morning, the strain he
-had to put on his faculties must have been always great,
-and in stirring times almost prodigious. There were
-hours of night when he often had to decide—to decide,
-of course, with great swiftness—between two or more
-courses of action momentously different; when, besides,
-he must judge the appeals brought up to the paramount
-arbiter from all kinds of men, from all sorts of earthly
-tribunals; when despatches of moment, when telegrams
-fraught with grave tidings, when notes hastily scribbled
-in the Lords or Commons, were from time to time coming
-in to disturb, perhaps even to annul, former reckonings;
-and these, besides, were the hours when, on questions
-newly obtruding, yet so closely, so importunately,
-present that they would have to be met before sunrise,
-he somehow must cause to spring up sudden essays, invectives,
-and arguments which only strong power of
-brain, with even much toil, could supply. For the delicate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">248</span>
-task any other than he would require to be in a
-state of tranquillity, would require to have ample time.
-But for him there are no such indulgences; he sees the
-hand of the clock growing more and more peremptory,
-and the time drawing nearer and nearer when his paper
-must, <em>must</em> be made up.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>That, mark you, was Delane, not Dana. When Mr.
-Dana counselled the young men at Cornell never to be
-in a hurry, he meant it. Fury was never a part of his
-system of life and work. Probably he viewed with
-something like contempt the high-pressure editor of his
-own and former days. There was no agony in the daily
-birth of the <i>Sun</i>. Mr. Mitchell said of his chief:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Mr. Dana has always been the master, and not the
-slave, of the immediate task. The external features
-of his journalism are simplicity, directness, common
-sense, and the entire absence of affectation. He would
-no more think of living up to Mr. Kinglake’s ideal of a
-great, mysterious, and thought-burdened editor, than
-of putting on a conical hat and a black robe spangled
-with suns, moons, and stars, when about to receive a
-visitor to his editorial office in Nassau Street.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>That office in Nassau Street, of which every reader
-of the <i>Sun</i>, and surely every newspaperman in America,
-formed his own mental picture! To some imaginations
-it probably was a bare room, with a desk for the editor
-and, close by, the famous cat. To other imaginations,
-whose owners were familiar with Mr. Dana’s love for
-the beautiful, the office may have been a studio unmarred
-by the presence of a single unbeautiful object.
-Both visions were incorrect.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_248" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 37em;">
- <img src="images/i_248a.jpg" width="1781" height="2407" alt="" />
- <div class="captionr">
- (<i>Drawn from Life by Corwin Knapp Linson</i>)</div>
- <div class="captionl">
- <p>MR. DANA IN HIS OFFICE</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Surroundings were nothing to Dana. To him an
-office was a place to work, to convert ideas into readable
-form. What would works of art be in such a
-place to a man who took more interest in the crowds<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">249</span>
-that went to and fro on Park Row beneath his window?
-Let the room itself be described by Mr. Mitchell, who
-set down this picture of it after he had spent hours in
-it with Mr. Dana almost daily for twenty years:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>In the middle of the small room a desk-table of black
-walnut of the Fulton Street style and the period of the
-first administration of Grant; a shabby little round
-table at the window, where Mr. Dana sits when the day
-is dark; one leather-covered chair, which does duty at
-either post, and two wooden chairs, both rickety, for
-visitors on errands of business or ceremony; on the desk
-a revolving case with a few dozen books of reference;
-an ink-pot and pen, not much used except in correcting
-manuscript and proofs, for Mr. Dana talks off to a
-stenographer his editorial articles and his correspondence,
-sometimes spending on the revision of the former
-twice as much time as was required for the dictation; a
-window-seat filled with exchanges, marked here and
-there in blue pencil for the editor’s eyes; a big pair of
-shears, and two or three extra pairs of spectacles in
-cache against an emergency—these few items constitute
-what is practically the whole objective equipment
-of the editor of the <i>Sun</i>. The shears are probably the
-newest article of furniture in the list. They replaced,
-three or four years ago, another pair of unknown antiquity,
-besought and obtained by Eugene Field, and
-now occupying, alongside of Mr. Gladstone’s ax, the
-place of honor in that poet’s celebrated collection of
-edged instruments.</p>
-
-<p>For the non-essentials, the little trapezoid-shaped
-room contains a third table containing a file of the newspaper
-for a few weeks back, and a heap of new books
-which have passed review; an iron umbrella-rack; on
-the floor a cheap Turkish rug; and a lounge covered
-with horsehide, upon which Mr. Dana descends for a five
-minutes’ nap perhaps five times a year.</p>
-
-<p>The adornments of the room are mostly accidental
-and insignificant. Ages ago somebody presented to Mr.
-Dana, with symbolic intent, a large stuffed owl. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">250</span>
-bird of wisdom remains by inertia on top of the revolving
-bookcase, just as it would have remained there
-if it had been a stuffed cat or a statuette of “Folly.”
-Unnoticed and probably long ago forgotten by the proprietor,
-the owl solemnly boxes the compass as Mr.
-Dana swings the case, reaching in quick succession for
-his Bible, his Portuguese dictionary, his compendium
-of botanical terms, or his copy of the Democratic national
-platform of 1892. On the mantelpiece is an ugly,
-feather-haired little totem figure from Alaska, which
-likewise keeps its place solely by possession. It stands
-between a photograph of Chester A. Arthur, whom Mr.
-Dana liked and admired as a man of the world, and the
-japanned calendar-case which has shown him the time
-of year for the last quarter of a century. A dingy
-chromolithograph of Prince von Bismarck stands shoulder
-to shoulder with George, the Count Joannes.</p>
-
-<p>The same mingling of sentiment and pure accident
-marks the rest of Mr. Dana’s picture-gallery. There is
-a large and excellent photograph of Horace Greeley,
-who is held in half-affectionate, half-humorous remembrance
-by his old associate in the management of the
-<i>Tribune</i>. Another is of the late Justice Blatchford,
-of the United States Supreme Court; it is the strong
-face of the fearless judge whose decision from the Federal
-bench in New York twenty years ago blocked the
-attempt to drag Mr. Dana before a servile little court
-in Washington to be tried without a jury on the charge
-of criminal libel, at the time when the <i>Sun</i> was demolishing
-the District Ring.</p>
-
-<p>Over the mantel is Abraham Lincoln. There are pictures
-of the four Harper brothers and of the Appletons.
-Andrew Jackson is there twice, once in black and white,
-once in vivid colors. An inexpensive Thomas Jefferson
-faces the livelier Jackson. A framed diploma certifies
-that Mr. Dana was one of several gentlemen who presented
-to the State a portrait in oils of Samuel J. Tilden.
-On different sides of the room are William T.
-Coleman, the organizer of the San Francisco Vigilantes,
-and a crude colored print of the Haifa colony at the
-foot of Mount Carmel in Syria. Strangest of all in this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">251</span>
-singular collection is a photograph of a tall, lank, and
-superior-looking New England mill-girl, issued as an
-advertisement by some Connecticut concern engaged in
-the manufacture of spool-cotton.</p>
-
-<p>For a good many years the most available wall-space
-in Mr. Dana’s office was occupied by a huge pasteboard
-chart, showing elaborately, in deadly parallel columns,
-the differences in the laws of the several States of the
-Union respecting divorce. It was put there, and it remained
-there, serving no earthly purpose except to
-illustrate the editor’s indifference as to his immediate
-surroundings, until it disappeared as mysteriously as it
-had come.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Such were Mr. Dana’s surroundings, with nothing to
-indicate, as Mr. Mitchell remarked, that the occupant
-“knew Manet from Monet, or old Persian lustre from
-Gubbio.”</p>
-
-<p>It is twenty years since Dana went out of that room
-for the last time, and the room and the old building
-are no more, but the stuffed owl is still at his post in
-the office of the editor of the <i>Sun</i>. He is an older if not
-wiser bird, and he is no longer subjected to the revolutions
-of the bookcase, for Mr. Mitchell has given him a
-firmer perch beside his door. From a nearby wall Mr.
-Dana’s pictures of the four Harpers keep vigil, too.</p>
-
-<p>Dana was interested in everything, read everything,
-saw almost everybody. His own office was almost as
-free as the great main office of the <i>Sun</i>, where sat everybody
-from the managing editor down to the office-boy.
-One day Dana, coming into the big room, saw carpenters
-building a partition between the room and the head of
-the stairs that led to the street. It was explained to
-him that the public was inclined to be unnecessarily intrusive
-at times.</p>
-
-<p>“Take the partition down,” he said. “A newspaper
-is for the public.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">252</span></p>
-
-<p>That this was not always a desirable plan is illustrated
-in a story about Dana, probably apocryphal, but
-characteristic. One night the city editor rushed into
-his chief’s room.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Dana,” he said, “there’s a man out there with
-a cocked revolver. He is very much excited, and he
-insists on seeing the editor-in-chief.”</p>
-
-<p>“Is he very much excited?” inquired Mr. Dana, returning
-to the proof that he was reading. “If you
-think it is worth while, ask Amos Cummings if he will
-see the gentleman and write him up.”</p>
-
-<p>Persons in search of alms would enter Mr. Dana’s
-room without ceremony. If they were Sisters of Charity,
-as often was the case, Mr. Dana would walk up and
-down, telling them of his visit with the Pope, and would
-finish by giving them one of the silver dollars of which
-his pocket seemed to have an endless supply. Almost
-every day, when he despatched a boy to a nearby restaurant
-for his sandwich and bottle of milk, he would
-give him a five-dollar bill and instruct him to bring
-back the change all in silver. He liked to jingle the
-coins in his pocket and to have them ready for alms-giving.</p>
-
-<p>Dana was never fussy, never overbearing with his
-men. He bore patiently with the occasional sinner, and
-tried to put the best face on a mistake.</p>
-
-<p>The Dana patience extended also to outsiders. On
-one occasion William M. Laffan, then the dramatic
-critic and later the owner of the <i>Sun</i>, wrote a severe
-criticism of a performance by Miss Ada Rehan. Augustin
-Daly hurried to Mr. Dana’s office the next afternoon.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Dana,” he said, “I have called to try to convince
-you that you should discharge your dramatic
-editor. He <span class="locked">has—”</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">253</span></p>
-
-<p>“I see,” said Dana, smiling. “Well, Mr. Daly, I will
-speak to Mr. Laffan about the matter, and if he thinks
-that he really deserves to be discharged, I will most
-certainly do it!”</p>
-
-<p>Thirty or forty years ago the belief was not uncommon,
-among those ignorant of editorial methods and the
-limitations of human powers, that Mr. Dana wrote every
-word that appeared on the editorial page of the <i>Sun</i>.
-It is likely that this flattering myth came to his ears
-and caused him more than one chuckle. Dana wrote
-pieces for the <i>Sun</i>, many of them, but he never essayed
-the superhuman task of filling the whole page with his
-own self. Nobody knew better than he what a bore a
-man becomes who flows opinion constantly, whether by
-voice or by pen.</p>
-
-<p>For Dana, not the eternal verities in allopathic doses,
-but the entertaining varieties, carefully administered.
-He might be immensely interested in the destruction of
-the Whisky Ring, and in writing about that infamy
-articles which would scorch the ears of Washington;
-but he knew that not every man, woman, and child who
-read the <i>Sun</i> was furious about the Whisky Ring or
-cared to read columns of opinion about it every day.
-They must have pabulum in the form of an article about
-the princely earnings of Charles Dickens, or the identification
-of Mount Sinai, or the mysterious murder of a
-French count.</p>
-
-<p>So he hired men who could compare Dickens’s lectures
-with Thackeray’s, or were familiar with the controversy
-over Mount Barghir, or who knew a murder mystery
-when they saw it. They wrote, and he read and sometimes
-edited, but usually approved, for he knew that
-newspaper success lay not so much in a choice of topics
-as in a choice of men. He knew that the success of an
-editorial page came less from inside opinions than from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">254</span>
-outside interest. Dana’s remarkable success in the
-exaltation of journalism to literary heights was won
-not so much through what he wrote, but through what
-he left other men free to write.</p>
-
-<p>His own work as a writer for the <i>Sun</i> took but a fraction
-of his busy day. He dictated his articles to Tom
-Williams, his stenographer, a Fenian and a bold man.</p>
-
-<p>“Can you write as fast as I talk?” asked Dana when
-Williams applied for the job.</p>
-
-<p>“I doubt it, Mr. Dana,” said Williams; “but I can
-write as fast as any man ought to talk.”</p>
-
-<p>For twenty years Tom Williams transcribed articles
-that absorbed the readers of the <i>Sun</i>, but his own heart
-was down the bay, near his Staten Island home, where
-he spent most of his spare time in fishing and sailing.
-It was always a grief to Williams to enter the office on
-an election or similarly important night, and to find
-that no one paid any attention to his stories about how
-the fish were biting.</p>
-
-<p>Dana had no doubt—nor had any one, least of all
-those who came under his editorial condemnation—of
-his own ability as a trenchant writer. The expression
-of thought was an art which he had studied from boyhood.
-Whatever of the academic appeared in his early
-work had been driven out during his service on the
-<i>Tribune</i> and in the war, particularly the latter, for as
-a reporter for the government he learned to avoid all
-but the salients of expression. But as the editor of the
-<i>Sun</i> he found less delight in his own product than in
-the work of some other man whose literary ability answered
-his own standards of terseness, vigour, and
-illumination. The new man would help the <i>Sun</i>, and
-that was all that Dana asked.</p>
-
-<p>That another man’s work should be mistaken for
-his own, or his own for another man’s, was to Dana<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">255</span>
-nothing at all, except perhaps a source of amusement.
-The anonymity of the writers on the <i>Sun</i> was so complete
-that the public knew their work only as a whole;
-but whenever anything particularly biting or humorous
-appeared, the same public instantly decided that Dana
-must have written it.</p>
-
-<p class="p1 b1 center">
-No king, no clown, to rule this town!
-</p>
-
-<p>That line, born in the <i>Sun’s</i> editorial page, will live
-as long as Shakespeare. In eight words it embodied
-the protest of New York against the arrogance and
-stupidity of machine political rule. Ten thousand times,
-at least, it has been credited to Dana, but as a matter
-of fact it was written by W. O. Bartlett.</p>
-
-<p>Bartlett was one of those great newspaper writers
-whose fate—or choice—it is never to own a newspaper
-and never to attract public attention through the writing
-of signed articles or books. Writing was not primarily
-his profession, and by the older men of New
-York who remember him he is recalled as a brilliant
-lawyer rather than as a writer. He met Dana through
-Secretary Stanton, and he was the <i>Sun’s</i> attorney soon
-after Dana and his friends bought the paper. His law-offices
-were in the Sun Building, directly below Mr.
-Dana’s own offices. There, and also at the Hoffman
-House, where he lived when he was not on his estate
-at Brookhaven, Long Island, Mr. Bartlett wrote his
-articles for the <i>Sun</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Bartlett was a writer of the school of simplicity.
-His style of reducing a proposition to its most elementary
-form, so that it was clear to even the Class B intellect,
-was the admiration and envy of all who knew
-his articles. It was an inspiration, too, to many young
-newspapermen of his day.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">256</span></p>
-
-<p>The manner of Mr. Arthur Brisbane of the <i>Evening
-Journal</i>, luring the reader into a sociological dissertation
-by first inquiring whether he knows “Why a Flea
-Jumps So Far,” is the Bartlett manner, with such modifications
-as are necessary to reach the attention of a
-group intellectually somewhat different from Bartlett’s
-readers. Only Bartlett did not spend too much time
-on the flea. Of the three men whose articles have most
-distinguished the first column of the <i>Sun’s</i> editorial
-page, each has had his own weapon when leading to attack.
-Dana struck with a sword. Mitchell used—and
-uses—the rapier. Bartlett swung the mace. It was
-jewelled with the gems of language, but still it was a
-mace; and if it crushed the skull of the enemy at the
-first blow, so much the better. It was Bartlett, for instance,
-who wrote the article in which the Democratic
-candidate for President in 1880, General Hancock, was
-referred to as “a good man, weighing two hundred and
-forty pounds.”</p>
-
-<p>W. O. Bartlett wrote for the <i>Sun</i> from 1868 until
-his death in 1881. He was the foremost figure in the
-group of older men around Dana—the men who had
-been prominent in political and literary life before the
-Civil War. Other notable men of middle age who were
-chosen by Mr. Dana to write editorial articles were
-James S. Pike, Fitz-Henry Warren, Henry B. Stanton,
-and John Swinton.</p>
-
-<p>James Shepherd Pike’s articles appeared more frequently
-in the columns of the <i>Sun</i> than Pike himself
-appeared in the office, for most of his work was done
-in Washington. He was about eight years older than
-Mr. Dana, but they were great friends from the earliest
-days of Dana’s <i>Tribune</i> experience. For five years, beginning
-in 1855, Pike was a Washington correspondent
-and one of the associate editors of the <i>Tribune</i>. During<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">257</span>
-the Civil War he was United States minister to the
-Netherlands, a reward for his services in his home State,
-Maine, where he was useful in uniting the anti-slavery
-forces. He was a brother of Frederick A. Pike, a war-time
-Representative from Maine, whose “Tax, fight,
-emancipate!” was the Republican watchword from its
-utterance in 1861.</p>
-
-<p>Pike was one of the group that supported Greeley for
-the Presidency in 1872. He was one of the really great
-publicists of his day. He wrote “The Restoration of
-the Currency,” “The Financial Crisis,” “Horace Greeley
-in 1872,” “A Prostrate State”—which was a description
-of the Reconstruction era in South Carolina—and
-“The First Blows of the Civil War,” this last a
-volume of reminiscent correspondence, some newspaper,
-some personal. The friendship and literary
-association of Pike and Dana lasted more than thirty
-years, and ended only with Pike’s death in 1882, just
-after he had passed threescore and ten.</p>
-
-<p>Fitz-Henry Warren, who has been already referred
-to in this narrative as the author of the <i>Tribune’s</i>
-cry, “On to Richmond!” wrote many editorial articles
-for Dana, who had conceived a great admiration for
-Warren when both were in the service of the <i>Tribune</i>,
-Dana as managing editor and Warren as head of the
-Washington bureau. Warren emerged from the Civil
-War not only a major-general, but a powerful politician,
-and it was not until several years later, after he had
-served in the Iowa Senate and as minister to Guatemala,
-that Dana was able to bring the pen of this transplanted
-New Englander to the office of the <i>Sun</i>. Once there,
-it did splendid work.</p>
-
-<p>It is not easy to identify the editorials that appeared
-in the <i>Sun</i> under the Dana régime; not so much because
-of the lapse of years, but because the spirit of Dana so<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">258</span>
-permeated everything that was printed on his page that
-it is difficult to say with certainty, “This Dana wrote,
-this Bartlett, this Mitchell, this Warren, and this Pike.”
-But, for the purpose of giving some small idea of the
-grace and magnificence of Warren’s style, here is a
-paragraph from an editorial article known to have been
-written by him on the death of Charles Sumner in
-March, 1874:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Men spoke softly on the street; their very voices betokened
-the impending event, and even their footfalls
-are said to have been lighter than common. But in the
-neighborhood of the Senator’s house there was a sense
-of singular and touching interest. Splendid equipages
-rolled to the corner, over pavements conceived in fraud
-and laid in corruption, to testify the regard of their
-occupants for eminent purity of life. Liveried servants
-carried hopeless messages from the door of him who was
-simplicity itself, and to whom the pomp and pageantry
-of this evil day were but the evidences of guilty degeneracy.
-Through all those lingering hours of anguish
-the sad procession came and went.</p>
-
-<p>On the sidewalk stood a numerous and grateful representation
-of the race to whom he had given the proudest
-efforts and the best energies of his existence. The
-black man bowed his head in unaffected grief, and the
-black woman sat hushing her babe upon the curbstone,
-in mute expectation of the last decisive intelligence from
-the chamber above.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>General Warren continued to write for the <i>Sun</i> until
-1876, and he died two years afterward, when he was
-only sixty-two years old, in Brimfield, Massachusetts,
-the town of his birth.</p>
-
-<div class="center"><div class="ilb">
-<div id="ip_258a" class="figleft">
- <img src="images/i_258a.jpg" width="844" height="1512" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">JOSEPH PULITZER</div></div>
-
-<div id="ip_258b" class="figleft noclear">
- <img src="images/i_258b.jpg" width="844" height="1512" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">ELIHU ROOT</div></div>
-
-<div id="ip_258c" class="figleft noclear">
- <img src="images/i_258c.jpg" width="844" height="1512" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">JUDGE WILLARD BARTLETT</div></div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Although Henry Brewster Stanton was a comparatively
-old man when he began writing for the <i>Sun</i>, his
-activities in that line lasted for nearly twenty years.
-In 1826, when he was twenty-one years old, he entered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">259</span>
-newspaper work on Thurlow Weed’s <i>Monroe Telegraph</i>,
-published in Rochester. Soon afterward he became an
-advocate of the anti-slavery cause. In 1840 he married
-Elizabeth Cady, and with her went abroad, where in
-Great Britain and France they worked for the relief
-of the slaves in the United States. It was during that
-journey that Elizabeth Cady Stanton signed the first
-call for a woman’s rights convention.</p>
-
-<p>On his return to America Stanton studied law with
-his father-in-law, Daniel Cady. After his admission to
-the bar he practised in Boston, but he returned to New
-York and politics in 1847. He left the Democratic
-party to become one of the founders of the Republican
-party.</p>
-
-<p>Dana met Stanton when the latter was a writer for
-the <i>Tribune</i>, and when Dana came into the control of
-the <i>Sun</i> he secured the veteran as a contributor. Stanton
-knew politics from A to Z, and his brief articles,
-filled with political wisdom and often salted with his
-dry humour, were just the class of matter that Dana
-wanted for the editorial page. Stanton was also a capable
-reviewer of books. He wrote for the <i>Sun</i> from 1868
-until his death in 1887. Henry Ward Beecher said of
-him:</p>
-
-<p>“I think Stanton has all the elements of old John
-Adams—able, staunch, patriotic, full of principle, and
-always unpopular. He lacks that sense of other people’s
-opinions which keeps a man from running against
-them.”</p>
-
-<p>John Swinton was one of the few of Dana’s men who
-might be described as a “character.” He lived a double
-intellectual life, writing conservative articles in his
-newspaper hours and making socialistic speeches when
-he was off duty. Yet it was a double life without duplicity,
-for there was no concealment in it, no hypocrisy,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">260</span>
-and no harm. When he had finished his day in the office
-of the <i>Sun</i>, perhaps at writing some instructive paragraphs
-about the possibilities of American trade in
-Nicaragua, he would take off his skull-cap, place a
-black soft hat on his gray head, and go forth to dilate
-on the advantages of super-Fourierism to some sympathetic
-audience of socialists.</p>
-
-<p>There was a story in the office that one evening Mr.
-Swinton, making a speech at a socialistic gathering, referred
-hotly to the editor of the <i>Sun</i> as one of the props
-of a false form of government, and added that “some
-day two old men will come rolling down the steps of the
-<i>Sun</i> office,” and that at the bottom of the steps he,
-Swinton, would be on top.</p>
-
-<p>This may be of a piece with the story about Mr.
-Dana and the man with the revolver; but the young men
-in the reporters’ room liked to tell it to younger men.
-It probably had its basis in the fact that on the morning
-after a particularly ferocious assault on capital, John
-Swinton would poke his head into Mr. Dana’s room to
-tell him how he had given him the dickens the night
-before—information which tickled Mr. Dana immensely.
-And Dana never went to the bottom of the <i>Sun</i> stairs
-except on his own sturdy legs.</p>
-
-<p>Swinton was a Scotsman, born in Haddingtonshire in
-1830. He emigrated to Canada as a boy, learned the
-printer’s trade, and worked at the case in New York.
-After travels all over the country, he lived for a time
-in Charleston, South Carolina, and there acquired an
-abhorrence for slavery. He went to Kansas and took
-part in the Free Soil contest, but returned to New York
-in 1857 and began the study of medicine.</p>
-
-<p>While so engaged he contributed articles to the New
-York <i>Times</i>, and Henry J. Raymond, who liked his
-work, took him as an editorial writer. He was the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">261</span>
-managing editor of the <i>Times</i> during the Civil War, and
-had sole charge during Raymond’s absences. At the
-end of the war Swinton’s health caused him to resign
-from the managing editorship, but he continued to
-write for the editorial page. He went to work on the
-<i>Sun</i> about 1877.</p>
-
-<p>His specialty was paragraphs. Dana liked men who
-could do anything, but he also preferred that every man
-should have some specialty. Swinton had the imagination
-and the light touch of the skilful weaver of small
-items. Also, he was much interested in Central America,
-and his knowledge of that region was of frequent
-use to the <i>Sun</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Swinton left the <i>Sun</i> in 1883 to give his whole time
-to <i>John Swinton’s Paper</i>, a weekly journal in which he
-expounded his labour-reform and other political views.
-He was the author of many pamphlets and several books,
-including a “Eulogy of Henry J. Raymond” and an
-“Oration on John Brown.”</p>
-
-<p>Such were the editorial writers of what may be called
-the iron age of the <i>Sun</i>; the men who helped Dana to
-build the first story of a great house. As they passed
-on, younger men, some greater men, trained in the Dana
-school, took their places and spanned the <i>Sun’s</i> golden
-age—such men as E. P. Mitchell, Francis P. Church,
-and Mayo W. Hazeltine.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, on the other side of a partition on the
-third floor of the old brick building at the corner of
-Frankfort Street, another group of men were doing their
-best to advance Dana’s <i>Sun</i> by making it the best newspaper
-as well as the best editorial paper in America.
-These, too, were giants.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_262" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">262</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">DANA’S FIRST BIG NEWS MEN</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>Amos J. Cummings, Dr. Wood, and John B. Bogart.—The
-Lively Days of Tweedism.—Elihu Root as a Dramatic
-Critic.—The Birth and Popularity of “The Sun’s” Cat.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Managing</span> editors did not come into favour in
-American newspaper offices until the second half
-of the last century. As late as 1872 Frederic Hudson,
-in his “History of Journalism in the United States,”
-grumbled at the intrusion of a new functionary upon
-the field:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>If a journal has an editor, and editor-in-chief, it is
-fair to assume that he is also its managing editor.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>That historian (he was a <i>Herald</i> man, and Bennett
-would have no managing editor) had not been reconciled
-to the fact that between the editor of a newspaper—the
-director of its policies and opinions and general
-style and tone—and the subeditors to whose various
-desks comes the flood of news there must be some one
-who will act as a link, lightening the labours of the
-editor and shouldering the responsibilities of the desk
-men. He may never write an editorial article; may
-never turn out a sheet of news copy or put a head on an
-item; may never make up a page or arrange an assignment
-list—but he must know how to do every one of
-these things and a great deal more.</p>
-
-<p>A managing editor is really the newspaper’s manager
-of its employees in the news field. He is an editor to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">263</span>
-extent that he edits men. He may appear to spend most
-of his time and judgment on the acceptance or rejection
-of news matter, the giving of decisions as to the length
-or character of an article, its position in the paper, and,
-more broadly, the general make-up of the next day’s
-product; but a man might be able to perform all these
-professional functions wisely and yet be impossible as
-a managing editor through his inability to handle newspapermen.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Tribune</i> was the first New York paper to have a
-managing editor. He was Dana. Serene, tactful, and
-a man of the world, he was able by judicious handling
-to keep for the <i>Tribune</i> the services of men like Warren
-and Pike, who might have been repelled by the sometimes
-irritable Greeley. The title came from the London
-<i>Times</i>, where it had been used for years, perhaps
-borrowed from the <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">directeur gérant</i> of the French newspapers.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> had no managing editor until Dana bought
-it, Beach having preferred to direct personally all matters
-above the ken of the city editor. The <i>Sun’s</i> first
-managing editor was Isaac W. England, whom Dana
-had known and liked when both were on the <i>Tribune</i>.
-England was of Welsh blood and English birth, having
-been born in Twerton, a suburb of Bath, in 1832. He
-worked at the bookbinding trade until he was seventeen,
-and then came to the United States and made his living
-at bookbinding and printing. He used to tell his <i>Sun</i>
-associates of his triumphal return to England, when
-he was twenty, for a short visit, which he spent in the
-shop of his apprenticeship, showing his old master how
-much better the Yankees were at embossing and
-lettering.</p>
-
-<p>England returned to America in the steerage and saw
-the brutal treatment of immigrants. This he described<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">264</span>
-in several articles and sold them to the <i>Tribune</i>. Greeley
-gave him a job pulling a hand-press at ten dollars a
-week, but later made him a reporter. He was city editor
-of the <i>Tribune</i> until after the Civil War, and then he
-went with his friend Dana to Chicago for the short and
-profitless experience with the Chicago <i>Republican</i>. In
-the period between Dana’s retirement from the <i>Republican</i>
-and his purchase of the <i>Sun</i>, England was manager
-of the Jersey City <i>Times</i>.</p>
-
-<p>England was managing editor of the <i>Sun</i> only a year,
-then becoming its publisher—a position for which he
-was well fitted. An example of his business ability was
-given in 1877, when Frank Leslie went into bankruptcy.
-England was made assignee, and he handled the affairs
-of the Leslie concern so well that its debts were paid
-off in three years. This was only a side job for England,
-who continued all the time to manage the business
-matters of the <i>Sun</i>. When he died, in 1885, Dana wrote
-that he had “lost the friend of almost a lifetime, a man
-of unconquerable integrity, true and faithful in all
-things.”</p>
-
-<p>The second managing editor of the <i>Sun</i> was that great
-newspaperman Amos Jay Cummings. He was born to
-newspaper work if any man ever was. His father, who
-was a Congregational minister—a fact which could not
-be surmised by listening to Amos in one of his explosive
-moods—was the editor of the <i>Christian Palladium and
-Messenger</i>. This staid publication was printed on the
-first floor of the Cummings home at Irvington, New
-Jersey. Entrance to the composing-room was forbidden
-the son, but with tears and tobacco he bribed the printer,
-one Sylvester Bailey, who set up the Rev. Mr. Cummings’s
-articles, to let him in through a window. Cummings
-and Bailey later set type together on the <i>Tribune</i>.
-They fought in the same regiment in the Civil War.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">265</span>
-They worked together on the <i>Evening Sun</i>, and they are
-buried in the same cemetery at Irvington.</p>
-
-<p>The trade once learned, young Amos left home and
-wandered from State to State, making a living at the
-case. In 1856, when he was only fourteen, he was
-attracted by the glamour that surrounded William
-Walker, the famous filibuster, and joined the forces of
-that daring young adventurer, who then had control
-of Nicaragua. The boy was one of a strange horde of
-soldiers of fortune, which included British soldiers who
-had been at Sebastopol, Italians who had followed Garibaldi,
-and Hungarians in whom Kossuth had aroused
-the martial flame.</p>
-
-<p>Like many of the others in Walker’s army, Cummings
-believed that the Tennessean was a second Napoleon,
-with Central America, perhaps South America,
-for his empire. But when this Napoleon came to his
-Elba by his surrender to Commander Davis of the
-United States navy, in the spring of 1857, Cummings
-decided that there was no marshal’s baton in his own
-ragged knapsack and went back to be a wandering
-printer.</p>
-
-<p>Cummings was setting type in the <i>Tribune</i> office when
-the Civil War began. He hurried out and enlisted as a
-private in the Twenty-Sixth New Jersey Volunteer Infantry.
-He fought at Antietam, Chancellorsville, and
-Fredericksburg. At Marye’s Hill, in the battle of
-Fredericksburg, his regiment was supporting a battery
-against a Confederate charge. Their lines were broken
-and they fell back from the guns. Cummings took the
-regimental flag from the hands of the colour-sergeant
-and ran alone, under the enemy’s fire, back to the guns.
-The Jerseymen rallied, the guns were recovered, and
-Cummings got the Medal of Honor from Congress. He
-left the service as sergeant-major of the regiment and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">266</span>
-presently appeared in Greeley’s office, a seedy figure infolded
-in an army overcoat.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Greeley,” said Amos, “I’ve just got to have
-work.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, indeed!” creaked Horace. “And why have
-you got to have work?”</p>
-
-<p>Cummings said nothing, but turned his back on the
-great editor, lifted his coat-tails and showed the sad, if
-not shocking, state of his breeches. He got work. In
-1863, when the <i>Tribune</i> office was threatened by the
-rioters, Amos helped to barricade the composing-room
-and save it from the mob.</p>
-
-<p>Cummings served as editor of the <i>Weekly Tribune</i>
-and as a political writer for the daily. This is the way
-he came to quit the <i>Tribune</i>:</p>
-
-<p>John Russell Young, the third managing editor of
-the <i>Tribune</i>, got the habit of issuing numbered orders.
-Two of these orders reached Cummings’s desk, as
-follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Order No. 756—There is too much profanity in this
-office.</p>
-
-<p>Order No. 757—Hereafter the political reporter must
-have his copy in at 10.30 <span class="allsmcap">P.M.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Cummings turned to his desk and wrote:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Order No. 1234567—Everybody knows —— well that
-I get most of the political news out of the Albany
-<i>Journal</i>, and everybody knows —— —— well that the
-<i>Journal</i> doesn’t get here until eleven o’clock at night,
-and anybody who knows anything knows —— —— well
-that asking me to get my stuff up at half past ten is
-like asking a man to sit on a window-sill and dance on
-the roof at the same time.</p>
-
-<p class="p0 sigright"><span class="smcap">Cummings.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The result of this multiplicity of numbered orders was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">267</span>
-that shortly afterward Cummings presented himself to
-the editor of the <i>Sun</i>.</p>
-
-<p>“Why are you leaving the <i>Tribune</i>?” asked Mr. Dana.</p>
-
-<p>“They say,” replied Amos, “that I swear too much.”</p>
-
-<p>“Just the man for me!” replied Dana, according to
-the version which Cummings used to tell.</p>
-
-<p>At any rate, Amos went on the <i>Sun</i> as managing
-editor, and he continued to swear. The compositors
-now in the <i>Sun</i> office who remember him at all remember
-him largely for that.</p>
-
-<p>The union once set apart a day for contributions to
-the printers’-home fund, and each compositor was to
-contribute the fruits of a thousand ems of composition.
-Cummings, who was proud of being a union printer,
-left his managing-editor’s desk and went to the composing-room.</p>
-
-<p>“Ah, Mr. Cummings,” said Abe Masters, the foreman,
-“I’ll give you some of your own copy to set.”</p>
-
-<p>“To hell with my own copy!” said Cummings, who
-knew his handwriting faults. “Give me some reprint.”</p>
-
-<p>Green reporters got a taste of the Cummings profanity.
-One of them put a French phrase in a story.
-Cummings asked him what it meant, and the youth told
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“Then why the hell didn’t you write it that way?”
-yelled Cummings. “This paper is for people who read
-English!”</p>
-
-<p>In those days murderers were executed in the old
-Tombs prison in Centre Street. Cummings, who was
-full of enterprise, sought a way to get quickly the fall
-of the drop. The telephone had not been perfected, but
-there was a shot-tower north of the <i>Sun’s</i> office and east
-of the Tombs. Cummings sent one man to the Tombs,
-with instructions to wave a flag upon the instant of the
-execution. Another man, stationed at the top of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">268</span>
-shot-tower, had another flag, with which he was to make
-a sign to Cummings on the roof of the Sun Building,
-as soon as he saw the flag move at the prison.</p>
-
-<p>The reporter at the Tombs arranged with a keeper
-to notify him just before the execution, but the keeper
-was sent on an errand, and presently Cummings, standing
-nervously on the roof of the Sun Building, heard the
-newsboys crying the extras of a rival sheet. The plan
-had fallen through. No blanks could adequately represent
-the Cummings temper upon that occasion.</p>
-
-<p>Cummings was probably the best all-round news man
-of his day. He had the executive ability and the knowledge
-of men that make a good managing editor. He
-knew what Dana knew—that the newspapers had yet
-to touch public sympathy and imagination in the news
-columns as well as in editorial articles; and he knew
-how to do it, how to teach men to do it, how to cram
-the moving picture of a living city into the four pages
-of the <i>Sun</i>. He advised desk men, complimented or
-corrected reporters, edited local articles, and, when a
-story appealed to him strongly, he went out and got it
-and wrote it himself.</p>
-
-<p>In such brief biographies of Cummings as have been
-printed you will find that he is best remembered in the
-outer world as a managing editor, or as the editor of the
-<i>Evening Sun</i>, or as a Representative in Congress fighting
-for the rights of Civil War veterans, printers’
-unions, and letter-carriers; but among the oldest generation
-of newspapermen he is revered as a great reporter.
-He was the first real human-interest reporter.
-He knew the news value of the steer loose in the streets,
-the lost child in the police station, the Italian murder
-that was really a case of vendetta. The <i>Sun</i> men of his
-time followed his lead, and a few of them, like Julian
-Ralph, outdid him, but he was the pioneer; and a thousand<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">269</span>
-<i>Sun</i> men since then have kept, or tried to keep, on
-the Cummings trail.</p>
-
-<p>It was Cummings who sent men to cover the police
-stations at night and made it possible for the <i>Sun</i> to
-beat the news association on the trivial items which
-were the delight of the reader, and which helped, among
-other things, to shoot the paper’s daily circulation to
-one hundred thousand in the third year of the Dana
-ownership.</p>
-
-<p>The years when Cummings was managing editor of
-the <i>Sun</i> were years stuffed with news. Even a newspaperman
-without imagination would have found plenty
-of happenings at hand. The Franco-Prussian War, the
-gold conspiracy that ended in Black Friday (September
-24, 1869), the Orange riot (July 12, 1871), the great
-Chicago fire, the killing of Fisk by Stokes, Tweedism—what
-more could a newspaperman wish in so brief a
-period? And, of course, always there were murders.
-There were so many mysterious murders in the <i>Sun</i> that
-a suspicious person might have harboured the thought
-that Cummings went out after his day’s work was done
-and committed them for art’s sake.</p>
-
-<p>When men and women stopped killing, Cummings
-would turn to politics. Tweed was the great man then;
-under suspicion, even before 1870, but a great man,
-particularly among his own. The <i>Sun</i> printed pages
-about Tweed and his satellites and the great balls of
-the Americus Club, their politico-social organisation.
-It described the jewels worn by the leaders of Tammany
-Hall, including the two-thousand-dollar club badge—the
-head of a tiger with eyes of ruby and three large diamonds
-shining above them.</p>
-
-<p>Everybody who wanted the political news read the
-<i>Sun</i>. As Jim Fisk remarked one evening as he stood
-proudly with Jay Gould in the lobby of the Grand Opera<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">270</span>
-House—proud of his notoriety in connection with the
-Erie Railroad jobbery, proud of the infamy he enjoyed
-from the fact that he owned two houses in the same
-block in West Twenty-third Street, housing his wife in
-one and Josie Mansfield in the other; proud of his guilty
-partnership in <span class="locked">Tweedism—</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“The <i>Sun’s</i> a lively paper. I can never wait for daylight
-for a copy. I have my man down there with a
-horse every morning, and just as soon as he gets a <i>Sun</i>
-hot from the press he jumps on the back of that horse
-and puts for me as if all hell was after him.</p>
-
-<p>“Gould’s the same way; he has to see it before daylight,
-too. My man has to bring him up a copy. You
-always get the news ahead of everybody else. Why, the
-first news I got that Gould and me were blackballed in
-the Blossom Club we got from the <i>Sun</i>. I’m damned
-if I’d believe it at first, and Gould says, ‘What is this
-Blossom Club?’ Just then Sweeny came in. I asked
-Sweeny if it was true, and Sweeny said yes, that Tweed
-was the man that done it all. There it was in the <i>Sun</i>,
-straight’s a die.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> reporter who chronicled this—it may have
-been Cummings himself—had gone to ask Fisk whether
-he and his friends had hired a thug to black-jack the
-respectable Mr. Dorman B. Eaton, a foe of the Erie outfit;
-but he took down and printed Fisk’s tribute to the
-<i>Sun’s</i> enterprise. As there was scarcely a morning in
-those days when the <i>Sun</i> did not turn up some new trick
-played by the Tweed gang and the Erie group, their
-anxiety to get an early copy was natural.</p>
-
-<p>Tweed and his philanthropic pretences did not deceive
-the <i>Sun</i>. On February 24, 1870—a year and a
-half before the exposure which sent the boss to prison—the
-<i>Sun</i> printed an editorial article announcing that
-Tweed was willing to surrender his ownership of the
-city upon the following terms:</p>
-
-<div id="ip_270" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 34em;">
- <img src="images/i_270a.jpg" width="1625" height="2190" alt="" />
- <div class="captionr">(<i>From a Photograph by Paul Dana</i>)</div>
- <div class="captionl">
- <p>MR. DANA AT SEVENTY</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<div class="blockquot"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">271</span>
-
-<p>To give up all interest in the court-house swindle.</p>
-
-<p>To receive no more revenue from the department of
-survey and inspection of buildings; and he hopes the
-people of New York will remember his generosity in
-giving up this place, inasmuch as his share amounts to
-over one hundred thousand dollars a year.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Tweed was liked by many New Yorkers, particularly
-those who knew him only by his lavish charities. One
-of these wrote the following letter, which the <i>Sun</i>
-printed on December 7, 1870, under the heading “A
-Monument to Boss Tweed—the Money Paid In”:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Enclosed please find ten cents as a contribution to
-erect a statue to William M. Tweed on Tweed Plaza. I
-have no doubt that fifty thousand to seventy-five thousand
-of his admirers will contribute. Yours, etc.,</p>
-
-<p class="p0 sigright"><span class="smcap">Seventeenth Ward Voter.</span>
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>On December 12 the <i>Sun</i> said editorially:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Has Boss Tweed any friends? If he has, they are a
-mean set. It is now more than a week since an appeal
-was made to them to come forward and put up the ancillary
-qualities to erect a statue of Mr. Tweed in the
-centre of Tweed Plaza; but as yet only four citizens
-have sent in their subscriptions. These were not large,
-but they were paid in cash, and there is reason for the
-belief that they were the tokens of sincere admiration
-for Mr. Tweed. But the hundreds, or, rather, thousands,
-of small-potato politicians whom he has made
-rich and powerful stand aloof and do not offer a
-picayune.</p>
-
-<p>We propose that the statue shall be executed by
-Captain Albertus de Groot, who made the celebrated
-Vanderbilt bronzes, but we have not yet decided
-whether it shall represent the favorite son of New
-York afoot or ahorseback. In fact, we rather incline
-to have a nautical statue, exhibiting Boss Tweed as a
-bold mariner, amid the wild fury of a hurricane, splicing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">272</span>
-the main brace in the foretopgallant futtock shrouds
-of his steam-yacht. But that is a matter for future
-consideration. The first thing is to get the money;
-and if those who claim to be Mr. Tweed’s friends don’t
-raise it, we shall begin to believe the rumor that the
-Hon. P. Brains Sweeny has turned against him, and
-has forbidden every one to give anything toward the
-erection of the projected statue.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Ten days later the <i>Sun</i> carried on the editorial page
-a long news story headed “Our Statue of Boss Tweed—the
-Readers of the <i>Sun</i> Going to Work in Dead
-Earnest—The <i>Sun’s</i> Advice Followed, Ha! Ha!—Organisation
-of the Tweed Testimonial Association of
-the City of New York—A Bronze Statue Worth
-Twenty-Five Thousand Dollars to Be Erected.”</p>
-
-<p>Sure enough, the ward politicians had taken the joke
-seriously. Police Justice Edward J. Shandley, Tim
-Campbell, Coroner Patrick Keenan, Police Commissioner
-Smith, and a dozen other faithful Tammany men
-were on the list of trustees. They decided upon the
-space then known as Tweed Plaza, at the junction of
-East Broadway and New Canal and Rutgers Streets as
-the site for the monument.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> added to the joke by printing more letters
-from contributors. One, from Patrick Maloy, “champion
-eel-bobber,” brought ten cents and the suggestion
-that the statue should be inscribed with the amount
-of money that Tweed had made out of the city. This
-sort of thing went on into the new year, the <i>Sun</i>
-aggravating the movement with grave editorial advice.</p>
-
-<p>At last the jest became more than Tweed could bear,
-and from his desk in the Senate Chamber at Albany, on
-March 13, 1871, he sent the following letter to Judge
-Shandley, the chairman of the statue committee:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">273</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p class="in0">
-<span class="smcap">My dear Sir</span>:
-</p>
-
-<p>I learn that a movement to erect a statue to me in the
-city of New York is being seriously pushed by a committee
-of citizens of which you are chairman.</p>
-
-<p>I was aware that a newspaper of our city had brought
-forward the proposition, but I considered it one of the
-jocose sensations for which that journal is so famous.
-Since I left the city to engage in legislation the proposition
-appears to have been taken up by my friends, no
-doubt in resentment at the supposed unfriendly motive
-of the original proposition and the manner in which it
-had been urged.</p>
-
-<p>The only effect of the proposed statue is to present
-me to the public as assenting to the parade of a public
-and permanent testimonial to vanity and self-glorification
-which do not exist. You will thus perceive that
-the movement, which originated in a joke, but which
-you have made serious, is doing me an injustice and an
-injury; and I beg of you to see to it that it is at once
-stopped.</p>
-
-<p>I hardly know which is the more absurd—the original
-proposition or the grave comments of others, based upon
-the idea that I have given the movement countenance.
-I have been about as much abused as any man in public
-life; I can stand abuse and bear even more than my
-share; but I have never yet been charged with being
-deficient in common sense.</p>
-
-<p class="p0 sigright">
-<span class="l4">Yours very truly,</span><br />
-<span class="smcap">Wm. M. Tweed</span>.
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>This letter appeared in the <i>Sun</i> the next day under
-the facetious heading: “A Great Man’s Modesty—The
-Most Remarkable Letter Ever Written by the Noble
-Benefactor of the People.” Editorial regret was expressed
-at Tweed’s declination; and, still in solemn
-mockery, the <i>Sun</i> grieved over the return to the subscribers
-of the several thousand dollars that had been
-sent to Shandley’s committee. William J. Florence,
-the comedian, had put himself down for five hundred
-dollars.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">274</span></p>
-
-<p>Was it utterly absurd that the Tweed idolaters should
-have taken seriously the <i>Sun’s</i> little joke? No, for so
-serious a writer as Gustavus Myers wrote in his “History
-of Tammany Hall” (1901) that “one of the signers
-of the circular has assured the author that it was a serious
-proposal. The attitude of the <i>Sun</i> confirms this.”
-And another grave literary man, Dr. Henry Van Dyke,
-set this down in his “Essays on Application” (1908):</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>William M. Tweed, of New York, who reigned over
-the city for seven years, stole six million dollars or more
-for himself and six million dollars or more for his followers;
-was indorsed at the heights of his corruption by
-six of the richest citizens of the metropolis; had a public
-statue offered to him by the New York <i>Sun</i> as a “noble
-benefactor of the city,” etc.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Of course Mr. Myers and Dr. Van Dyke had never
-read the statue articles from beginning to end, else
-they would not have stumbled over the brick that even
-Tweed, with all his conceit, was able to perceive.</p>
-
-<p>In July, 1871, when the New York <i>Times</i> was fortunate
-enough to have put in its hands the proof of what
-everybody already suspected—that Senator Tweed,
-Comptroller Connolly, Park Commissioner Sweeny, and
-their associates were plundering the city—the <i>Sun</i> was
-busy with its own pet news and political articles, the
-investigation of the Orange riots and the extravagance
-and nepotism of President Grant’s administration.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> did not like the <i>Times</i>, which had been directed,
-since the death of Henry J. Raymond, in 1869,
-by Raymond’s partner, George Jones, and Raymond’s
-chief editorial writer, Louis J. Jennings; but the <i>Sun</i>
-liked the Tweed gang still less. It had been pounding
-at it for two years, using the head-lines “Boss Tweed’s
-Legislature,” or “Mr. Sweeny’s Legislature,” every day<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">275</span>
-of the sessions at the State capital; but neither the <i>Sun</i>
-nor any other newspaper had been able to obtain the
-figures that proved the robbery until the county bookkeeper,
-Matthew J. O’Rourke, dug them out and took
-them to the <i>Times</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The books showed that the city had been gouged out
-of five million dollars in one item alone—the price paid
-in two years to a Tweed contracting firm, Ingersoll &amp;
-Co., for furniture and carpets for the county court-house.
-Enough carpets had been bought—or at least
-paid for—to cover the eight acres of City Hall Park
-three layers deep. And that five million dollars was
-only a fraction of the loot.</p>
-
-<p>In September, 1871, after the mass-meeting of citizens
-in Cooper Union, the <i>Sun</i> began printing the revelations
-of Tweedism under the standing head, “The Doom of
-the Ring.”</p>
-
-<p>Tweed engaged as counsel, among others, William O.
-Bartlett, who was not only counsel for the <i>Sun</i> but,
-next to Mr. Dana, the paper’s leading editorial writer
-at that time. The boss may have fancied that in retaining
-Bartlett he retained the <i>Sun</i>, but it is more
-likely that he sought Bartlett’s services because of that
-lawyer’s reputation as an aggressive and able counsellor.
-If Tweed had any delusions about influencing the <i>Sun</i>,
-they were quickly dispelled. On September 18, in an
-editorial article probably written by Dana, the <i>Sun</i>
-said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>While Mr. Bartlett, in his able argument before
-Judge Barnard on Friday, vindicated Mr. Tweed from
-certain allegations set forth in the complaint of Mr.
-Foley, he by no means relieved him from all complicity
-in the enormous frauds and robberies that have been
-committed in the government of this city. With all his
-ability, that is something beyond Mr. Bartlett’s power;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">276</span>
-and it is vain to hope that either of the leaders of the
-Tammany Ring can ever regain the confidence of the
-public, or for any length of time exercise the authority
-of political office. They must all go, Sweeny, Tweed,
-and Hall, as well as Connolly.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Tweed must not imagine that he can buy his way
-out of the present complication with money, as he did
-in 1870. The next Legislature will be made up of different
-material from the Republicans he purchased, and
-the people will exercise a sterner supervision over its
-acts.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A good picture of Tweed’s popularity, which he still
-retained among his own people, was drawn in an editorial
-article in the <i>Sun</i> of October 30, 1871, three days
-after the boss had been arrested and released in a million
-dollars’ bail:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>In the Fourth District William M. Tweed is sure to
-be re-elected [to the State Senate]. The Republican
-factions, after a great deal of quarreling, have concentrated
-on O’Donovan Rossa, a well-known Fenian, but
-his chance is nothing. Even if it had been possible by
-beginning in season to defeat Tweed, it cannot be done
-with only a week’s time.</p>
-
-<p>Besides, his power there is absolute. The district
-comprises the most ignorant and most vicious portion
-of the city. It is full of low grog-shops, houses of ill-fame,
-low gambling-houses, and sailor boarding-houses,
-whose keepers enjoy protection and immunity, for which
-they pay by the most efficient electioneering services.
-Moreover, the district is full of sinecures paid from the
-city treasury. If, instead of having stolen millions, Mr.
-Tweed were accused of a dozen murders, or if, instead of
-being in human form, he wore the semblance of a bull or
-a bear, the voters of the Fourth District would march
-to the polls and vote for him just as zealously as they
-will do now, and the inspectors of election would furnish
-for him by fraudulent counting any majority that might
-be thought necessary in addition to the votes really
-given.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">277</span></p>
-
-<p>Tweed was re-elected to the State Senate by twelve
-thousand plurality.</p>
-
-<p>The great robber-boss was a source of news from his
-rise in the late sixties to his death in 1878. As early as
-March, 1870, the <i>Sun</i> gave its readers an intimate idea
-of Tweed’s private extravagances under the heading:
-“Bill Tweed’s Big Barn—Democratic Extravagance
-Versus That of the White House—Grant’s Billiard
-Saloon, Caligula’s Stable, and Leonard Jerome’s Private
-Theatre Eclipsed—Martin Van Buren’s Gold Spoons
-Nowhere—Belmont’s Four-in-Hand Overshadowed—a
-Picture for Rural Democrats.”</p>
-
-<p>Beneath this head was a column story beginning:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The Hon. William M. Tweed resides at 41 West
-Thirty-sixth Street. The Hon. William M. Tweed’s
-horses reside in East Fortieth Street, between Madison
-and Park Avenues.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>That was the <i>Sun’s</i> characteristic way of starting a
-story.</p>
-
-<p>Tweed was, in a way, responsible for the appearance
-of a <i>Sun</i> more than four pages in size. Up to December,
-1875, there was no issue of the <i>Sun</i> on Sundays. In
-November of that year it was announced that beginning
-on December 5 there would be a Sunday <i>Sun</i>, to be sold
-at three cents, one cent more than the week-day price,
-but nothing was said, or thought, of an increase In
-size.</p>
-
-<p>On Saturday, December 4, Tweed, with the connivance
-of his keepers, escaped from his house in Madison
-Avenue. This made a four-column story on which Mr.
-Dana had not counted. Also, the advertisers had taken
-advantage of the new Sunday issue, and there were more
-than two pages of advertisements. There was nothing
-for it but to make an eight-page paper, for which Dana,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">278</span>
-who then believed that all the news could be told in a
-folio, apologised as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>We confess ourselves surprised at the extraordinary
-pressure of advertisements upon our pages this morning;
-and disappointed in being compelled to present the
-<i>Sun</i> to our readers in a different form from that to
-which they are accustomed. We trust, however, that
-they will find it no less interesting than usual; and,
-still more, that they will feel that although the appearance
-may be somewhat different, it is yet the same
-friendly and faithful <i>Sun</i>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>But the Sunday issue of the <i>Sun</i> never went back to
-four pages, for the eight-page paper had been made so
-attractive with special stories, reprint, and short fiction
-that both readers and advertisers were pleased. It was
-ten years, however, before the week-day <i>Sun</i> increased
-its size. Even during the Beecher trial (January,
-1875) when the <i>Sun’s</i> reporter, Franklin Fyles, found
-himself unable to condense the day’s proceedings within
-a page of seven columns, the <i>Sun</i> still gave all the rest
-of the day’s news.</p>
-
-<p>Cummings’s right-hand man in the news department
-of the <i>Sun</i> was Dr. John B. Wood, the Great American
-Condenser. All the city copy passed through his hands.
-He was then nearing fifty, a white-haired man who wore
-two pairs of glasses with thick lenses, these crowned
-with a green shade. He had been a printer on several
-papers and a desk man on the <i>Tribune</i>, whence Dana
-brought him to the <i>Sun</i>. Wood’s sense of the value of
-words was so acute that he could determine, as rapidly
-as his eye passed along the pages of a story, just what
-might be stricken out without loss. It might be a word,
-a sentence, a page; sometimes it would be ninety-eight
-per cent of the article.</p>
-
-<p>Even when his sight so failed that he was unable to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">279</span>
-read copy continuously, Dr. Wood performed the remarkable
-feat of condensing through a reader. Willis
-Holly read copy to him for months, six hours a night.
-Holly might read three pages without interruption,
-while Wood sat as silent as if he were asleep. <span class="locked">Then——</span></p>
-
-<p>“Throw out the introduction down to the middle of
-the second page, begin with ‘John Elliott killed,’ and
-cut it off at ‘arrested him.’”</p>
-
-<p>Joseph C. Hendrix, who became a member of Congress
-and a bank president, was a <i>Sun</i> cub reporter. One
-night he was assigned to read copy to Dr. Wood. He
-picked up a sheet and began:</p>
-
-<p>“‘The application of Mrs. Jane Smith for divorce
-from her husband, John <span class="locked">Smith—’”</span></p>
-
-<p>“Cut out ‘her husband,’” said Wood.</p>
-
-<p>“‘—who alleges cruelty,’” Hendrix continued, “‘in
-that he—’” Here the reporter’s writing was blurred,
-and Hendrix, who could not decipher it, said “Damn!”</p>
-
-<p>“Cut out the ‘damn,’” said Dr. Wood.</p>
-
-<p>In keeping news down to the bone Wood was of
-remarkable value to the <i>Sun</i> in those years when Dana
-showed that it was possible to tell everything in four
-pages. New York was smaller then, and display advertising
-had not come to be a science. The <i>Sun</i> got along
-nicely on its circulation, for the newsdealers paid one
-and one-third cents for each copy. With the circulation
-receipts about fourteen hundred dollars a day, the advertising
-receipts were clear profit. Amos Cummings
-had such a fierce disregard for the feelings of advertisers
-that often, when a good piece of news came in late, he
-would throw out advertising to make room for it.</p>
-
-<p>The city editors of the <i>Sun</i> under Cummings were, in
-order, John Williams, Lawrence S. Kane, Walter M.
-Rosebault, William Young, and John B. Bogart. Williams,
-who had been a Methodist preacher, left the <i>Sun</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">280</span>
-in 1869 to become religious editor of the <i>Herald</i>. Kane,
-a big blond Irishman with mutton-chop whiskers, held
-the city desk until the summer of 1870 and then returned
-to the reportorial staff. Rosebault, who had
-been one of the <i>Sun’s</i> best young reporters, resigned
-from the city editorship late in 1870 in order to study
-law. He afterward went to San Francisco to be principal
-editorial writer of the <i>Chronicle</i>, but soon returned
-to New York and for many years, while practising law,
-he contributed editorial and special articles to the <i>Sun</i>.
-Mr. Rosebault, who is still an active lawyer, told the
-present writer, in July, 1918, that of all the reporters
-who served on his staff when he was city editor of the
-<i>Sun</i> only one, Sidney Rosenfeld, later a dramatist and
-the first editor of <i>Puck</i>, was still alive.</p>
-
-<p>The first telegraph editor of the <i>Sun</i> was an Episcopalian
-clergyman, Arthur Beckwith, afterward connected
-with the Brooklyn <i>Eagle</i> and the Brooklyn
-<i>Citizen</i> as a law reporter. When he left the telegraph
-desk of the <i>Sun</i> his place was taken by Colonel Henry
-Grenville Shaw, a Civil War veteran. Colonel Shaw
-left the <i>Sun</i> to become night editor of the San Francisco
-<i>Chronicle</i> and was succeeded by Amos B. Stillman, a
-ninety-pound man from Connecticut. He was a newspaperman
-in his native state until the Civil War, and
-after Appomattox he went back to Connecticut. He
-went on the <i>Sun</i> in 1870 as telegraph editor, and stayed
-on the same desk for forty-five years.</p>
-
-<p>In the early days of Dana’s <i>Sun</i> there were no night
-editors, for it had not been found necessary to establish
-a central desk where all the news of all the departments
-could be gathered together for judgment as to relative
-value. Each desk man sent his own copy to the composing-room,
-and the pages were made up by the managing
-editor or the night city editor after midnight. Leisurely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">281</span>
-nights, those, with no newspaper trains to catch
-and no starting of the presses until four o’clock in the
-morning!</p>
-
-<div id="ip_280" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 33em;">
- <img src="images/i_280a.jpg" width="1593" height="1916" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
- <p>AMOS JAY CUMMINGS</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>One evening in that period the other desk men in
-the news department of the <i>Sun</i> observed that Amos
-Stillman was extraordinarily busy and more than
-usually silent. He scribbled away, revising despatches
-and writing subheads, and it was after twelve o’clock
-when he got up, stretched, and uttered one sentence:</p>
-
-<p>“Quite a fire in Chicago!”</p>
-
-<p>That was the October evening in 1871 when Mrs.
-O’Leary’s cow started the blaze that consumed seventeen
-thousand buildings. To Deacon Stillman it was
-just a busy night.</p>
-
-<p>Deacon Stillman was born only eighteen months after
-the <i>Sun</i>—Ben Day’s <i>Sun</i>; but even as this is being written
-he is strolling up and down a corridor in the <i>Sun</i>
-office, waiting for another old-timer, some mere lad of
-sixty, to come out and have dinner with him.</p>
-
-<p>Under Cummings was developed a young man who
-turned out to be one of the great city editors of New
-York—John B. Bogart, of whom Arthur Brisbane wrote
-that he was the best teacher of journalism that America
-had produced. He was in most respects the opposite
-of Cummings. He had all of Cummings’s love for the
-business, but not his tremendous rush. Cummings was
-an explosion, Bogart a steady flame. Cummings roared,
-Bogart was gentle.</p>
-
-<p>Like Cummings and Stillman, Bogart was a Union
-veteran. In 1861, when he was only sixteen years old,
-he left the New Haven store where he was a clerk and
-enlisted in the Seventh Connecticut Volunteers. After
-serving three years in the army, he returned home to
-become a bookkeeper in a dry-goods store. He went on
-the <i>Sun</i> February 21, 1871, as a general reporter. On<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">282</span>
-March 17, 1873—his twenty-eighth birthday—he was
-made city editor, the former city editor, William Young,
-having been promoted to the managing editor’s desk to
-take the place of Cummings, whose health was poor.</p>
-
-<p>John Bogart remained at the city desk for seventeen
-years of tireless work. He was a master of journalistic
-detail, a patient follower-up of the stories which, like
-periscopes, appear and reappear on the sea of events.</p>
-
-<p>“He was a whole school of journalism in himself,”
-Brisbane wrote of Bogart years afterward. “He could
-tell the young men where to go for their news, what
-questions to ask, what was and what was not worth
-while. Above all, he could give enthusiasm to his men.
-He worked by encouraging, not by harsh criticism.”</p>
-
-<p>Bogart always asked a young reporter whether he had
-read the <i>Sun</i> that morning. If one confessed that he
-had read only part of it, Bogart would invite him to
-sit down, and would say:</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Jones, it is one of the salutary customs of this
-paper that every reporter shall read everything in it
-before appearing for duty. Don’t even skip the advertisements,
-because there are stories concealed in many
-of them. The <i>Sun</i> is good breakfast-food.”</p>
-
-<p>The custom of Bogart’s time is the custom still, but
-a reporter has to go harder at his reading than he did
-in the days of the four-page <i>Sun</i>.</p>
-
-<p>If a new reporter had not absorbed the <i>Sun</i> style,
-Bogart gently tried to saturate him with it.</p>
-
-<p>“I notice,” he said to a man who had covered a little
-fire the night before, “that you begin your story with
-‘at an early hour yesterday morning,’ and that you say
-also that ‘smoke was seen issuing from an upper
-window.’”</p>
-
-<p>“Isn’t that good English?” asked the young man.</p>
-
-<p>“It is excellent English,” Bogart replied calmly,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">283</span>
-“and it has been indorsed by generations of reporters
-and copy-readers. If you look in the other papers you
-will find that some of them also discovered smoke issuing
-from an upper window at an early hour yesterday
-morning. We do not deny that it is good English; but
-it is not good <i>Sun</i> English.”</p>
-
-<p>Never again did smoke issue from an upper window
-of that reporter’s copy.</p>
-
-<p>Under Cummings and Bogart the <i>Sun</i> turned out <i>Sun</i>
-men. A young man from Troy, Franklin Fyles, was
-one of their first police-station reporters. He did not
-know as many policemen as did Joseph Josephs, who
-wore a silk hat and a gambler’s mustache, and who
-covered the West Side stations, but he wrote well. He
-did not know as many desperate characters as were
-honoured with the acquaintance of David Davids, the
-East Side police reporter, but he knew a <i>Sun</i> story when
-he saw it. In 1875, five years after Fyles came on the
-<i>Sun</i>, he was the star reporter, and he reported the
-Beecher trial. Ten thousand words a day in longhand
-was an easy day’s work for the reports of that great scandal.
-Fyles became the dramatic critic of the <i>Sun</i> in
-1885, and continued as such until 1903. In that period
-he wrote several plays, including “The Girl I Left Behind
-Me,” in which David Belasco was his collaborator;
-“Cumberland ’61,” and “The Governor of Kentucky.”
-Fyles died in 1911 at the age of 64.</p>
-
-<p>Another police-station reporter of the <i>Sun</i> was Edward
-Payson Weston, who had been an office-boy in
-various newspaper offices until about the beginning of
-the Civil War and had then become a reporter. Before
-Dana bought the <i>Sun</i> Weston had walked from Portland,
-Maine, to Chicago—thirteen hundred and twenty-six
-miles—in twenty-six days. Forty years later he
-walked it in twenty-five days.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">284</span></p>
-
-<p>Cummings liked Weston. Whatever faults there may
-have been in his literary style, his knee action was a
-perfect poem. He could bring a story down from the
-Bellevue morgue faster than all the horse-cars. He was
-the best “leg man” in the history of journalism. In
-1910, more than four decades after the <i>Sun</i> first took
-him on, Weston, then a man of seventy years, walked
-from Los Angeles to New York in seventy-seven days.</p>
-
-<p>Henry Mann, a Civil War veteran, was the <i>Sun’s</i> principal
-court reporter. He covered the Tweed and Stokes
-trials and the impeachment of Judge Barnard. Later
-he was exchange editor and he is remembered also as
-the author of “The History of Ancient and Medieval
-Republics.”</p>
-
-<p>Other <i>Sun</i> reporters were Tom Cook, who came from
-California, had the shiniest silk hat on Park Row, and
-knew Fisk and the rest of the Erie crowd; Big Jim Connolly,
-one of the best news writers of his day; the
-McAlpin brothers, Robert and Tod; and Chester S.
-Lord, who was to become the managing editor of the
-<i>Sun</i> and serve it in that capacity for a third of a
-century.</p>
-
-<p>William Young, who was city editor when Lord went
-on the paper, gave him his first assignment—to get a
-story about the effect of the Whisky Ring’s work on
-the liquor trade. Lord wrote a light and airy piece
-which indicated that the ring’s operations would bring
-highly moral results by decreasing the supply of intoxicants;
-but when the copy-reader got through with the
-story this is the way it read:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>A <i>Sun</i> reporter interviewed several leading wholesale
-liquor-dealers yesterday concerning the despatch from
-Louisville, saying that all the old whisky in the country
-had been purchased by a Western firm for a rise. They
-said that they had sold their accumulated stock of prime<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">285</span>
-whisky months ago. One firm, the largest in the city,
-had sold nearly two thousand barrels, stored since 1858.
-One shrewd dealer said it was reported that Grant was
-in the ring, and that he wanted to secure a supply to
-fall back on in his retirement.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Mark Maguire, the celebrated “Toppy,” was the chief
-of the sporting writers. He was about the oldest man
-in the <i>Sun</i> office, born before Napoleon went to Elba.
-He was the first king of the New York newsboys, and
-Barney Williams, the boy who first sold Ben Day’s <i>Sun</i>,
-once worked for him.</p>
-
-<p>Maguire had as customers, when they visited New
-York, Jackson, Webster, Clay, and Calhoun. When
-prosperity came to him he opened road-houses that were
-the resorts of horse-owners like Commodore Vanderbilt
-and Robert Bonner. His Cayuga House, at McComb’s
-Dam, was named after his own fast trotter, Cayuga
-Girl. Maguire’s intimacy with Bonner was such that
-the hangers-on in the racing game believed that Bonner
-owned the <i>Sun</i> and transmitted his views to Dana
-through “Toppy.” Maguire worked for the <i>Sun</i> up
-to his death in 1889.</p>
-
-<p>When Amos Cummings had an evening to spare from
-his regular news work he would go with Maguire to a
-prize-fight and write the story of it. Maguire invented
-the chart by which a complete record of the blows struck
-in a boxing match is kept—one circle for the head and
-one for the body of each contestant, with a pencil-mark
-for every blow landed. After an evening in which Jem
-Mace was one of the entertainers, Maguire’s chart
-looked like a shotgun target, but Cummings, who
-watched the fighters while Mark tallied the blows, would
-make a live story from it.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> of that day had women reporters; indeed, it
-had the first real woman reporter in American journalism,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">286</span>
-Mrs. Emily Verdery Battey. She worked on
-fashion stories, women’s-rights stories, and general-news
-stories. She was one of the Georgia Verderys, and she
-went on the <i>Sun</i> shortly after Mr. Dana took hold. Her
-brother, George Verdery, was also a <i>Sun</i> reporter. Another
-<i>Sun</i> woman of that time was Miss Anna Ballard,
-who wrote, among other things, the news stories that
-bobbed up in the surrogates’ court.</p>
-
-<p>The dramatic criticisms of the <i>Sun</i>, in the first three
-or four years of the seventies, were written by two young
-lawyers recently graduated from the law school of New
-York University, Willard Bartlett and Elihu Root.
-Bartlett was a year the younger, but he ranked Root
-as a critic because of his acquaintance—through his
-father, W. O. Bartlett—with newspaper ways. If
-Lester Wallack was putting on “Ours,” that would be
-Mr. Bartlett’s assignment, while Mr. Root went to
-report the advance of art at Woods’s Museum, where
-was the Lydia Thompson troupe. If it befell that on
-the same evening Edwin Booth produced “Hamlet” in
-a new setting and George L. Fox appeared in a more
-glorious than ever “Humpty Dumpty,” Critic Bartlett
-would see Booth; Assistant Critic Root, Fox.</p>
-
-<p>In time these young journalists passed on to be actors
-in that more complex and perhaps equally interesting
-drama, the law, which for fourteen years they practised
-together. Mr. Bartlett figured as one of Mr. Dana’s
-counsel in several of the <i>Sun’s</i> legal cases. After thirty
-years on the bench, retiring from the chief judgeship of
-the Court of Appeals of the State of New York through
-the age statute in 1916, Judge Bartlett is still actively
-interested in the <i>Sun</i>, and many of its articles on legal
-and literary topics are contributed by him.</p>
-
-<p>As for Mr. Root, his friendship with the <i>Sun</i> has been
-unbroken for almost fifty years, and he has made more<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">287</span>
-news for it than most men. Under such circumstances
-even the most jealous newspaper is willing to forgive
-the desertion of an assistant dramatic critic.</p>
-
-<p>It was Willard Bartlett, incidentally, who was the
-inventor of the <i>Sun’s</i> celebrated office cat. One night
-in the eighties the copy of a message from President
-Cleveland to Congress came to the desk of the telegraph
-editor. It was a warm evening, and the window near
-the telegraph desk was open. The message fluttered
-out and was lost in Nassau Street. The <i>Sun</i> had nothing
-about it the next morning, and in the afternoon,
-when Mr. Bartlett called on Mr. Dana, the matter of
-the lost message was under discussion. The editor remarked
-that it was a matter difficult to explain to the
-readers.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, say that the office cat ate it up,” suggested
-Bartlett.</p>
-
-<p>Dana chuckled and dictated a paragraph creating the
-cat. Instantly the animal became famous. Newspapers
-pictured it as Dana’s inseparable companion,
-and the <i>Sun</i> presently had another, and longer, editorial
-article about the wonderful beast:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The universal interest which this accomplished animal
-has excited throughout the country is a striking
-refutation that genius is not honored in its own day
-and generation. Perhaps no other living critic has
-attained the popularity and vogue now enjoyed by our
-cat. For years he worked in silence, unknown, perhaps,
-beyond the limits of the office. He is a sort of
-Rosicrucian cat, and his motto has been “to know all
-and to keep himself unknown.” But he could not
-escape the glory his efforts deserved, and a few mornings
-ago he woke up, like Byron, to find himself famous.</p>
-
-<p>We are glad to announce that he hasn’t been puffed
-up by the enthusiastic praise which comes to him from
-all sources. He is the same industrious, conscientious,
-sharp-eyed, and sharp-toothed censor of copy that he has<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">288</span>
-always been, nor should we have known that he is conscious
-of the admiration he excites among his esteemed
-contemporaries of the press had we not observed him in
-the act of dilacerating a copy of the <i>Graphic</i> containing
-an alleged portrait of him.</p>
-
-<p>It was impossible not to sympathize with his evident
-indignation. The <i>Graphic’s</i> portrait did foul injustice
-to his majestic and intellectual features. Besides, it
-represented him as having a bandage over one eye, as
-if he had been involved in controversy and had had his
-eye mashed. Now, aside from the fact that he needs
-both eyes to discharge his literary duties properly, he is
-able to whip his weight in office cats, and his fine, large
-eyes have never been shrouded in black, and we don’t
-believe they ever will be. He is a soldier as well as a
-scholar.</p>
-
-<p>We have received many requests to give a detailed
-account of the personal habits and peculiarities of this
-feline Aristarchus. Indeed, we have been requested to
-prepare a full biographical sketch to appear in the next
-edition of “Homes of American Authors.” At some
-future day we may satisfy public curiosity with the details
-of his literary methods. But genius such as his
-defies analysis, and the privacy of a celebrity ought not
-to be rudely invaded.</p>
-
-<p>It is not out of place, however, to indicate a few
-traits which illustrate his extraordinary faculty of literary
-decomposition, so to speak. His favorite food
-is a tariff discussion. When a big speech, full of wind
-and statistics, comes within his reach, he pounces upon
-it immediately and digests the figures at his leisure.
-During the discussion of the Morrison Bill he used to
-feed steadily on tariff speeches for eight hours a day,
-and yet his appetite remained unimpaired.</p>
-
-<p>When a piece of stale news or a long-winded, prosy
-article comes into the office, his remarkable sense of
-smell instantly detects it, and it is impossible to keep
-it from him. He always assists with great interest at
-the opening of the office mail, and he files several hundred
-letters a day in his interior department. The
-favorite diversion of the office-boys is to make him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">289</span>
-jump for twelve-column articles on the restoration of
-the American merchant marine.</p>
-
-<p>He takes a keen delight in hunting for essays on civil-service
-reform, and will play with them, if he has time,
-for hours. They are so pretty that he hates to kill
-them, but duty is duty. Clumsy and awkward English
-he springs at with indescribable quickness and ferocity;
-but he won’t eat it. He simply tears it up. He can’t
-stand everything.</p>
-
-<p>We don’t pretend he is perfect. We admit that he
-has an uncontrollable appetite for the <i>Congressional
-Record</i>. We have to keep this peculiar publication out
-of his reach. He will sit for hours and watch with
-burning eyes the iron safe in which we are obliged to
-shut up the <i>Record</i> for safe-keeping. Once in a while
-we let him have a number or two. He becomes uneasy
-without it. It is his catnip.</p>
-
-<p>With the exception of this pardonable excess he is a
-blameless beast. He mouses out all the stupid stuff and
-nonsense that finds its way into the office and goes for
-it tooth and claw. He is the biggest copyholder in the
-world. And he never gets tired. His health is good,
-and we have not deemed it necessary to take out a policy
-on any one of his valuable lives.</p>
-
-<p>Many of our esteemed contemporaries are furnishing
-their offices with cats, but they can never hope to have
-the equal of the <i>Sun’s</i> venerable polyphage. He is a cat
-of genius.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The cat may have contracted his hatred of the dull
-and prosy from the men who worked in the <i>Sun</i> office
-when Amos Cummings smiled and swore and got out
-the greatest four-page paper ever seen, singing the while
-the song of Walker’s filibusters:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">How would you like a soldier’s life</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">On the plains of Nicara-goo?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Marching away and fighting all day,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Nothing to eat and as much to pay—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">We do it all for glory, they say,</div><span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">290</span>
- <div class="verse indent0">On the plains of Nicara-goo.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Not a bit of breakfast did I see,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And dinner was all the same to me;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Two fried cats and three fried rats</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Was a supper at Nicara-goo.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Marching away and fighting all day,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Nothing to eat and as much to pay—</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">We do it all for glory, they say,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">On the plains of Nicara-goo!</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Cummings worked so hard that in 1873 he broke down
-and the <i>Sun</i> sent him to Florida. There he wandered
-about, exploring rivers, studying the natives, and writing
-for the <i>Sun</i>, over the signature of “Ziska,” a series
-of travel letters as interesting as any that ever appeared
-in a newspaper. When he returned to New York in
-1876, John Kelly, then endeavouring to raise Tammany
-from the mire into which Tweed had dropped it, persuaded
-Cummings to become managing editor of the
-New York <i>Express</i>. Cummings did not stay long on
-the <i>Express</i>, being disgusted with Kelly’s hostility
-toward Tilden’s candidacy for the presidential nomination,
-and he went back to the <i>Sun</i>.</p>
-
-<div class="center"><div class="ilb">
-<div id="ip_290a" class="figleft">
- <img src="images/i_290a.jpg" width="842" height="1516" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">DANIEL F. KELLOGG</div></div>
-
-<div id="ip_290b" class="figleft noclear">
- <img src="images/i_290b.jpg" width="842" height="1516" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">AMOS B. STILLMAN</div></div>
-
-<div id="ip_290c" class="figleft noclear">
- <img src="images/i_290c.jpg" width="842" height="1516" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">JOHN B. BOGART</div></div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>For the next ten years his efforts were mostly in the
-direction of improving the weekly issue. In 1886 he
-was elected to the House of Representatives from a
-West Side district, but he maintained his connection
-with the <i>Sun</i>, and in 1887 he became editor of the
-<i>Evening Sun</i>, then just started. In 1888 Cummings
-resigned from the House, saying that he was too poor
-to be a Congressman, but on the death of Representative
-Samuel Sullivan (“Sunset”) Cox he consented to
-take the vacant place and continue Cox’s battles for the
-welfare of the letter-carriers. His service in the House
-lasted fifteen years. Cummings was a great labour advocate,
-not only in behalf of letter-carriers, but of printers,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">291</span>
-navy-yard employees, and musicians. He had the last-named
-in mind when he said in a speech on an alien-labour
-bill:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>As the law now stands, when a German student, or
-one of those fellows that swill beer along the Rhine,
-desires to come here for the summer, all he has to do
-is to get a saxophone or some other kind of musical
-instrument, call himself an artist, and be allowed to
-land here.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>That was Amos’s convincing, if inelegant, style.
-When he introduced a bill to compensate navy-yard men
-for labour already performed, but not paid for, Representative
-Holman, of Indiana, asked:</p>
-
-<p>“How much money will it take out of the Treasury?”</p>
-
-<p>“None of your business!” snapped Cummings.
-“The government must pay its just debts.”</p>
-
-<p>While he was in the House, Cummings wrote a series
-of articles on the big men of Washington. He was a
-delegate to the Democratic national conventions of 1892
-and 1896. He died in Baltimore May 2, 1902, and a
-Republican House of Representatives voted a public
-funeral to this militant Democrat.</p>
-
-<p>Greater news men than Cummings followed him, undoubtedly,
-but there was no newspaperman in New
-York before his time who knew better what news was
-or how to handle it; not even the elder Bennett, for
-that great man knew only the news that looked big.
-Cummings was the first to know the news that felt big.</p>
-
-<p>It was Cummings and his work that Henry Watterson
-had in mind when he one day remarked to Mr. Dana:</p>
-
-<p>“The <i>Sun</i> is a damned good paper, but you don’t
-make it.”</p>
-
-<p>That statement undoubtedly pleased the editor of the
-<i>Sun</i>, for it was evidence from an expert that he had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">292</span>
-carried his theory to success. He had set men free to
-write what they saw, as they saw it, in their own way.
-It was the <i>Sun</i> way, and that was what he wanted. As
-Dana himself handed down this heritage of literary freedom
-in his editorial page to Mitchell, so he gave to the
-men on the news pages, through Amos Cummings and
-Chester S. Lord and their successors, the right to watch
-with open eyes the world pass by, and to describe that
-parade in a different way three hundred and sixty-five
-days a year.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_293" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">293</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">DANA’S FAMOUS RIVALS PASS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>The Deaths of Raymond, Bennett, and Greeley Leave Him
-the Dominant Figure of the American Newspaper Field.—Dana’s
-Dream of a Paper Without Advertisements.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Four</span> years after he became the master of the <i>Sun</i>,
-and a quarter of a century before death took him
-from it, Dana found himself the Nestor of metropolitan
-journalism. Of the three other great New York editors
-of Dana’s time—three who had founded their own
-papers and lived with those papers until the wing of
-Azrael shut out the roar of the presses—Raymond had
-been the first, and the youngest, to go; for his end came
-when he was only forty-nine, eighteen years after the
-establishment of his <i>Times</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Bennett, the inscrutable monarch of the <i>Herald</i>, died
-in 1872, three years after Raymond, but Bennett, who
-did not establish the <i>Herald</i> until he was forty, had
-owned it, and had given every waking hour to its welfare,
-for thirty-seven years. The year of Bennett’s
-death saw the passing of the unfortunate Greeley,
-broken in body and mind from his fatuous chase of
-public office, within three weeks of his defeat for the
-presidency. As the sprightly young editor of the Louisville
-<i>Courier-Journal</i>, Colonel Henry Watterson, wrote
-in his paper in January, 1873:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Mr. Bryant being no longer actively engaged in newspaper
-work, Mr. Dana is left alone to tell the tale of
-old-time journalism in New York. He, of all his fellow<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">294</span>
-editors of the great metropolis, has passed the period
-of middle age; though—years apart—he is as blithe and
-nimble as the youngest of them, and has performed, with
-the <i>Sun</i>, a feat in modern newspaper practice that entitles
-him to the stag-horns laid down at his death by
-James Gordon Bennett. Mr. Dana is no less a writer
-and scholar than an editor; as witness his sketch of
-Mr. Greeley, which for thorough character-drawing is
-unsurpassed. In a word, Mr. Dana at fifty-three is as
-vigorous, sinewy, and live as a young buck of thirty-five
-or forty.</p>
-
-<p>His professional associates were boys when he was
-managing editor of the <i>Tribune</i>. Manton Marble was
-at college at Rochester, and Whitelaw Reid was going
-to school in Ohio. Young Bennett and Bundy were
-wearing short jackets.</p>
-
-<p>They were rough-and-tumble days, sure enough, even
-for New York. There was no Central Park. Madison
-Square was “out of town.” Franconi’s Circus, surnamed
-a “hippodrome,” sprawled its ugly wooden
-towers, minarets, and sideshows over the ground now
-occupied by the Fifth Avenue Hotel. <i>Miss Flora
-McFlimsy</i> of the opposite square had not come into being;
-nay, Madison Square itself existed in a city ordinance
-merely, and, like the original of Mr. Praed’s Darnell
-Park, was a wretched waste of common, where the
-boys skated and played shinny.</p>
-
-<p>The elder Harpers stood in the shoes now worn by
-their sons, who were off at boarding-school. George
-Ripley was as larky as John Hay is. Delmonico’s,
-down-town, was the only Delmonico’s. The warfare
-between the newspapers constituted the most exciting
-topic of the time. Bennett was “Jack Ketch,” Raymond
-was the “little villain,” and Greeley was by turns
-an “incendiary,” a “white-livered poltroon,” and a
-“free-lover.” Parke Godwin and Charles A. Dana were
-managing editors respectively; both scholars and both,
-as writers, superior to all the rest, except Greeley, who,
-as a newspaper writer, never had a superior.</p>
-
-<p>The situation is changed completely. Bennett, Greeley,
-and Raymond are dead. Dana and Godwin, both<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">295</span>
-about of an age, stand at the head of New York journalism;
-while Reid, Marble, and Jennings, all young
-men, wear the purple of a new era.</p>
-
-<p>Will it be an era of reforms? There are signs that
-it will be. Marble is a recruit. Reid is essentially a
-man of the world. Jennings is an Englishman. One
-would think that these three, led by two ripe scholars
-and gentlemen like Godwin and Dana, would alter the
-character of the old partisan warfare in one respect at
-least, and that if they have need to be personal, they
-will be wittily so, and not brutally and dirtily personal;
-the which will be an advance.</p>
-
-<p>There will never be an end to the personality of journalism.
-But there is already an end of the efficacy of
-filth. In this, as in other things, there are fashions.
-What ill thing, for example, can be said personally injurious
-of Reid, Marble, Jennings, Bundy, and the rest,
-all hard-working, painstaking men, without vices or peculiarities,
-who do not invite attack?</p>
-
-<p>On the whole, the newspaper prospect in New York
-is very good. There will be, perhaps, less of what we
-call “character” in New York journalism, but more
-usefulness, honesty, and culture and as the New York
-dailies, like the New York milliners, set the fashion,
-these excellent qualities will diffuse themselves over the
-country. They may even reach Nashville and Memphis.
-It is an age of miracles. Who can tell?</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>“There will never be an end to the personality of
-journalism.” It is curious to note in passing that
-Henry Watterson, who retired from the active editorship
-of the <i>Courier-Journal</i> on August 7, 1918, after
-fifty years’ service, was the last of the men who, according
-to the measure of forty years ago, were “personal
-journalists.” “Dana says,” “Greeley says,” “Raymond
-says”—such oral credits are no longer given by the
-readers of the really big and reputable newspapers of
-New York to the men who write opinions. “Henry
-Watterson says” was the last of the phrases of that
-style.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">296</span></p>
-
-<p>Dana believed in personal journalism and thought it
-would not pass away. A few days after the death of
-Horace Greeley, the editor of the <i>Sun</i> printed his views
-on the subject:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>A great deal of twaddle is uttered by some country
-newspapers just now over what they call personal journalism.
-They say that now that Mr. Bennett, Mr. Raymond,
-and Mr. Greeley are dead, the day for personal
-journalism is gone by, and that impersonal journalism
-will take its place. That appears to be a sort of journalism
-in which nobody will ask who is the editor of a
-paper or the writer of any class of article, and nobody
-will care.</p>
-
-<p>Whenever in the newspaper profession a man rises
-up who is original, strong, and bold enough to make his
-opinions a matter of consequence to the public, there
-will be personal journalism; and whenever newspapers
-are conducted only by commonplace individuals whose
-views are of no interest to the world and of no consequence
-to anybody, there will be nothing but impersonal
-journalism.</p>
-
-<p>And this is the essence of the whole question.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>For all that, Dana must have felt lonely, for at that
-moment, at any rate, the new chiefs of the <i>Sun’s</i> rivals
-did not measure up to the heights of their predecessors.
-To Dana, the trio that had passed were men worthy of
-his steel, and worthy, each in his own way, of admiration.
-Toward Greeley, in spite of the circumstances
-under which Dana left the <i>Tribune</i>, the editor of the
-<i>Sun</i> showed a kindly spirit; not only in his support of
-Greeley for the presidency, which may have sprung from
-Dana’s aversion to Grantism, but in his general attitude
-toward the brilliant if erratic old man. As for Bennett,
-Dana frankly believed him to be a great newspaperman,
-and never hesitated to say so.</p>
-
-<p>What Dana thought of the three may be judged by his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">297</span>
-editorial article in the <i>Sun</i> on the day after Greeley’s
-funeral:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>In burying Mr. Greeley we bury the third founder of
-a newspaper which has become famous and wealthy in
-this city during the last thirty-five years. Mr. Raymond
-died three years and Mr. Bennett barely six
-months ago.</p>
-
-<p>These three men were exceedingly unlike each other,
-yet each of them possessed extraordinary professional
-talents. Mr. Raymond surpassed both Mr. Bennett and
-Mr. Greeley in the versatility of his accomplishments,
-and in facility and smoothness as a writer. But he was
-less a journalist than either of the other two. Nature
-had rather intended him for a lawyer, and success as a
-legislative debater and presiding officer had directed his
-ambition toward that kind of life.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Bennett was exclusively a newspaperman. He
-was equally great as a writer, a wit, and a purveyor of
-news; and he never showed any desire to leave a profession
-in which he had made himself rich and formidable.</p>
-
-<p>Horace Greeley delighted to be a maker of newspapers,
-not so much for the thing itself, though to that
-he was sincerely attached, as for the sake of promoting
-doctrines, ideas, and theories in which he was a believer;
-and his personal ambition, which was very profound and
-never inoperative, made him wish to be Governor, Legislator,
-Senator, Cabinet Minister, President, because
-such elevation seemed to afford the clearest possible
-evidence that he himself was appreciated and that the
-cause he espoused had gained the hearts of the people.
-How incomplete, indeed, would be the triumph of any
-set of principles if their chief advocate and promoter
-were to go unrecognized and unhonored!</p>
-
-<p>It is a most impressive circumstance that each of
-these three great journalists has had to die a tragic
-and pitiable death. One perished by apoplexy long
-after midnight in the entrance of his own home; another
-closed his eyes with no relative near him to perform that
-last sad office; and the third, broken down by toils,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">298</span>
-excitements, and sufferings too strong to be borne,
-breathed his last in a private madhouse. What a lesson
-to the possessors of power, for these three men were
-powerful beyond others! What a commentary upon
-human greatness, for they were rich and great, and
-were looked upon with envy by thousands who thought
-themselves less fortunate than they! And amid such
-startling surprises and such a prodigious conflict of
-lights and shadows, the curtain falls as the tired actor,
-crowned with long applause, passes from that which
-seems to that which is.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Louis J. Jennings succeeded Raymond as the editor
-of the <i>Times</i>, and acted as such until 1876, when he
-returned to England, his desk being taken by John
-Foord. Jennings went into politics in England, and
-was elected a member of Parliament. He also wrote
-a life of Gladstone and edited a collection of Lord Randolph
-Churchill’s speeches.</p>
-
-<p>Bennett was followed in the possession of the <i>Herald</i>
-by his son and namesake. Whitelaw Reid took Greeley’s
-place at the head of the <i>Tribune</i>. Dana did not
-like Reid in those days. In a “Survey of Metropolitan
-Journalism” which appeared in the editorial columns
-of the <i>Sun</i> on September 3, 1875—the <i>Sun’s</i> forty-second
-birthday—Dana dismissed his neighbour of the then
-“tall tower” <span class="locked">with—</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>We pass the <i>Tribune</i> by. Our opinion of it is well
-known. It is Jay Gould’s paper, and a disgrace to
-journalism.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Dana’s attitude toward the other big newspapers was
-more kindly:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The <i>Times</i> is a very respectable paper, and more than
-that, a journal of which the Republican party has reason
-to be proud. It is not a servile organ, but a loyal partisan.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">299</span>
-We prefer for our own part to keep aloof from
-the party politicians. They are disagreeable fellows to
-have hanging about a newspaper office, and their advice
-we do not regard as valuable. But we do not decry
-party newspapers. They have their field, and must
-always exist. The <i>Times</i> is a creditable example of
-such a newspaper. It would be better, however, if Mr.
-Jennings himself wrote the whole editorial page.</p>
-
-<p>The mistake of the <i>Times</i> was in lapsing into the dulness
-of respectable conservatism after its Ring fight. It
-should have kept on and made a crusade against frauds
-of all sorts.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Herald</i> has improved since young Mr. Bennett’s
-return. We are attracted toward this son of his father.
-He has a passion for manly sports, and that we like. If
-the shabby writers who make jest of his walking-matches
-had an income of three or four hundred thousand dollars
-a year, perhaps they would drive in carriages instead of
-walking and dawdle away their time on beds of ease or
-the gorgeous sofas of the Lotos Club. Mr. Bennett does
-otherwise. He strides up Broadway with the step of an
-athlete, dons his navy blue and commands his yacht,
-shoots pigeons, and prefers the open air of Newport to
-the confinement of the <i>Herald</i> office.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>World</i> is a journal which pleases us on many accounts
-... but occasionally there is a bit of prurient
-wit in its columns that might better be omitted. The
-<i>World</i> is also too often written in too fantastic language.
-Its young men seem to vie with each other in tormenting
-the language. They will do better when they learn
-that there is more force in simple Anglo-Saxon than in
-all the words they can manufacture. We advise them
-to read the Bible and Common Prayer Book. Those
-books will do their souls good, anyway, and they may
-also learn to write less affectedly.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> was as frank in discussing its own theories
-and ambitions as it was in criticising its contemporaries
-for dulness and poor writing. Dana’s dream, never to be
-realized, was a newspaper without advertisements. He<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">300</span>
-believed that by getting all the news, condensing it into
-the smallest readable space, and adding such literary
-matter as the readers’ tastes demanded, a four-page
-paper might be produced with a reasonable profit from
-the sales, after paper and ink, men and machinery, had
-been paid for.</p>
-
-<p>An editorial article in the <i>Sun</i> on March 13, 1875,
-was practically a prospectus of this idea:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Until Robert Bonner sagaciously foresaw a handsome
-profit to be realized by excluding advertisements and
-crowding a small sheet with such choice literature as
-would surely attract a mighty throng of readers, never
-did the owner of any serial publication so much as dream
-of making both ends meet without a revenue from advertisements.
-The <i>Tribune</i>, the <i>Times</i>, and the <i>Herald</i>
-at length ceased to expect a profit from their circulation,
-and then they came to care for large editions only so
-far as they served to attract advertisers.</p>
-
-<p>It was then that the <i>Sun</i> conceived the idea of a daily
-newspaper that should yield more satisfactory dividends
-from large circulation than had ever been declared by
-the journals that had looked to the organism of political
-parties and to enterprising advertisers for the bulk of
-their income. It saw in New York a city of sufficient
-population to warrant the experiment of a two-cent
-newspaper whose cost should equal that of the four-cent
-dailies in every respect, the cost of white paper alone
-excepted. Accordingly we produced the <i>Sun</i> on a sheet
-that leaves a small margin for profit, and by restricting
-the space allotted to advertisers and eliminating the verbiage
-in which the eight-page dailies hide the news, we
-made room in the <i>Sun</i> for not only all the real news of
-the day, but for interesting literature and current political
-discussion as well.</p>
-
-<p>It was an enterprise that the public encouraged with
-avidity. The edition rapidly rose to one hundred and
-twenty thousand copies daily, and it is now rising; while
-the small margin of profit on that enormous circulation
-makes the <i>Sun</i> able to exist without paying any special<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">301</span>
-attention to advertising—approaching very closely, in
-fact, to the condition of a daily newspaper able to support
-itself on the profits of its circulation alone.</p>
-
-<p>Only a single further step remains to be taken. That
-step was recently foreshadowed in a leader in which the
-<i>Sun</i> intimated that the time was not far distant in which
-it would reject more advertising than it would accept.
-With a daily circulation of fifty or a hundred thousand
-more, there is little doubt that the <i>Sun</i> would find it
-necessary to limit the advertisers as the reporters and
-other writers for its columns are limited, each to a space
-to be determined by the public interest in his subject.</p>
-
-<p>It will be a long stride in the progress of intellectual
-as distinguished from commercial journalism, and the
-<i>Sun</i> will probably be the first to make it, thus distancing
-the successors of Raymond, Bennett, and Greeley in the
-great sweepstakes for recognition as the Journal of the
-Future.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="center"><div class="ilb">
-<div id="ip_300a" class="figleft">
- <img src="images/i_300a.jpg" width="844" height="1516" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">JAMES GORDON BENNETT, SR.</div></div>
-
-<div id="ip_300b" class="figleft noclear">
- <img src="images/i_300b.jpg" width="844" height="1516" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">HORACE GREELEY</div></div>
-
-<div id="ip_300c" class="figleft noclear">
- <img src="images/i_300c.jpg" width="844" height="1516" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">HENRY J. RAYMOND</div></div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>It must be remembered, in recalling the failure of
-Dana’s dream of a paper <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">sans</i> advertising, that his mind
-was not usually the port of vain dreams. He was a
-practical man, with more business sense than any other
-editor of his time, Bennett alone excepted. In him
-imagination had not swallowed arithmetic, and there is
-no possible doubt that he had good reason to believe in
-the practicability of the program he so candidly outlined
-to his readers. It was part and parcel of his faith
-in a four-page newspaper—a faith so strong, so well
-grounded on results, that for the first twenty years of
-the Dana régime the <i>Sun</i> never appeared in more than
-four pages, except in emergencies.</p>
-
-<p>In the end, of course, the scheme was beaten by the
-very excellence of its originator’s qualities. The <i>Sun</i>, by
-its popularity, drew more and more advertising. By its
-good English, its freedom from literary shackles, and
-the spirit of its staff, it attracted more and more writers
-of distinction, each unwilling to be denied his place in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">302</span>
-the <i>Sun</i>. Dana always had unlimited space for a good
-story, just as the cat had an insatiable appetite for a
-bad one; and thus, through his own genius, he destroyed
-his own dream, but not without having almost proved
-that it was possible of realisation.</p>
-
-<p>Dana believed that most of the newspapers of his day—particularly
-in the seventies—were tiring out not only
-the reader, but the writer. Commenting on a decline
-in the newspaper business in the summer of 1875, the
-<i>Sun</i> said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Some of our big contemporaries have been overdoing
-the thing. They seem to think that to secure circulation
-it is necessary to overload the stomachs of their
-readers.</p>
-
-<p>The American newspaper-reader demands of an editor
-that he shall not give him news and discussions in heavy
-chunks, but so condensed and clarified that he shall be
-relieved of the necessity of wading through a treatise to
-get at a fact, or spending time on a dilated essay to get
-a bite at an argument.</p>
-
-<p>Six or seven dreary columns are filled with leading
-articles, no matter whether there are subjects to discuss
-of public interest, or brains at hand to treat them. Our
-big contemporaries exhaust their young men and drive
-them too hard. The stock of ideas is not limitless, even
-in a New York newspaper office.</p>
-
-<p>Another thing has been bad. Men with actual capacity
-of certain sorts for acceptable writing have been
-frightened off from doing natural and vigorous work by
-certain newspaper critics and doctrinaires who are in
-distress if the literary proprieties are seemingly violated,
-and if the temper and blood of the writer actually show
-in his work. They measure our journalistic production
-by an English standard, which lays it down as its first
-and most imperative rule that editorial writing shall be
-free from the characteristics of the writer. This is
-ruinous to good writing, and damaging to the sincerity
-of writers.... If we choose to glow or cry out in indignation,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">303</span>
-we do so, and we are not a bit frightened at the
-sound of our own voice.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Dana himself had that peculiar faculty, as indescribable
-as instinct, of knowing, when he saw an article in
-the paper, just how much work the author of it had put
-in—particularly in cases where the labour had been in
-leaving out, rather than in writing. As a result of this
-intuition he never drove his men. He would accept
-three lines or three columns for a day’s work, and his
-admiration might go out more heartily to the three lines.
-As for the appearance of characteristics in men’s writing,
-that was as necessary, in Dana’s opinion, as it was
-wicked in the judgment of the ancient editors.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_304" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">304</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">“THE SUN” AND THE GRANT SCANDALS</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>Dana’s Relentless Fight Against the Whisky Ring, Crédit
-Mobilier, “Addition, Division, and Silence,” the Safe
-Burglary Conspiracy and the Boss Shepherd Scandal.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> first ten years of Dana’s service on the <i>Sun</i> were
-marked by the uprooting of many public evils. To
-use the mild phrasing of the historian John Fiske, “Villains
-sometimes succeeded in imposing upon President
-Grant, who was an honest, simple-hearted soldier without
-much knowledge of the ways of the world.” To say
-it more concretely, hardly a department of the national
-government but was alive with fraud. The <i>Sun</i>, which
-had supported Grant in the election of 1868, turned
-against his administration in its first months, and for
-years it continued to keep before the public the revelations
-of corruption—which were easily made, so bold
-were the scoundrels, so coarse their manner of theft.</p>
-
-<p>Among the scandals which the <i>Sun</i> either brought to
-light or was most vigorous in assailing, these were the
-principal:</p>
-
-<p>The Crédit Mobilier Scandal—This involved the
-names of many Senators and Representatives who were
-accused of accepting stock in the Crédit Mobilier of
-America, the fiscal company organised to build the
-Union Pacific Railroad, as a reward for using their
-influence and votes in favour of the great enterprise.</p>
-
-<p>The Navy Department Scandal—In this the <i>Sun</i> accused
-George M. Robeson, Secretary of the Navy, of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">305</span>
-having permitted double payment to contractors and of
-violating the law in making large purchases without
-competitive bidding. Mr. Dana appeared as a witness
-in the Congressional investigation of Robeson, who, in
-the end, while not convicted of personal corruption, was
-censured for the laxity of his official methods.</p>
-
-<p>The Whisky Ring—This evil combination cheated the
-government out of millions of dollars. It was made up
-of distillers, wholesale liquor-dealers, and employees of
-the internal revenue office, these conspiring together to
-avoid the payment of the liquor tax. The first attack
-on the corrupt alliance was made in the <i>Sun</i> of February
-3, 1872, in an article by “Sappho,” one of the <i>Sun’s</i>
-Washington correspondents. Other great newspapers
-took up the fight, but the <i>Sun</i> was the chief aggressor.
-As a result of the exposure, two hundred and thirty-eight
-men were indicted and many of them, including
-the chief clerk of the Treasury Department, were sent
-to prison.</p>
-
-<p>“Addition, Division, and Silence”—On March 20,
-1867, W. H. Kemble, State Treasurer of Pennsylvania
-and one of the Republican bosses, wrote the following
-letter to Titian J. Coffey, a lawyer and claim-agent in
-Washington:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p class="in0">
-<span class="smcap">My dear Titian</span>:
-</p>
-
-<p>Allow me to introduce to you my particular friend,
-Mr. George O. Evans. He has a claim of some magnitude
-that he wishes you to help him in. Put him
-through as you would me. He understands addition,
-division, and silence.</p>
-
-<p class="p0 sigright"><span class="smcap">W. H. Kemble.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>When this letter fell into the hands of the <i>Sun</i>, which
-had already made war on the ring formed for the collection
-of war claims, it saw in Kemble’s last four words<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">306</span>
-the sententious platform of wide-spread fraud. It
-printed the letter, and kept on printing it, with that
-iteration which Dana knew was of value in a crusade.
-In a few months the whole country was familiar with
-the phrase so suggestive of plunder.</p>
-
-<p>Kemble was a politician with a thick skin, but he at
-last became so enraged at the repetition of “addition,
-division, and silence,” whether uttered by street urchins
-or printed all over America as the watchword of corruption—“honest
-graft,” he would have called it, if that
-phrase had then been common—that he sued out a writ
-of criminal libel against Mr. Dana and had him arrested
-as he was passing through Philadelphia. The
-only result of this was to make the phrase more common
-than before.</p>
-
-<p>Kemble was afterward convicted of trying to bribe
-Pennsylvania legislators, and was sent to prison for a
-year.</p>
-
-<p>The Post-Trader Scandal—William W. Belknap,
-Grant’s Secretary of War, was charged with receiving
-from Caleb P. Marsh fifteen hundred dollars in consideration
-for the appointment of John S. Evans to maintain
-a trading-establishment at Fort Sill, in the Indian
-Territory. The scandal came to the surface through the
-remark of Mrs. Belknap that Mrs. Evans would have
-no place in society, “as she is only a post-trader’s wife,”
-and the retort of Mrs. Evans, upon hearing of this, that
-“a post-trader’s wife is as good as the wife of an official
-who takes money for the appointment of a post-trader.”</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> laid the story of bribery wide open, and the
-Senate proceeded to impeach the Secretary of War. He
-escaped punishment by resigning his office, twenty-five
-Senators voting “not guilty” on the ground that
-Belknap’s resignation technically removed him from
-the Senate’s jurisdiction. Thirty-five Senators voted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">307</span>
-“guilty,” but a two-thirds vote was necessary to punish.</p>
-
-<p>The Salary Grab—This was the act of Congress of
-March 3, 1873, which raised the President’s salary from
-twenty-five thousand dollars to fifty thousand, and the
-salaries of Senators and Representatives from five thousand
-to seventy-five hundred. Its evil lay not in the
-increases, but in the retroactive clause which provided
-that each Congressman should receive five thousand
-dollars as extra pay for the two-year term then ending.
-The assaults of the <i>Sun</i> and other newspapers so
-aroused public indignation that Congress was obliged
-to repeal the act in January, 1874, and many Members
-returned their share of the spoil to the Treasury.</p>
-
-<p>The Boss Shepherd Scandal—The <i>Sun</i> printed an
-article from Washington accusing Alexander Shepherd,
-vice-president of the Board of Public Works of the
-District of Columbia, and Henry D. Cooke, governor of
-the District, with having a financial interest in the
-Metropolitan Paving Company, which had many street
-contracts in the national capital. Shepherd and Cooke
-laid a complaint of criminal libel against Mr. Dana, and
-an assistant district attorney of the District of Columbia
-came to New York and procured from United States
-Commissioner Davenport a warrant for the editor’s
-arrest.</p>
-
-<p>It was the intent of the prosecution to hale Dana to
-a Washington police-court, where he would be tried
-without a jury. Dana had gone willingly, even eagerly,
-to Washington when summoned in the Robeson case, but
-the Shepherd strategy was so manifestly an attempt to
-railroad him that an appeal was taken to the Federal
-court for the southern district of New York. The historic
-decision of the district judge—Samuel Blatchford,
-subsequently promoted to the United States Supreme
-Court—may be summed up in one of its paragraphs:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">308</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The Constitution says that all trials shall be by jury,
-and the accused is entitled, not to be first convicted by
-a court and then to be convicted by a jury, but to be
-convicted or acquitted <em>in the first instance</em> by a jury.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>As the <i>Sun</i> said of this decision, important to the
-freedom of the individual as well as to that of the press:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Those who sought to murder liberty, where they
-looked for a second Jeffreys, found a second Mansfield.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Safe Burglary Conspiracy—Columbus Alexander,
-a reputable citizen of Washington, was active in
-the movement to smash the Washington contractors’
-ring. He sought to bring certain contractors’ books
-into court and exposed the false set that was produced.
-The ringsters hired a man to go to Mr. Alexander with
-a story that he could bring him the genuine books.
-Then the gang, which included men in the secret-service
-departments of the government, placed some of the genuine
-books in the safe of the district attorney’s office and
-employed three professional burglars to blow open the
-safe.</p>
-
-<p>The books, taken from the safe, were carried to Alexander’s
-home by the man who had approached him.
-Close behind came police, who were prepared to arrest
-Alexander as soon as he received the “stolen property.”
-He was to be accused of hiring the burglars to crack
-the district attorney’s safe. But the hour was early in
-the morning, Alexander was sleeping the deep sleep of
-the just, and the criminal rang his doorbell in vain.</p>
-
-<p>The ringsters then “arrested” the “thief,” and
-caused him to sign a false confession, accusing Alexander;
-but the failure of their theatricals had broken
-the hireling’s nerve as well as their own, and the conspiracy
-collapsed. Two of the hired criminals turned<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">309</span>
-state’s evidence at the trial, but the powerful politicians
-of the ring were able to bring about a disagreement of
-the jury.</p>
-
-<p>These were the greatest of the scandals which the <i>Sun</i>
-exposed in its news columns and denounced on its editorial
-page. It was the cry of the ringsters, and even
-of some honest men, that the <i>Sun’s</i> assaults on the evils
-that marred Grant’s administration were the result of
-Dana’s personal dislike of the President. More specifically
-it was declared that Dana was a disappointed
-office-seeker, and that the place of collector of customs
-at the port of New York was the office he sought.</p>
-
-<p>We have it on the unimpeachable testimony of General
-James Harrison Wilson, the biographer of Dana,
-and, with Dana, a biographer of Grant, that General
-Rawlins, Grant’s most intimate friend, told Dana’s associates,
-and particularly General Wilson, that Dana
-was to be appointed collector. There is no evidence
-that Dana ever asked Grant, or any other man, for
-public office. One place, that of appraiser of merchandise
-at the port of New York, was offered him, and
-he refused it. The <i>Sun</i> said editorially, replying to an
-insinuation made by the <i>Commercial Advertiser</i> that if
-Dana had been made collector his paper would not denounce
-the administration:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The idea that the editor of the <i>Sun</i>, which shines for
-all, could consent to become collector of the port of
-New York is extravagant and inadmissible. It would
-be stepping down and out with a vengeance.</p>
-
-<p>And yet we do not mean that the collector of New
-York need be other than an upright man. Moses H.
-Grinnell was such, and Tom Murphy, though a politician,
-a crony of Boss Grant, and one of the donors of
-Boss Grant’s cottage, certainly never took a dollar of
-money from the Federal Treasury to which he was not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">310</span>
-entitled. General Arthur, the present collector, is a
-gentleman in every sense of the word.</p>
-
-<p>The office of collector is respectable enough, but it is
-not one that the editor of the <i>Sun</i> could desire to take
-without deserving to have his conduct investigated by
-a proceeding <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">de lunatico</i>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Dana and the <i>Sun</i> lost friends because of the assaults
-on Grantism. The warfare was bitter and personal.
-In the case of Belknap, for instance, the <i>Sun</i> was attacking
-a man whom Dana, having known him as a good
-soldier, had recommended for appointment as Secretary
-of War. But it must be recalled that at the very
-height of his antagonism to Grant, the President, Dana
-never receded from his opinion that Grant, the general,
-was the Union’s greatest soldier. And the <i>Sun</i> was
-quick to applaud him as President when, as in currency
-matters, he took a course which Dana considered right.</p>
-
-<p>The friends of Grant, nevertheless, turned against
-Dana and his paper. Some of them, stockholders in the
-Sun Printing and Publishing Association, quit the concern
-when they found themselves unable to turn Dana
-from his purpose. All their pleadings were vain.</p>
-
-<p>“A few years from now,” Dana would reply, “I shall
-be willing to accept whatever judgment the nation passes
-on my course of action; but now I must do as I think
-right.”</p>
-
-<p>So far as the material prosperity of the <i>Sun</i> was concerned,
-the desertion of Grant’s friends hurt it not a
-whit. For every reader lost, four or five were won.
-Men may stop reading a paper because it disgusts them;
-they rarely quit it because it is wounding them.</p>
-
-<p>“I don’t read the <i>Sun</i>,” said Henry Ward Beecher
-during his trial, “and don’t allow anybody to read it
-to me. What’s the good of a man sticking pins into
-himself?”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">311</span></p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> made this reply to Beecher’s assertion:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Everybody reads the <i>Sun</i>—the good, that they may
-be stimulated to do better; the bad, in fear and trembling
-lest their wickedness shall meet its deserts.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In Beecher’s case, as in Grant’s, the <i>Sun</i> believed that
-it was doing a public service in laying open wrongful
-conditions. In answer to one who criticised its brutal
-candour about the Plymouth Church scandal the <i>Sun</i>
-said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The exposure of the moral nastiness in Brooklyn is a
-salutary thing. If, when the exposure of the scandal
-took place, the people had been indifferent—as indifferent
-as Beecher assumed to be—and had received no
-shock to their sense of purity and propriety, then the
-Jeremiahs might well have bewailed the turpitude of
-society and prophesied evil things for the country.
-Then, indeed, the poison would have been in the whole
-social atmosphere....</p>
-
-<p>The Plymouth pastor, if a guiltless man, has brought
-all this trouble on himself by his cowardly course in
-dealing with the accusations against him....</p>
-
-<p>If he is not a bold man, strong in the truth and in
-purity, what business has he to preach the religion of
-the Apostles to his fellow men—he who distributed
-Sharp’s rifles to the Kansas combatants with slavery,
-who denounced sin and bore his head high as a man
-of freedom of thought and action? To have kept himself
-consistent, he should not have dallied with Tilton
-and Moulton in secret, but if entrenched in innocence
-he should have dragged out their slanders and torn to
-pieces their plans from the pulpit where he had preached
-courage under difficulties, divine faith under sorrow,
-and bold encounter with sin. This would soon have
-expelled the poison lurking in the social atmosphere,
-but Beecher did not do it.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Perhaps Beecher’s thanks were not due to Dana, but
-Grant’s surely were. It is impossible that scandals like<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">312</span>
-those of the Whisky Ring could have lain hidden forever.
-If they had not been exposed when they were,
-they would have come to the top later, perhaps after
-Grant went out of office, and when his cry, “Let no
-guilty man escape!” would have been in vain.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun’s</i> fights against the scandals of the Grant
-period were no more bitter than its attacks on the
-frauds attending the Presidential election of 1876,
-although Dana had no cause for personal animosity
-toward Hayes. The <i>Sun’s</i> chief Washington correspondent,
-A. M. Gibson, who handled many of the
-Grant scandals, wrote most of the news stories about
-the theft of the Presidency by Mr. Hayes’s managers.
-He also published in book form an official history of
-the fraud.</p>
-
-<p>Joseph Pulitzer, then newly come from the West, was
-assigned by Dana to cover the proceedings of the Electoral
-Commission in semieditorial style. Pulitzer was
-later, in 1878, a European correspondent of the <i>Sun</i>.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_313" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">313</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">“THE SUN” AND “HUMAN INTEREST”</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>Something About Everything, for Everybody.—A Wonderful
-Four-Page Paper.—A Comparison of the Styles of
-“Sun” Reporters in Three Periods Twenty Years Apart.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> political scandals made good reading, but the
-<i>Sun</i> was not content to feed its readers on investigations.
-It put a little bit of everything on their breakfast-plates—the
-Moody and Sankey revivals, Mr. Keely’s
-motor, which didn’t work, and young Edison’s multiple
-telegraph, which did; the baseball games of the days
-when Spalding pitched for Boston and Anson and Reach
-were at first and second base, respectively, for the Philadelphia
-Athletics; the presentation of a cup to John
-Cable Heenan, the prize-fighter, as the handsomest and
-best-dressed man at the ball of the Shandley Association;
-an interview with Joaquin Miller on Longfellow;
-the wiggles of the sea-serpent off Swampscott; a ghost-story
-from Long Island, with a beautiful spook lashed
-to the rigging of a spectral bark; the arrival of New
-York’s first Chinese laundryman; Father Tom Burke’s
-lectures on Ireland; the lectures of Tyndall on newly-discovered
-phenomena of light; the billiard-matches between
-Cyrille Dion and Maurice Daly; a tar-and-feathers
-party in Brooklyn—the <i>Sun</i> skimmed the pan of life and
-served the cream for two cents.</p>
-
-<p>The familiar three-story head-line, which was first
-used by the <i>Sun</i> on the day of Grant’s inauguration,
-and which stayed the same until long after Mr. Dana’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">314</span>
-death, attracted readers with the magic of the head-writers’
-art. “The Skull in the Chimney,” “Shaved by
-a Lady Barber,” “A Man Hanged by Women,” “Burned
-Alive for $5,000,” “The Murder in the Well,” “Death
-Leap in a Theatre,” “An Aged Sinner Hanged,” “The
-Duel in the Bedroom,” “Horrors of a Madhouse,” “A
-Life for a Love-Letter”—none could glance at the compelling
-titles of the <i>Sun</i> stories without remaining to
-read. They are still fascinating in an age when lady
-barbers would attract no attention.</p>
-
-<p>A typical <i>Sun</i> of 1874 might contain, in its four pages,
-six columns about the Beecher-Tilton case; four columns
-of editorial articles; a letter from Eli Perkins (Melville
-DeLancey Landon) at Saratoga, declaring that the spa
-was standing still commercially because of its lack of
-good drinking-water; a column, also from Saratoga, describing
-the defeat of Preakness by Springbok; the
-latest in the strange case of Charley Ross; a column
-headed “Life in the Metropolis—Dashes Here and
-There by the <i>Sun’s</i> Reporters”; a column of “Sunbeams,”
-a column about trout-fishing, two columns of
-general news, and five columns of advertisements.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of Eli Perkins’s letter, there might be a
-critique by Leopold Damrosch, from Baireuth, of Wagner’s
-“Götterdämmerung,” just presented; or a dissection,
-by “Monsieur X,” of E. A. Sothern’s <i>Dundreary</i>.
-“Monsieur X” was Napoleon Leon Thiéblin, who was
-for years one of the <i>Sun’s</i> most distinguished critics and
-essayists. He was that kind of newspaperman who
-could—and did—write on Saturday of the political news
-of Bismarck and on Sunday of the crowd at Coney
-Island.</p>
-
-<p>Thiéblin, who was of French blood, was born in St.
-Petersburg in 1834. He was graduated at the Russian
-Imperial Academy of Artillery, and commanded forty<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">315</span>
-pieces of cannon at the siege of Sebastopol. At the
-close of the Crimean War he went to London and became
-a member of the staff of the <i>Pall Mall Gazette</i>,
-reporting for that journal the French side of the war
-with Germany in 1870–71, and the atrocities of the
-Commune, over the pen-name of “Azamet Batuk.” He
-reported the Carlist War in Spain for the New York
-<i>Herald</i>, and then came to America to lecture, but Dana
-persuaded him to join the <i>Sun</i> staff. He contributed
-to the <i>Sun</i> many articles on foreign affairs, including
-a series on European journalism; “The Stranger’s Note-Book,”
-which was made up of New York sketches; letters
-from the Centennial Exposition at Philadelphia;
-and the Wall Street letters signed “Rigolo.”</p>
-
-<p>In the “Sunbeams” column were crowded the vagrant
-wit and wisdom of the world. The items concerned
-everything from great men in European chancelleries
-to organ-grinders in Nassau Street:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The mules are all dying in Arkansas.</p>
-
-<p>A printer in Texas has named his first-born Brevier
-Fullfaced Jones.</p>
-
-<p>Real estate is looking up at New Orleans.</p>
-
-<p>Translations from Hawthorne are becoming popular
-in France.</p>
-
-<p>Venison costs six cents a pound in St. Paul.</p>
-
-<p>Queen Victoria says every third woman in Cork is a
-beauty.</p>
-
-<p>Goldwin Smith is coming to the United States.</p>
-
-<p>The Pope denounces short dresses.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The same terseness is seen in the “Footlight Flashes,”
-begun in 1876:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Clara Morris takes her lap-dog out for a daily drive.</p>
-
-<p>Miss Claxton is meeting with indifferent success in
-“Conscience.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">316</span></p>
-
-<p>Not less than $30,000 was spent last evening in the
-theatres of New York.</p>
-
-<p>John T. Raymond drew excellent houses as <i>Colonel
-Sellers</i> at the Brooklyn Theatre.</p>
-
-<p>For the term of their appearance in “King Lear,”
-Lawrence Barrett will receive $1,200 a week; E. E.
-Sheridan, $1,000; Frederick B. Warde, $500.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The interview, invented by the elder Bennett, was
-becoming more and more popular. The <i>Sun</i> used it,
-not only as the vehicle of acquired information, but
-sometimes as the envelope of humour. Take, for
-example, this bit, printed in 1875, but as fresh in style
-and spirit as if it were of the product of a reporter of
-1918:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p1 center larger">INTERVIEWING VANDERBILT</p>
-
-<p class="p1 b1 center">ANOTHER REPORTER COMES AWAY FREIGHTED WITH
-VALUABLE INFORMATION</p>
-
-<p>Commodore Vanderbilt was eighty-one years old yesterday.
-He spent the day in his Fourth Avenue offices,
-taking his usual drive in the afternoon. A <i>Sun</i> reporter
-visited him in the evening to inquire about a favorable
-time for selling a few thousands of New York Central.</p>
-
-<p>“This,” said the commodore, slowly and solemnly, as
-he entered the drawing-room, “is my birthday.”</p>
-
-<p>“Indeed!” said the reporter. “Do you think the
-preferred <span class="locked">stock——”</span></p>
-
-<p>“To-day,” the commodore interrupted, “I am eighty-one
-years old. I am <span class="locked">stronger——”</span></p>
-
-<p>“Is there any prospect of an immediate rise?”</p>
-
-<p>“I have never gone into the late-supper business,” the
-commodore answered, apparently not catching the drift
-of the question; “and I have always been a very temperate
-man. But how did you find out that this was
-my birthday?”</p>
-
-<p>“You hinted at the fact yourself,” the reporter replied.
-“Will the Erie <span class="locked">troubles——”</span></p>
-
-<p>“The Erie troubles will not prevent me from beginning<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">317</span>
-my eighty-second year with a young heart and a
-clear conscience.”</p>
-
-<p>“And with the prospect of seeing a good many more
-birthday anniversaries?” the reporter asked.</p>
-
-<p>“That, my dear boy,” said the commodore, “is one of
-those things that no fellow can tell about.”</p>
-
-<p>“Do you think that this is a good time to sell?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, it’s never a good time to sell after banking-hours.”</p>
-
-<p>“Good evening!”</p>
-
-<p>“Good evening! Drop in again.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<div id="ip_316" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 34em;">
- <img src="images/i_316a.jpg" width="1632" height="2027" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
- <p>JULIAN RALPH</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>How did the <i>Sun</i> reporters of the seventies compare
-with those of later years? As no two reporters are alike
-in vision and style, no two occasions identical in incident,
-no two dramatic moments twin, it is better to make
-comparison by choosing arbitrarily scenes far apart in
-years, but set on similar stages, and to lay before the
-reader the work of the <i>Sun</i> reporter in each case. Let
-us take, because of their resemblance in public interest
-and the similarity of physical surroundings, the close
-of the trials, twenty years apart, of Edward S. Stokes
-for the murder of James Fisk, Jr.; of Lizzie Borden for
-the killing of her father and step-mother, and of Charles
-Becker for the assassination of Herman Rosenthal.</p>
-
-<p>The following is from the <i>Sun</i> of January 6, 1873:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Stokes took his accustomed place, and his relatives
-sat down facing the jurors. The judge entered and took
-his place. Then, amid the most solemn silence, the
-twelve jurymen filed in and seated themselves. The
-awful conclusion at which they had arrived could be
-read in their faces. Each juror’s name was called, and
-with the usual response.</p>
-
-<p>The judge turned toward them, and in a low, clear
-voice asked:</p>
-
-<p>“Gentlemen, have you agreed on a verdict?”</p>
-
-<p>The foreman of the jury arose and said, “We have.”</p>
-
-<p>Clerk of the Court: “Gentlemen of the jury, rise.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">318</span>
-Prisoner, stand up. Gentlemen of the jury, look upon
-the prisoner. Prisoner, look upon the jury. What say
-you, gentlemen of the jury? Do you find the prisoner
-at the bar guilty or not guilty?”</p>
-
-<p>Foreman of the Jury: “Guilty of murder in the first
-degree.”</p>
-
-<p>A passionate wail that made men’s hearts leap rose
-from the group that clustered round the prisoner, and
-the head of the horror-stricken girl, from whose bosom
-the anguished cry was rent, fell upon the shoulder of
-her doomed brother.</p>
-
-<p>The jury was polled by request of the prisoner’s counsel.
-No sooner had the last man answered “Yes” to
-the question whether all agreed on the verdict than the
-prisoner, erect and firm, turned his face full upon Mr.
-Beach (of the prosecution), who at one time had been
-his counsel in a civil case.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Beach,” the prisoner said, slowly and in a full-toned
-voice, “you have done your work well. I hope
-you have been well paid for it.”</p>
-
-<p>Then the prisoner sank slowly into his seat. Mr.
-Beach made no reply. Mr. Fellows, assistant district
-attorney, explained that he had refused to try the case
-unless Mr. Beach and Mr. Fullerton were associated
-with him. They had consented to join him at the request
-of District Attorney Garvin, and without any fee
-from any member of Colonel Fisk’s family.</p>
-
-<p>The prisoner half-arose and, sweeping the air with his
-clenched fist, said:</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Fellows, say that they were hired by Jay Gould.
-Please say that!”</p>
-
-<p>The sensation in court was such as is seldom known.
-You could hear it as you hear the wind stirring the trees
-of the forest. Then the court discharged the jury and
-the people began to move.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The following was printed in the <i>Sun</i> of June 21,
-1893, under date of New Bedford, Massachusetts:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Lizzie Andrew Borden,” said the clerk of the court,
-“stand up!”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">319</span></p>
-
-<p>She arose unsteadily, with a face as white as
-marble.</p>
-
-<p>“Gentlemen, have you agreed upon a verdict?” said
-the clerk to the jury.</p>
-
-<p>It was so still in court that the flutter of two fans
-made a great noise.</p>
-
-<p>“We have,” said Foreman Richards boldly.</p>
-
-<p>The prisoner was gripping the rail in front of the
-dock as if her standing up depended upon its keeping
-its place.</p>
-
-<p>“Lizzie Andrew Borden,” said the clerk, “hold up
-your right hand. Jurors, look upon the prisoner.
-Prisoner, look upon the foreman.”</p>
-
-<p>Every juryman stood at right-about-face, staring at
-the woman. There was such a gentle, kindly light beaming
-in every eye that no one questioned the verdict that
-was to be uttered. But God save every woman from
-the feelings that Lizzie Borden showed in the return
-look she cast upon that jury! It was what is pictured
-as the rolling gaze of a dying person. She seemed not
-to have the power to move her eyes directly where she
-was told to, and they swung all around in her head.
-They looked at the ceiling; they looked at everything,
-but they saw nothing. It was a horrible, a pitiful sight,
-to see her then.</p>
-
-<p>“What say you, Mr. Foreman?” said the gentle old
-clerk.</p>
-
-<p>“Not guilty!” shouted Mr. Richards.</p>
-
-<p>At the words the wretched woman fell quicker than
-ever an ox fell in the stockyards of Chicago. Her forehead
-crashed against the heavy walnut rail so as to
-shake the reporter of the <i>Sun</i> who sat next to her, twelve
-feet away, leaning on the rail. It seemed that she must
-be stunned, but she was not. Quickly, with an unconscious
-movement, she flung up both arms, threw them
-over the rail, and pressed them under her face so that it
-rested on them. What followed was mere mockery, but
-it was the well-governed order of the court and had to
-be gone through with.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>And finally, this is from the <i>Sun</i> of May 23, 1914:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">320</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Charles Becker to the bar!”</p>
-
-<p>Once more the door that gives entrance toward the
-Tombs as well as to the jury-room was opened. A
-deputy sheriff appeared, then Becker, then a second
-deputy. One glance was all you needed to see that
-Becker had himself under magnificent control. His
-iron nerve was not bending. He swung with long
-strides around the walls and came to a stand at the
-railing. Those who watched him did not see a sign
-of agitation. He was breathing slowly—you could see
-that from the rise and fall of his powerful chest—and
-smiling slightly as he glanced toward his counsel.</p>
-
-<p>He looked for the first time toward the jurors. There
-was confidence and hope shining in his eyes. Coolly,
-without haste, he studied the face of every man in the
-box. Not one of them met his eye. Foreman Blagden
-gazed at the floor. Frederick G. Barrett, Sr., juror No.
-12, studied the ceiling. The others gazed into space or
-turned their glance toward the justice.</p>
-
-<p>There was the most perfect silence in the court-room.
-The movements of trolley-cars in Centre Street made a
-noise like rolling thunder. A pneumatic riveter at work
-on a building close by set up a tremendous din.</p>
-
-<p>And yet such sounds and annoyances were forgotten,
-ceased to be of consequence, when Clerk Penny bent
-toward the foreman and slowly put the customary question:</p>
-
-<p>“Gentlemen of the jury, have you agreed upon your
-verdict?”</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Blagden’s reply was barely audible; many in the
-room sensed its import, but failed to grasp the actual
-words. It was obvious that the foreman, having to
-express the will of his associates, was stirred by such
-feeling as seldom comes to any man.</p>
-
-<p>“Guilty as charged in the indictment,” he breathed
-more than spoke.</p>
-
-<p>Becker’s right hand was then gripped to the railing.
-He held his straw hat in his left hand, which, as his
-arm was bent backward and upward, rested against the
-small of his back. It is the plain truth that he took the
-blow without a quiver. After a second, it may be, he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">321</span>
-coughed just a little; a mere clearing of the throat.
-But his mouth was firm. His dark face lost no vestige
-of color. His black eyes turned toward the jurymen,
-who still avoided his glance, who looked everywhere but
-at the man they had condemned.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>If comment were needed, it would be that the <i>Sun</i>
-reporter in the court-room at New Bedford had the advantage
-of describing a protagonist who, by her sex and
-by the very mystery that was left unsolved at her acquittal,
-was a far more dramatic figure than Stokes or
-the police lieutenant. The climaxes quoted are useful
-as an illustration of the advance of reporting from 1873,
-when the <i>Sun</i> style was still forming, to 1893 and 1914,
-when it was fully formed; not as a comparison between
-what may not have been the best work of the reporter of
-the Stokes trial, Henry Mann, and the stories by Julian
-Ralph, who saw Lizzie Borden fall, and Edwin C. Hill,
-who wrote the Becker article.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> omitted the weary introductions that had
-been the fashion in newspapers—leading paragraphs
-which told over again what was in the head-lines and
-were merely a prelude to a third and detailed telling.
-The <i>Sun</i> reporter began at the beginning, thus:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The Hon. John Kelly, wearing a small bouquet in the
-lapel of his coat, stepped out of his coach in front of
-Cardinal McCloskey’s residence in Madison Avenue just
-before eight o’clock yesterday morning. A few minutes
-later three other coaches arrived, and their occupants
-entered the house. Many of the neighbors knew that a
-niece of the cardinal was to be married to Mr. Kelly, and
-they strained their eyes through plate-glass windows in
-the hope that they might see the bride and the groom.
-Cardinal McCloskey, having been apprized of the arrival
-of the wedding-party, went to the chapel in the other
-part of the house, and at about a quarter past eight,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">322</span>
-the time fixed for the mass <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">pro sponsis</i>, the marriage
-ceremony was begun.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the longer and more important stories, the rule
-was adhered to as closely as possible. Prolixity, fine
-writing, and hysteria were taboo. Mark the calmness
-with which the <i>Sun</i> reporter began his story of the most
-sensational crime of the late seventies:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Two little mounds of red-colored earth around a small
-hole in the ground, and a few feet of downtrodden grass,
-were all that marked the last resting-place of Alexander
-T. Stewart yesterday morning. In the dead of the night
-robbers had dug into the earth above the vault, removed
-one of the stones that covered it, and stolen the body of
-the dead millionaire.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The human lights of life were caught by the <i>Sun</i> men
-and transferred to every page of every issue. In 1878
-a <i>Sun</i> reporter was sent to Menlo Park, New Jersey, to
-see how a young inventor there, who had just announced
-the possibility of an incandescent electric light, worked:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Here Mr. Edison dropped his cigar-stump from his
-mouth, and, turning to Griffin, asked for some chewing-tobacco.
-The private secretary drew open his drawer
-and passed out a yellow cake as large as a dinner-plate.
-The professor tore away a chew, saying:</p>
-
-<p>“I am partly indebted to the <i>Sun</i> for this tobacco.
-It printed an article saying that I chewed poor tobacco.
-That was so. The Lorillards saw the article and sent
-me down a box of the best plug that ever went into a
-man’s mouth. All the workmen have used it, and Grif
-says there is a marked moral improvement in the men.
-It seems, however, to have the opposite effect on Grif.
-You see that he has salted away the last cake for his
-own use.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Nearly forty years later <i>Sun</i> reporters still went to
-see Mr. Edison borrow white magic from nature and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">323</span>
-chewing-tobacco from his employees, and to describe
-both interesting processes.</p>
-
-<p>With Dana’s knowledge of what people wanted to
-read was mixed a curiosity, sometimes frankly expressed
-in the <i>Sun</i>, as to just why they wanted to read some
-things a great deal more than other things. It must be
-remembered that even in the seventies and eighties not
-everybody read a newspaper every day; some reserved
-their pennies and their eyes for great climaxes. The
-<i>Sun</i>, a paper which paid much attention to political
-matters, naturally found its circulation sharply affected
-by important political happenings. It sold
-ninety-four thousand extra copies on the morning after
-the Tilden-Hayes election—two hundred and twenty-two
-thousand copies, in all, being disposed of before
-eight o’clock in the morning. In 1875, when the pugilist,
-John Morrissey, who was supported by the <i>Sun</i>
-for the State Senate because he was anti-Tammany,
-defeated Fox, the <i>Sun</i> sold forty-nine thousand extra
-copies on the day after the election.</p>
-
-<p>The assassination of the Czar Alexander II of Russia
-did not sell an extra paper, but the hanging of Foster,
-the “car-hook murderer,” sent the sales up seventeen
-thousand. The deaths of Cornelius Vanderbilt and
-Alexander T. Stewart had no effect on the <i>Sun’s</i> circulation,
-the passing of Napoleon III raised it only
-one thousand for the day, and the death of Pius IX
-caused only four thousand irregular readers to buy the
-paper; but the execution of Dolan, a murderer now
-practically forgotten, sent the sales up ten thousand.
-The beginning of coercive measures in Ireland by the
-arrest of Michael Davitt sold no extra papers in a city
-full of Irishmen, but the Fenian invasion of Canada
-meant the sale of ten thousand copies more than
-usual.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">324</span></p>
-
-<p>Tweed’s death caused an increase of five thousand;
-the death of President Garfield, of seventy-four thousand.
-Only thirteen thousand extras were sold after
-the Brooklyn Theatre fire, while the Westfield steamboat
-explosion sold thirty-one thousand. Twenty-one
-thousand irregular readers bought the <i>Sun</i> to read
-about the first blasting of Hell Gate in 1876, while
-only eight thousand were interested in the fact that
-Tilden had been counted out by the Electoral Commission.
-The flare-up of the Beecher scandal, in
-August, 1874, sold as many extras—ten thousand—as
-the shooting of Fisk.</p>
-
-<p>The beginning of the Crédit Mobilier exposé added
-only a thousand to the normal circulation, but on the
-morning after a big walking-match the presses had to
-run off forty thousand more than their usual daily
-grist. The resignation of Roscoe Conkling and Thomas
-C. Platt from the United States Senate hoisted the
-circulation only two thousand, but the fight between
-John L. Sullivan and Paddy Ryan meant a difference
-of eleven thousand. The opening of the Centennial
-Exposition in Philadelphia caused extra sales of three
-thousand; an international rifle-match at Creedmoor,
-ten thousand.</p>
-
-<p>In 1882 the <i>Sun</i> made the calculation that the average
-effect of certain sorts of news in increase of circulation
-was about as follows:</p>
-
-<table id="t324" class="tnarrow30" summary="effect of events on circulation">
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Presidential elections</td>
- <td class="tdr">82,000</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">State and city elections</td>
- <td class="tdr">42,000</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Last days of walking-matches</td>
- <td class="tdr">25,000</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">October State elections in Presidential years</td>
- <td class="tdr">21,000</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Great fires</td>
- <td class="tdr">10,000</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Notable disasters</td>
- <td class="tdr">9,000</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Hangings in or near New York</td>
- <td class="tdr">8,000</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">325</span></p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> expressed a curiosity to <span class="locked">know—</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Who are the eighty or ninety thousand people, not
-regular readers of the <i>Sun</i>, that buy the paper after
-a Presidential election? Where do they live? Do they
-read the papers only after exciting events?</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>On its fiftieth birthday—September 3, 1883—the <i>Sun</i>
-printed a table showing the high-tide marks of its circulation:</p>
-
-<table id="t325" class="tnarrow30" summary="circulation summary">
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">November 8, 1876—Presidential election</td>
- <td class="tdr">222,390</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Sept. 20, 1881—Garfield’s death</td>
- <td class="tdr">212,525</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Nov. 3, 1880—Presidential election</td>
- <td class="tdr">206,974</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">July 13, 1871—Orange riots</td>
- <td class="tdr">192,224</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Sept. 21, 1881—Second day after Garfield’s death</td>
- <td class="tdr">180,215</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Nov. 3, 1875—State and city election</td>
- <td class="tdr">177,588</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">July 3, 1881—Garfield shot</td>
- <td class="tdr">176,093</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>In the same article, a page review written by Mr.
-Mitchell, the reasons for the <i>Sun’s</i> success were succinctly
-given:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>No waste of words, no nonsense, plain, outspoken
-expressions of honest opinion, the abolishment of the
-conventional measures of news importance, the substitution
-of the absolute standard of real interest to human
-beings, bright and enjoyable writing, wit, philosophical
-good humor, intolerance of humbug, hard
-hitting from the shoulder on proper occasions—do we
-not see all these qualities now in our esteemed contemporaries
-on every side of us, and in every part of
-the land?</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>By this time Dana had framed a newspaper organisation
-more nearly perfect than any other in America.
-Grouping about him men suited to the <i>Sun</i>, to himself,
-and to one another, he had created a literary world of
-his own—a seeing, thinking, writing world of keen objective<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">326</span>
-vision. Men of a hundred various minds, each
-with his own style, his own ambition, his own manner
-of life, the <i>Sun</i> staff focused their abilities into the
-one flood of light that came out every morning. It
-was a bohemia of brightness, not of beer; unconventional
-in its manner of seeing and writing, but not in
-its collars or its way of living. The <i>Sun</i> spirit, unquenchable
-then as now, burned in every corner of the
-shabby old rooms. It was the spirit of unselfish devotion,
-not so much to Dana or his likable lieutenants
-as to the invisible god of a machine in which each man
-was a pinion, meshing smoothly with his neighbour.</p>
-
-<p>That these pinions did mesh without friction was
-due, in largest part, to Dana’s intuitive faculty of
-choosing men who would “fit in” rather than men
-who could merely write. It was by his choosing that
-the <i>Sun</i> came to have for its editorial page writers
-like W. O. Bartlett and E. P. Mitchell, M. W. Hazeltine
-and N. L. Thiéblin, Henry B. Stanton and John
-Swinton, James S. Pike and Fitz-Henry Warren, Paul
-Dana and Thomas Hitchcock, Francis P. Church and
-E. M. Kingsbury. It was by his choosing that the Sun
-had managing editors like Amos J. Cummings and
-Chester S. Lord, city editors like John B. Bogart and
-Daniel F. Kellogg, and night city editors like Henry
-W. Odion, Ambrose W. Lyman, and S. M. Clarke.</p>
-
-<p>Managing editors and city editors hired men, hundreds
-of them, but always according to the Dana plan—first
-find the man, then find the work for him.
-Chester S. Lord, who took more men on the <i>Sun</i> than
-any other of its executives, was fully familiar with the
-Dana method when he began, in 1880, a career as managing
-editor that lasted for thirty-two years of brilliant
-achievement; and he followed it until he retired. He
-had been on the <i>Sun</i> since 1872, shortly after he came<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">327</span>
-out of Hamilton College, and he had served as a reporter,
-as editor of suburban news, as assistant night
-city editor under Lyman, and as assistant managing
-editor in the brief period when Ballard Smith succeeded
-Cummings and Young as chief of the <i>Sun’s</i>
-news department.</p>
-
-<p>At the beginning of his service as managing editor
-Lord found himself with a staff which included Bogart,
-Dr. Wood, Stillman, Odion, E. M. Rewey, Garrett
-P. Serviss, and Cyrus C. Adams, all trained desk men
-and most of them good reporters as well; and such
-first-class reporters and correspondents as Julian
-Ralph, S. S. Carvalho, Willis Holly, and E. J. Edwards.
-To these, by the time the <i>Sun</i> reached its half-century
-mark, had been added the great night city
-editor Clarke and reporters like John R. Spears and
-Arthur Brisbane. Other great newspapermen were
-soon to join the army of Mr. Lord in that long campaign
-of which the editor of the <i>Sun</i> said, on the occasion
-of Mr. Lord’s retirement:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Every night of his ten thousand nights of service
-has been a Trafalgar or a Waterloo. He has fought
-ten thousand battles against the world, the flesh, and
-the devil; the woman applicant, the refractory citizen,
-the liar at the other end of the wire, and the ten thousand
-demons which make up the great army of nervous
-prostration.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_328" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">328</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">“SUN” REPORTERS AND THEIR WORK</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>Cummings, Ralph, W. J. Chamberlin, Brisbane, Riggs,
-Dieuaide, Spears, O. K. Davis, Irwin, Adams, Denison,
-Wood, O’Malley, Hill, Cronyn.—Spanish War Work.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">There</span> is an unconventional club which has no home
-except on the one night each year when it holds
-a dinner in a New York hotel. Its members are men
-who have been writers on the <i>Sun</i>, and who, though they
-have left the paper, love it. They meet for no purpose
-except to toast the <i>Sun</i> of their day and this. They
-call themselves the Sun Alumni.</p>
-
-<p>From the ranks of the novelists and magazine editors
-and writers come men like Will Irwin, Samuel Hopkins
-Adams, Robert Welles Ritchie, Albert W. Atwood,
-Henry James Forman, Cameron Mackenzie, Kirk Munroe,
-Charles Mason Fairbanks, Robert R. Whiting,
-James L. Ford, E. J. Edwards, Arthur F. Aldridge,
-George B. Mallon, Gustav Kobbé, and Frederick Kinney
-Noyes.</p>
-
-<p>From the lists of newspaper owners and editors come
-Arthur Brisbane, of the Washington <i>Times</i>; Edward
-H. Mott, of the Goshen <i>Republican</i>; Frank H. Simonds,
-of the New York <i>Tribune</i>; Martin J. Hutchins, of the
-Chicago <i>Journal</i>; C. L. Sherman, of the Hartford
-<i>Courant</i>.</p>
-
-<p>From the staffs of other New York newspapers come
-Charles Selden, Carr V. Van Anda, and Richard V.
-Oulahan, of the <i>Times</i>; William A. Willis, of the
-<i>Herald</i>; Rudolph E. Block, of the <i>American</i>; J. Arthur<span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">329</span>
-Seavey, of the <i>Tribune</i>; and Lindsay Denison, of the
-<i>Evening World</i>.</p>
-
-<p>From the bench come Judges Willard Bartlett, Warren
-W. Foster, and Willard H. Olmsted; from government
-work, Stephen T. Mather, Robert Sterling Yard,
-and E. W. Townsend; from business, Edward G. Riggs,
-Willis Holly, Collin Armstrong, Oscar King Davis,
-Robert Grier Cooke, John H. O’Brien, and Roy Mason.
-If the racing season is over in Cuba, C. J. Fitzgerald is
-present. If business on the San Diego <i>Sun</i> is not too
-brisk, its editor, Clarence McGrew, crosses the continent
-to be at the feast. Until his death in 1917, Franklin
-Matthews, associate professor of journalism at Columbia
-University, who was with the <i>Sun</i> from 1890 to 1909 in
-many capacities, was one of the leading spirits of the
-Alumni. Dr. Talcott Williams, chief of the school of
-journalism, is another enthusiastic alumnus.</p>
-
-<p>These men, the outsider observes, gather and talk in
-groups. The men of the eighties recall the wonders of
-the four-page <i>Sun</i> and its Bogarts, Ralphs, and Cummingses.
-Men of the nineties chat of the feats of “Jersey”
-Chamberlin and “Commodore” Spears. The
-alumni who matriculated in the present century speak
-of Riggs and Irwin, Denison and O’Malley and Hill.
-But all talk of the <i>Sun</i>, and of Dana and Mitchell and
-Lord and Clarke.</p>
-
-<p>It is only when they speak of reporters that there is
-a grouping of heroes. That is because it is a natural
-and pleasant practice, if an illogical one, for newspapermen
-of the present and previous decades to look back
-to this or that period of a paper and say:</p>
-
-<p>“That was <em>the</em> day! The names of the men on the
-staff prove it.”</p>
-
-<p>An old <i>Sun</i> man will point, for instance, to the <i>Sun’s</i>
-roster of reporters in 1893, when the local staff included:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">330</span></p>
-
-<p class="in0 in4">
-Julian Ralph<br />
-John R. Spears<br />
-Oscar K. Davis<br />
-C. J. Fitzgerald<br />
-Carr V. Van Anda<br />
-David Graham Phillips<br />
-George B. Mallon<br />
-Samuel Hopkins Adams<br />
-Daniel F. Kellogg<br />
-C. M. Fairbanks<br />
-Lawrence Reamer<br />
-W. J. Chamberlin<br />
-Edward G. Riggs<br />
-E. W. Townsend<br />
-Rudolph E. Block<br />
-Samuel A. Wood<br />
-E. D. Beach<br />
-E. O. Chamberlin<br />
-Victor Speer<br />
-Joseph Vila<br />
-W. A. Willis<br />
-Collin Armstrong
-</p>
-
-<p>The weak place in this sort of retrospection is that
-after twenty-five years the observer’s focus is twisted.
-Julian Ralph was a great reporter in 1893, but W. J.
-Chamberlin, whose name is linked with Ralph’s among
-great <i>Sun</i> reporters, was only just arriving. John R.
-Spears had made his reputation, but Riggs’s fame as
-a political writer was not yet established. Townsend
-had tickled New York with his “Chimmie Fadden”
-stories, but Sam Adams was a cub. Wood, Vila, and
-Reamer were not as important to the <i>Sun</i> in 1893 as
-they are at this writing.</p>
-
-<p>The men of 1893 probably agreed that there was no
-staff like the staff of 1868, just as the men of 1942 may
-gaze with proud regret at the staff list of 1917. Distance,
-like pay-day, lends enchantment; and newspaper
-history is a little more hazy than most other kinds of
-history, because the men who write what happens to
-other people have no time to set down what happens
-to themselves.</p>
-
-<p>The anonymity of the <i>Sun</i> reporter has been almost
-complete. If Julian Ralph had never gone into the field
-of books and magazines, he would have been as little
-known to the general public as the <i>Sun’s</i> best reporter
-is to-day; but newspapermen would not have undervalued
-him. There is better quality in the things he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">331</span>
-wrote hastily and anonymously for the <i>Sun</i> than in
-some of the eight or nine published volumes that bear
-his name, and the reason for this is that he was primarily
-a newspaperman.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_330" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 34em;">
- <img src="images/i_330a.jpg" width="1610" height="2134" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
- <p>ARTHUR BRISBANE</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>He entered the game at fifteen, as an apprentice in
-the office of the Red Bank (New Jersey) <i>Standard</i>. At
-seventeen he was a city editor and a writer of humour.
-At eighteen he had founded the Red Bank <i>Leader</i>—a
-failure. At nineteen he was one of the editors of the
-Webster (Massachusetts) <i>Times</i>, and at twenty he was
-a reporter on the New York <i>Graphic</i>. At twenty-two
-he was on the <i>Sun</i>, where he remained from 1875 to
-1893.</p>
-
-<p>Ralph was a news man who lacked none of the large
-reportorial qualities. He enjoyed seeing new places
-and new people. He liked to hunt news—an instinct
-missing in some good writers who fail to be great reporters.
-He liked to write—a taste found too seldom
-among men who write well, and too frequently among
-the graphomaniacs who fancy that everything is worth
-writing, and that perfection lies in an infinite number
-of words.</p>
-
-<p>Some one said of Ralph that he “could write five
-thousand words about a cobblestone.” If he had done
-that, it would have been an interesting cobblestone. He
-had a passion for detail, but it was not the lifeless and
-wearisome detail of the realistic novelist. When he
-wrote half a column about a horse eating a woman’s
-hat, the reader became well acquainted with the horse,
-the woman, and the crowd that had looked on.</p>
-
-<p>Ralph was untiring in mind, legs, and fingers. He
-liked the big one-man news story, such as an inauguration
-or a parade, or the general introduction of a national
-convention. His quiet, easy style, his ability to
-cover an event of many hours and much territory, were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">332</span>
-shown to good advantage in his description of the
-funeral of General Grant in August, 1885. He wrote
-it all—a full front page of small type—in about seven
-hours, and with a pencil. It began:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>There have not often been gathered in one place so
-many men whose names have been household words, and
-whose lives have been inwoven with the history of a
-grave crisis in a great nation’s life, as met yesterday
-in this city. The scene was before General Grant’s
-tomb in Riverside Park; the space was less than goes
-to half an ordinary city block, and the names of the
-actors were William T. Sherman, Joe Johnston, Phil
-Sheridan, Simon B. Buckner, John A. Logan, W. S.
-Hancock, Fitz John Porter, Chester A. Arthur, Thomas
-A. Hendricks, John Sherman, Fitzhugh Lee, John B.
-Gordon, David D. Porter, Thomas F. Bayard, John L.
-Worden, and a dozen others naturally linked in the
-mind with these greater men. Among them, like children
-amid gray-heads, or shadows beside monuments,
-were other men more newly famous, and famous only
-for deeds of peace in times of quiet and plenty—a President,
-an ex-President, Governors, mayors, and millionaires.
-And all were paying homage to the greatest
-figure of their time, whose mortal remains they pressed
-around with bared, bowed heads.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>That was the beginning of a story of about eleven
-thousand words, all written by Ralph in one evening.
-It told everything that was worth reading about the
-burial—the weather, the crowded line of march, the
-people from out of town, the women fainting at the
-curbs, the uniforms and peculiarities of the Union and
-Confederate heroes who rode in the funeral train; told
-everything from eight o’clock in the morning, when the
-sightseers began to gather, until the bugler blew taps
-and the regiments fired their salute volleys. It was
-a story typical of Ralph, who saw everything, remembered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">333</span>
-everything, wrote everything. In detail it is unlikely
-that any reporter of to-day could surpass it. In
-dramatic quality it has been excelled by half a dozen
-<i>Sun</i> reporters, including Ralph himself.</p>
-
-<p>For example, there is the story of a similar event—Admiral
-Dewey’s funeral—written in January, 1917, by
-Thoreau Cronyn, of the <i>Sun</i>, with a dramatic climax
-such as Ralph did not reach. This is the end of
-Cronyn’s story—the incident of the old bugler whose
-art failed him in his grief:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Chattering of spectators in the background hushed
-abruptly. A light breeze, which barely rumpled the
-river, set a few dry leaves tossing about the tomb of
-Farragut, Dewey’s mentor at Mobile. The voice of
-Chaplain Frazier could be heard repeating a prayer,
-catching, and then going on smoothly.</p>
-
-<p>A second of silence, then the brisk call of the lieutenant
-commanding the firing-squad of Annapolis cadets.</p>
-
-<p>“Load!”</p>
-
-<p>Rifles rattling.</p>
-
-<p>“Aim!”</p>
-
-<p>Rifles pointed a little upward for safety’s sake, though
-the cartridges had no bullets.</p>
-
-<p>“Fire!”</p>
-
-<p>Twenty rifles snapped as one. This twice repeated—three
-volleys over the tomb into which the twelve sailors
-had just carried the admiral’s body.</p>
-
-<p>And now came the moment for Master-at-Arms
-Charles Mitchell, bugler on the Olympia when Dewey
-sank the Spanish fleet, to perform his last office for the
-admiral. Raising the bugle to his lips and looking
-straight ahead at the still open door of the tomb, he
-sounded “taps.” The first three climbing notes and
-the second three were perfect. Then the break and the
-recovery, and the funeral was over.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Julian Ralph saw more of the world, and made more
-copy out of what he saw, than any other newspaperman.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">334</span>
-While still on the <i>Sun</i> he was making books out of the
-material he picked up on his assignments. In the early
-nineties, while still on the <i>Sun</i> staff, he made two tours
-for <i>Harper’s Magazine</i> and wrote “On Canada’s Frontier,”
-“Our Great West,” and “Chicago and the World’s
-Fair,” the last of which was the official book of the
-Columbian Exposition. After his experiences in the
-Boer War he wrote “Towards Pretoria,” “War’s
-Brighter Side” (with Conan Doyle), and “An American
-with Lord Roberts.” His other books are “Alone
-in China,” “Dixie; or, Southern Scenes and Sketches,”
-“People We Pass,” and a novel, “The Millionairess.”
-He was the author of the “German Barber” sketches,
-which appeared almost weekly in the <i>Sun</i> for a long
-time, and which are remembered as among the genuine
-examples of real humour in dialect. During the Boer
-War, Ralph joined the staff of the London <i>Daily Mail</i>,
-and after returning from South Africa he made his
-home in London until his death in 1903.</p>
-
-<p>A tradition about Ralph, indicating the pleasure that
-his articles gave to his own colleagues as well as to the
-public, concerns one of the great football-games of the
-eighties. John Spears discovered the picturesqueness
-of the Yale-Princeton games, usually played on Thanksgiving
-Day, and the <i>Sun</i> featured them year after year.
-Reporters hungered for the job, for it meant not only
-money, but the opportunity to write a fine story.</p>
-
-<p>When Ralph’s turn came he wrote such a good article
-that the copy-desk let it run for five columns. Lord
-admired it, Clarke was enthusiastic over it, and the
-other men in the office took turns in reading the story
-in the proofs, so happily was it turned. It was not
-until the first edition was off the press that an underling,
-who cared more for football than for literature,
-suggested that the story ought to contain the score of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">335</span>
-the game. Ralph had forgotten to state it, and all the
-desks, absorbed in the thrill of the article itself, had
-overlooked the omission.</p>
-
-<p>Ralph reported for the <i>Sun</i> the outrages of the Molly
-Maguires in the Pennsylvania coal-fields. After the
-execution of two of the outlaws for murder, he was
-bold enough to follow their bodies back to their village
-where they had lived, in order to describe the wake.
-He was warned to leave the place before sunset, on
-pain of death, and he went, for there was nothing to
-be gained by staying.</p>
-
-<p>On another assignment, a murder mystery, the relatives
-of the victim, who were ignorant and superstitious
-people, suspected Ralph of being the murderer. When
-he came into their house to see the body, they demanded
-that he should touch it, their belief being that the body
-would turn over, or the wounds reopen, if touched by
-the murderer. There was an implied threat of death
-for the reporter if he refused, but Ralph walked out
-without complying.</p>
-
-<p>Ralph was a believer in the sixth sense of journalists,
-that inexplicable gift by which a man, and particularly
-a newspaperman, comes to a clairvoyant knowledge that
-something is about to happen—in other words, an exalted
-hunch. John B. Bogart, city editor in Ralph’s
-<i>Sun</i> days, had this sense, and he called it a “current
-of news.” He thus described its workings to Ralph:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>One day I was walking up Broadway when suddenly
-a current of news came up from a cellar and enveloped
-me. I felt the difference in the temperature of the air.
-I tingled with the electricity or magnetism in the current.
-It seemed to stop me, to turn me around, and to
-force me to descend some stairs which reached up to
-the street by my side.</p>
-
-<p>I ran down the steps, and as I did so a pistol-shot<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">336</span>
-sounded in my ears. One man had shot another, and
-I found myself at the scene upon the instant.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>While acting as the legislative correspondent of the
-<i>Sun</i> at Albany, Ralph was in the habit of walking to
-one of the local parks to enjoy the view across a valley
-southwest of the city. One day, while gazing across
-the valley, he was seized with a desire to go to the
-mountains in the distance beyond it. The impulse remained
-with him for two days, and then, on the third
-day, he read of a news happening that had occurred in
-the mountains on the very day when the current of news
-had thrilled him.</p>
-
-<p>Ralph reported the Dreyfus court-martial at Rennes,
-in France. One morning he could not sleep after five
-o’clock. As he was on his way to court he said to
-George W. Steevens, of the London <i>Daily Mail</i>, who
-was walking with him:</p>
-
-<p>“Wait a moment while I go into the telegraph office
-and wire my paper that I expect exciting news to-day.”</p>
-
-<p>At that hour there was no apparent reason to expect
-any news out of the ordinary, but it was only a few
-hours later that Maître Labori, Dreyfus’s counsel, was
-shot down on his way to court.</p>
-
-<p>Young newspapermen who are fortunate enough to
-be possessed of—or by—the sixth sense must remember,
-however, that it cannot be relied upon to sound the
-alarm on every occasion. Mr. Bogart, who felt that
-he had a friend in the current of news, kept close track
-of the assignment-book. As a city editor he was unsurpassed
-for his diligence in following up news stories.
-One day he assigned Brainerd G. Smith, afterward professor
-of journalism at Cornell, to report the first reception
-given by Judge Hilton after the death of the
-judge’s partner, A. T. Stewart.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">337</span></p>
-
-<p>“And above all,” Mr. Bogart wound up, “don’t leave
-the house without asking Judge Hilton whether they’ve
-found Stewart’s body yet.”</p>
-
-<p>Julian Ralph attributed his success as a journalist
-chiefly to three things—a liking for his work, the ability
-to get what he was sent for, and good humour. He
-omitted mention of something which distinguished him
-and Chamberlin and all other great reporters—hard
-work. Ralph himself gives a brief but complete picture
-of a day’s hard work in his description, in “The Making
-of a Journalist,” of the way in which he reported the
-inauguration of a President:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>I had myself called at five o’clock in the morning,
-and, having a cab at hand, mounted the box with the
-negro driver and traveled about the city from end to
-end and side to side. I did this to see the people get
-up and the trains roll in and the soldiers turn out—to
-catch the capital robing like a bride for her wedding.</p>
-
-<p>After breakfast, eaten calmly, I made another tour
-of the town, and then began to approach the subject
-more closely, calling at the White House, mingling with
-the crowds in the principal hotels, moving between the
-Senate and the House of Representatives, to report the
-hurly-burly of the closing moments of a dying administration.
-I saw the old and the new President, and then
-witnessed the inauguration ceremonies and the parade.</p>
-
-<p>Then, having seen the new family in place in the
-White House, I took a hearty luncheon, and sat down
-at half past one o’clock to write steadily for twelve
-hours, with plenty of pencils and pads and messenger-boys
-at hand, and with my notebook supplemented by
-clippings from all the afternoon papers, covering details
-to which I might or might not wish to refer. Cigars, a
-sandwich or two at supper-time, and a stout horn of
-brandy late at night were my other equipments.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>As Ralph remarked, that was hard work, but it was
-nothing when compared with the job of reporting a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">338</span>
-national convention. “One needs only to <em>see</em> an inauguration,”
-he said. “In a national convention one
-must <em>know</em>.”</p>
-
-<p>Wilbur J. Chamberlin’s name is not in any book of
-American biography. In library indexes his name is
-found only as the author of “Ordered to China,” a series
-of letters he wrote to his wife while on the assignment
-to report the Boxer rebellion—one of the many pieces
-of <i>Sun</i> work which he did faithfully and well. He never
-found time to write books, although he wished to do so.
-He was a <i>Sun</i> man from the day he went on the staff,
-in 1890, until the day of his death, August 14, 1901.</p>
-
-<p>Chamberlin was born in Great Bend, Pennsylvania,
-March 12, 1866. While he was still a boy he went to
-Jersey City, where he worked in newspaper offices and
-became the local correspondent of several newspapers,
-including the <i>Sun</i>. He came to be known as “Jersey”
-Chamberlin to the <i>Sun</i> men who did not know how
-much he detested the nickname. His intimates called
-him Wilbur, and the office knew him generally as “W.
-J.”—an easy way of distinguishing him from other
-Chamberlins and Chamberlains. He lacked Ralph’s
-rather distinguished personal appearance, but his strong
-personality, his courage, ability, and industry overshadowed
-any lack of fashion.</p>
-
-<p>Like Ralph, he was indefatigable. Like his brother,
-E. O. Chamberlin, he let nothing stop him in the pursuit
-of news. Like Henry R. Chamberlain, he had the gift
-of divining rapidly the necessary details of any intricate
-business with which his assignment dealt. If a bank
-cashier had gone wrong, “W. J.” was the man to describe
-how the sinner had manœuvred the theft; to
-wring from usually unwilling sources the story which
-appeared in the bank only in figures, but which must
-appear in the <i>Sun</i> in terms of human life. The world<span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">339</span>
-of finance was more dumb then than it is now, for Wall
-Street had not learned the wisdom of uttering its own
-pitiless publicity.</p>
-
-<p>Chamberlin had one idiosyncrasy and one hatred.
-The mental peculiarity was a wish to conceal his own
-age. Unlike most successful men, he wished to be
-thought older than he was; and he looked older. He
-was only thirty-five when he died in Carlsbad, on his
-way home from China; yet he had packed into that
-brief life the work of an industrious man of fifty.</p>
-
-<p>His single enmity was directed against cable companies,
-and he had good reason to dislike them. One
-day, during the Spanish-American War he boarded the
-<i>Sun</i> boat, the Kanapaha, and ran to Port Antonio,
-Jamaica, with an exclusive story. The women clerks
-in the telegraph office took his despatch and counted
-the words three times before they would start sending
-it. They told Chamberlin the cost, about a hundred
-dollars, which he promptly paid in cash.</p>
-
-<p>Three or four days later he went back to Port Antonio
-with another important despatch. The cable clerk told
-him that on his previous visit their count had been one
-word short.</p>
-
-<p>“That’s all right,” said Chamberlin, and he threw
-down a shilling to pay for the one word.</p>
-
-<p>“Thank you,” said the lady. “<em>Now</em> we can send
-the message!”</p>
-
-<p>The cable hoodoo pursued Chamberlin to China. As
-soon as he arrived in Peking he began sending important
-news stories by telegraph to Tientsin, where he had left
-a deposit of three hundred dollars with the cable company
-that was to forward the messages to New York.
-After working in Peking for two weeks, he discovered
-that all his stories were lying in a pigeonhole at Tientsin;
-not one had been relayed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">340</span></p>
-
-<p>A third time an important despatch was held up overnight
-because it had not been written on a regular telegraph-blank.
-But Chamberlin’s most bitter grudge
-against the cable companies was the result of his adding
-to a message sent to the <i>Sun</i> on Christmas Eve, 1900,
-the words “Madam Christmas greeting.” This was a
-short way of saying, “Please call up Mrs. Chamberlin
-and tell her that I wish her a Merry Christmas.” Under
-the cable company’s rules nothing could be sent at the
-special newspaper rate except what was intended for
-publication. Chamberlin got a despatch from the manager
-of the cable company as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Your cable <i>Sun</i> New York December 24 words
-“Madam Christmas greeting” not intended for publication.
-Please explain.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>There was nothing for Chamberlin to do but assure
-the cable manager that if the <i>Sun</i> had wished to print
-“Madam Christmas greeting” in its columns it was
-welcome to do so.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of his cable misfortunes Chamberlin got more
-news to the <i>Sun</i> about the Boxer troubles than any
-other correspondent obtained. He was the first reporter
-in China who told the truth about the outrageous treatment
-of the Chinese by some of the so-called Christians.
-He was particularly frank in describing the brutality
-of Count von Waldersee’s German soldiers. In November,
-1900, he wrote to his wife:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>As you have probably noticed in my despatches, I
-have not much use for the German soldiers anyhow.
-They are a big lot of swine, if human beings ever are
-swine.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Chamberlin had a reputation for possessing the ability
-to write any kind of a story, no matter how technical<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">341</span>
-or how delicate. Edward G. Riggs was sitting beside
-him in the Populist convention of July, 1896, when the
-suspenders of the sergeant-at-arms of the convention,
-who was standing on a chair, cheering, surrendered to
-cataclasm. Riggs turned to his colleague and said
-triumphantly:</p>
-
-<p>“At last, W. J., there’s one story you can’t write!”</p>
-
-<p>But Chamberlin wrote it:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>He clutched, but he clutched too late. He dived and
-grabbed once, twice, thrice, but down those trousers
-slipped. Mary E. Lease was only three feet away.
-Miss Mitchell, of Kansas, was less than two feet away.
-Helen Gougar was almost on the spot. Mrs. Julia
-Ward Pennington was just two seats off, and all around
-and about him were gathered the most beautiful and
-eloquent women of the convention, and every eye was
-upon the unfortunate Deacon McDowell.</p>
-
-<p>Then he grabbed, and then again, again, and again
-they eluded him. Down, down he dived. At last victory
-perched on him. He got the trousers, and, with
-a yank that threatened to rip them from stem to stern,
-he pulled them up. At no time had the applause ceased,
-nor had there been any sign of a let-up in the demonstration.
-Now it was increased twofold. The women
-joined in.</p>
-
-<p>McDowell, clutching the truant trousers closely about
-him, attempted to resume his part in the demonstration,
-but it was useless, and after frantic efforts to show enthusiasm
-he retired to hunt up tenpenny nails. When
-it was over, an indignant Populist introduced this resolution:</p>
-
-<p>“Resolved, that future sergeants-at-arms shall be required
-to wear tights.”</p>
-
-<p>The chairman did not put the resolution.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The number of Chamberlains and Chamberlins in the
-history of American journalism is enough to create confusion.
-The <i>Sun</i> alone had four at one time. They<span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">342</span>
-were Wilbur J. Chamberlin and his almost equally valued
-brother, Ernest O. Chamberlin, who later became
-managing editor of the <i>Evening World</i>; Henry Richardson
-Chamberlain, and Henry B. Chamberlin.</p>
-
-<p>E. O. Chamberlin went on the <i>Sun’s</i> local staff while
-Wilbur was still engaged in small work in Jersey City.
-In the late eighties he was a colabourer with reporters
-like Daniel F. Kellogg, Edward G. Riggs, William McMurtrie
-Speer, Charles W. Tyler, Robert Sterling Yard,
-Samuel A. Wood, Paul Drane, and Willis Holly.</p>
-
-<p>Henry Richardson Chamberlain, who was born in
-Peoria, Illinois, became a <i>Sun</i> reporter in May, 1889.
-He was then thirty years old, and had had twelve years’
-experience in Boston and New York. In 1888 he had
-served as managing editor of the New York <i>Press</i>. He
-was particularly valuable to the <i>Sun</i> on the stories most
-easily obtained by reporters of wide acquaintance, such
-as business disasters. In 1891 he returned to Boston
-to become managing editor of the Boston <i>Journal</i>, but
-he was soon back on the <i>Sun</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In 1892 he was sent to London as the <i>Sun’s</i> correspondent
-there, and it was at this post that he won his
-greatest distinction. He had a news eye that looked
-out over political Europe and an imagination that compelled
-him to concern himself as much with the future
-of the continent as with its past and present. The
-Balkans and their feuds interested him strongly, and
-he was forever writing of what might come from the
-complications between the little states through their
-own quarrels and through their tangled relations with
-the powers. It was the habit of some newspapermen,
-both in London and New York, to stick their tongues in
-their cheeks over “H. R. C.’s war-cloud articles.”</p>
-
-<p>“H. R. is always seeing things,” was a common remark,
-even when the logic of what he had written was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">343</span>
-undeniable. There couldn’t be a general war in Europe,
-said his critics, kindly; it was impossible.</p>
-
-<p>Besides having general supervision over the <i>Sun’s</i>
-European news, Chamberlain personally reported the
-Macedonian disturbances, the Panama Canal scandal in
-France, the Russian crisis of 1906, and the Messina
-earthquake. He was the author of many short stories
-and of one book, “Six Thousand Tons of Gold.” He
-died in London in 1911, while still in the service of the
-<i>Sun</i>; still believing in the impossibility of putting off
-forever the great war which so often rose in his visions.</p>
-
-<p>Henry B. Chamberlin’s service on the <i>Sun</i> was briefer
-than that of the Chamberlin brothers or H. R. Chamberlain.
-He came to New York from Chicago, where he
-had been a reporter on the <i>Herald</i>, the <i>Tribune</i>, the
-<i>Inter-Ocean</i>, the <i>Times</i>, and the <i>Record</i>. After 1894,
-when he left the <i>Sun</i>, he was again with the Chicago
-<i>Record</i>, and in that paper’s service he saw the Santiago
-sea-fight from his boat—the only newspaper boat with
-the American squadron.</p>
-
-<p>Nor must any of these Chamberlins and Chamberlains
-be confused with some of their distinguished contemporaries
-not of the <i>Sun</i>—Joseph Edgar Chamberlin,
-who was the Cuban correspondent of the New York
-<i>Evening Post</i> in 1898, and later an editorial writer on
-the New York <i>Evening Mail</i> and the Boston <i>Transcript</i>;
-Eugene Tyler Chamberlain, one-time editor of the Albany
-<i>Argus</i>; and Samuel Selwyn Chamberlain, son of
-the famous Ivory Chamberlain of the New York <i>Herald</i>,
-founder of the <i>Matin</i> of Paris, and at various times
-editor of the San Francisco <i>Examiner</i> and the New
-York <i>American</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Edward G. Riggs, who left the <i>Sun</i> on February 1,
-1913, to become a railroad executive, had been a <i>Sun</i>
-reporter and political correspondent for twenty-eight<span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">344</span>
-years. He joined the staff in 1885 as a Wall Street
-reporter. Though he never lost interest in the world
-of finance and its remarkable men, he soon gravitated
-toward politics. He became, indeed, the best-known
-writer of political news in America. He wrote at every
-national convention from 1888—when Ambrose W.
-Lyman, then the Washington correspondent of the <i>Sun</i>,
-was at the head of a staff that included Julian Ralph
-and E. O. Chamberlin—until 1912. In 1892 Ralph was
-in charge of the <i>Sun’s</i> national convention work, with
-Riggs as his first lieutenant; but Riggs was the <i>Sun’s</i>
-top-sawyer at the conventions of 1896, 1900, 1904, 1908,
-and 1912.</p>
-
-<p>Riggs had a closer view of the wheels of the political
-machines of New York State than any other political
-writer. His intimate acquaintance with Senators Platt
-and Hill, Governors Odell and Flower, and the other
-powers of the State brought to him one hundred per
-cent of the political truths of his time—the ten per cent
-that can be printed and the ninety per cent that can’t.</p>
-
-<p>Riggs never became a regular correspondent at either
-Washington or Albany. He preferred to rove, going
-where the news was. In Washington he knew and was
-welcomed by Presidents Harrison, Cleveland, McKinley,
-Roosevelt, and Taft; by Senators like Hanna and Quay;
-by Cabinet members like Hay and Knox; by House
-leaders like Reed and Bland. He knew J. P. Morgan
-and William C. Whitney as well as he knew William J.
-Bryan and Peffer, the Kansas Populist.</p>
-
-<p>Between Presidential elections, when political affairs
-were quiet in New York, Riggs acted as a scout for the
-<i>Sun</i> with the whole country to scan. Mr. Dana had
-an unflagging interest in politics, and he relied on Riggs
-to bring reports from every field from Maine to
-California.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">345</span></p>
-
-<p>“Riggs,” Dana once remarked to a friend, “is my
-Phil Sheridan.”</p>
-
-<p>It was through Riggs that Thomas C. Platt, then the
-Republican master of New York State, sent word to
-Dana that he would like to have the <i>Sun’s</i> idea of a
-financial plank for the Republican State platform of
-1896. The plank was written by Mr. Dana and the
-<i>Sun’s</i> publisher—afterward owner—William M. Laffan.
-It denounced the movement for the free coinage of silver
-and declared in favour of the gold standard. The State
-convention, held in March, adopted Dana’s plank, and
-the national convention in June accepted the same ideas
-in framing the platform upon which Major McKinley
-was elected to the Presidency.</p>
-
-<p>It was Riggs who carried a message from Dana to
-Platt, in 1897, asking the New York Senator to withdraw
-his opposition to the nomination of Theodore
-Roosevelt as Assistant Secretary of the Navy. Platt
-complied, and Roosevelt got the position.</p>
-
-<p>Some years ago, in response to a question as to the
-difference between a political reporter and a political
-correspondent, Riggs wrote:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>There was a vast difference between the two. The
-political reporter is he who begins at the foot of the
-ladder when he reports the actual facts at a ward meeting.
-The political correspondent is he who has run
-the gamut of ward meetings, primaries, Assembly district,
-Senate district, and Congress district conventions,
-city conventions, county conventions, State conventions,
-and national conventions, and who builds his articles
-to his newspaper on his information of the situation
-in the State or nation, based upon circumstances and
-facts arising out of all of the aforesaid conventions.</p>
-
-<p>A political reporter and a political correspondent occupy
-in newspaper life the same relative positions as
-the cellar-digger and the architect in the building-trade<span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">346</span>
-world. Cellar-digger is just as important in his sphere
-as architect. The most superb architects were the most
-superb cellar-diggers. No man can be a successful political
-correspondent unless he has been a successful
-political reporter. Judges are made out of lawyers,
-generals and admirals out of cadets. Only the most
-ordinary of human virtues are necessary for the equipment
-of a successful political reporter and correspondent—cleanliness,
-sobriety, honesty, and truthfulness.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Writing of Riggs as the dean of American political
-correspondents, Samuel G. Blythe said in the <i>Saturday
-Evening Post</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>He has made it his business to know men in all parts
-of the country, and to know them so they will tell him
-as much of the truth as they will tell anybody. He is
-tenacious of his opinions and loyal to his friends. He
-is jolly, good-natured, companionable, and a fine chap
-to have around when he is in repose. Wherever men
-spoke the English language he was known as “Riggs—of
-the <i>Sun</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>Reputation and success in newspaper work demand
-the highest and most unselfish loyalty to one’s paper.
-It must be the paper first and nothing else second.
-Loyalty is Riggs’s first attribute, even better than his
-courage.</p>
-
-<p>The influence of a man like Riggs cannot be estimated.
-There is no way of computing this, but there
-is no person who will deny that he has been a power.
-He has not had his head turned by flattery. He has
-been “Riggs—of the <i>Sun</i>.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>One of Mr. Riggs’s last great pieces of newspaper
-work was a twenty-thousand-word history of national
-conventions which appeared in the <i>Sun</i> in 1912—the
-first history of its kind ever written. Mr.
-Riggs was also a frequent contributor to the editorial
-page.</p>
-
-<p>Arthur Brisbane, when he became a <i>Sun</i> reporter in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">347</span>
-1882, was almost the youngest reporter the <i>Sun</i> had
-had; he went to work on his eighteenth birthday. He
-had been intensively educated in America and abroad.
-In his first three or four months he was a puzzle to his
-superiors, his colleagues, and perhaps to himself.</p>
-
-<p>“He sat around,” said one of his contemporary reporters,
-“like a fellow who didn’t understand what it
-was all about—and then he came out of his trance like
-a shot from a gun and seemed to know everything about
-everything.”</p>
-
-<p>Brisbane was well liked. He was a handsome, athletic
-youth, interested in all lines of life and literature,
-cheerful, and eager for adventurous assignment. After
-two years of reportorial work he went to France to
-continue certain studies, and while he was there the
-<i>Sun</i> offered to him the post of London correspondent,
-which he accepted.</p>
-
-<p>In March, 1888, when John L. Sullivan and Charley
-Mitchell went to Chantilly, in France, for their celebrated
-fight, Brisbane went with them and wrote a good
-two-column story about it—a story that contained never
-a word of pugilistic slang but a great deal of interest.
-He saw the human side:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Deeply interested were the handfuls of Frenchmen
-who gathered and watched from such a safe and distant
-pavilion as we would select to look upon a hyena fight.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>And, when other reporters were deafened by the battle,
-Brisbane heard the plaintive appeal of Baldock,
-Mitchell’s tough second:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Think of the kids, Charley, the dear little kids,
-a calling for you at home and a counting on you for
-bread! Think what their feelings will be if you don’t
-knock the ear off him, and knock it off him again!”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">348</span></p>
-
-<p>Not but what the correspondent paid conscientious
-attention to the technique of the fray:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>A detailed report of each of the thirty-nine rounds
-taken by me shows that out of more than a hundred
-wild rushes made by Sullivan, and of which any one
-would have been followed by a knockout in Madison
-Square, not half a dozen resulted in anything.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A couple of years after the establishment of the
-<i>Evening Sun</i> Brisbane was made its managing editor—a
-big job for a man of twenty-three years. In 1890 he
-went to the <i>World</i>, where he became the editor of the
-Sunday magazine and the most illustrious exponent of
-that startling form of graphic art which demonstrates
-to the reader, without calling upon his brain for undue
-effort, how much taller than the Washington Monument
-would be New York’s daily consumption of dill
-pickles, if piled monumentwise.</p>
-
-<p>Seven years later Mr. Hearst took Brisbane from
-Mr. Pulitzer and made him editor of the <i>Evening Journal</i>—a
-position eminently suited to his talents, for here
-he was able to write as he wished in that clear, simple
-style which had endeared him to the <i>Sun</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Brisbane’s newspaper style goes directly back to the
-writing of William O. Bartlett. It has its terse, cutting
-qualities, the avoidance of all but the simplest words,
-and the direct drive at the object to be attained. Brisbane,
-too, adopted the Dana principle that nothing was
-more valuable in editorial writing, for the achievement
-of a purpose, than iteration and reiteration. This was
-the plan that Dana always followed in his political
-battles—incessant drum-fire. Brisbane uses it now as
-proprietor of the Washington <i>Times</i>, which he bought
-from Frank A. Munsey, the present owner of the <i>Sun</i>,
-in June, 1917.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">349</span></p>
-
-<p>John R. Spears was one of the big <i>Sun</i> men for fifteen
-years. He, like Amos Cummings and Julian
-Ralph, was brought up in the atmosphere of a printing-office
-as a small boy; but in 1866, when he was sixteen
-years old, he entered the Naval Academy at Annapolis
-and spent a couple of years as a naval cadet. His
-cruise around the world in a training-ship filled him
-with a love of the sea that never left him. His marine
-knowledge helped him and the <i>Sun</i>, for which he wrote
-fine stories of the international yacht-races between the
-Mayflower and the Galatea (1886) and the Volunteer
-and the Thistle (1887).</p>
-
-<p>Spears liked wild life on land, too, and the <i>Sun</i> sent
-him into the mountains of West Virginia and Kentucky
-to tell of the feuds of the Hatfields and the McCoys.
-He went into the Ozarks to write up the Bald Knobbers,
-and he sent picturesque stories, in the eighties, from
-No Man’s Land, that unappropriated strip between
-Kansas and Texas which knew no law from 1850, when
-it was taken from Mexico, until 1890, when it became
-a part of the new State of Oklahoma.</p>
-
-<p>Spears was a hard worker. They said of him in the
-<i>Sun</i> office that he never went out on an assignment
-without bringing in the material for a special article
-for the Sunday paper. He wrote several books, including
-“The Gold Diggings of Cape Horn,” “The Port of
-Missing Ships,” “The History of Our Navy,” “The
-Story of the American Merchant Marine,” “The Story
-of the New England Whalers,” and “The History of
-the American Slave Trade.” He now lives in retirement
-near Little Falls, New York. His son, Raymond
-S. Spears, the fiction-writer, was a <i>Sun</i> reporter from
-1896 to 1900.</p>
-
-<p>Park Row knows Erasmus D. Beach chiefly through
-the book-reviews he wrote for the <i>Sun</i> during many<span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">350</span>
-years, but he was a first-class reporter, too. The <i>Sun</i>
-liked specialists, but no man could expect to stick to
-his specialty. When Gustav Kobbé went on the <i>Sun</i>
-in March, 1880, it was for the general purpose of assisting
-William M. Laffan in dramatic criticism and Francis
-C. Bowman in musical criticism; but his first assignment
-was to go to Bellevue Hospital and investigate the
-reported mistreatment of smallpox patients—a job
-which he accepted like the good soldier that every good
-<i>Sun</i> man is.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Beach was a clever all-round writer and reporter,
-with a leaning toward the purely literary side of the
-business, and he had no special fondness for sports;
-but the <i>Sun</i> sent him, with Christopher J. Fitzgerald
-and David Graham Phillips, to report the Yale-Princeton
-football-game at Eastern Park, Brooklyn, on Thanksgiving
-Day, 1890—that glorious day for Yale when the
-score in her favour was thirty-two to nothing. It was
-the time of Heffelfinger and Poe, McClung and King.
-Beach wrote an introduction which Mr. Dana classed
-as Homeric. Here is a bit of it:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Great in the annals of Yale forever must be the name
-of McClung. Twice within a few minutes this man has
-carried the ball over the Princeton goal-line. He runs
-like a deer, has the stability of footing of one of the
-pyramids, and is absolutely cool in the most frightfully
-exciting circumstances.</p>
-
-<p>A curious figure is McClung. He has just finished
-a run of twenty yards, with all Princeton shoving
-against him. He is steaming like a pot of porridge,
-and chewing gum. His vigorously working profile is
-clearly outlined against the descending sun. How dirty
-he is! His paddings seem to have become loosed and
-to have accumulated over his knees. He has a shield,
-a sort of splint, bound upon his right shin. His long
-hair is held in a band, a linen fillet, the dirtiest ever
-worn.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">351</span></p>
-
-<p>He pants as a man who has run fifty miles—who has
-overthrown a house. He droops slightly for a moment’s
-rest, hands on knees, eyes shining with the glare
-of battle, the gum catching between his grinders. A
-tab on one of his ears signifies a severe injury to that
-organ, an injury received in some previous match from
-an opposition boot-heel, or from a slide over the rough
-earth with half a dozen of the enemy seated upon him.
-He has a little, sharp-featured face, squirrel-like, with
-a Roman nose and eyes set near together. Brief dental
-gleams illuminate his countenance in his moments of
-great joyfulness.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div id="ip_350" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 34em;">
- <img src="images/i_350a.jpg" width="1629" height="2441" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
- <p>EDWARD G. RIGGS</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Dana liked Beach’s introduction because the reader
-need not be a football fan to enjoy it. For the technique
-of the game he who wished to follow the plays
-could find all that he wanted in the stories of Fitzgerald
-and Phillips.</p>
-
-<p>In connection with Beach’s literary accomplishments,
-there is a tradition that another famous <i>Sun</i> reporter
-of the eighties, Charles M. Fairbanks, was assigned to
-report one of the great games at Princeton, and, although
-entirely unacquainted with punts and tackles,
-came back with a story complete in technical detail,
-having learned the fine points of football in a few hours.
-Later, in the early nineties, Fairbanks was night editor
-of the paper.</p>
-
-<p>A <i>Sun</i> man who has been a <i>Sun</i> man from a time
-to which the memory of man goeth back only with a
-long pull, is Samuel A. Wood, who has been the <i>Sun’s</i>
-ship-news man for more than thirty-five years. He is
-a good example, too, of the <i>Sun</i> man’s anonymity, for
-although he was the originator of the rhymed news story
-and his little run-in lyrics have been the admiration
-of American newspapermen for more than a generation,
-few persons beyond Park Row have known Wood as
-the author of them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_352">352</span></p>
-
-<p>Although a first-class general reporter, Wood has
-stuck closely to his favourite topics, the ships and the
-weather. He made weather news bearable with such
-bits as this:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The sun has crossed the line, and now the weather
-may be vernal; that is, if no more cyclones come, like
-yesterday’s, to spurn all the efforts of the spring to
-come as per the classic rhymers. (Perhaps there was
-a spring in those days of the good old-timers!) But
-this spring sprang a fearful leak from clouded dome
-supernal, and weather that should be divine might be
-declared infernal; entirely too much chilliness, nocturnal
-and diurnal, which prompted many citizens to
-take, for woes external, the ancient spring reviver of
-the old Kentucky colonel.</p>
-
-<p>The mercury fell down the tube a point below the
-freezing, and Spring herself might be excused for shivering
-and sneezing. The wind, a brisk northeaster,
-howled, the sky was dark and solemn, and chills chased
-one another up and down the spinal column.</p>
-
-<p>Oh hail, diphtherial mildness, hail, and rain, and
-snow—and blossom! Perhaps the spring has really
-come, and may be playing possum!</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Wood writes rhymeless sea-stories with the grace of
-a Clark Russell. He turns to prose-verse only when
-the subject particularly suits it, as for instance in the
-story upon which Mr. Clarke, the night city editor,
-wrote the classic head—“Snygless the Seas Are—Wiig
-Rides the Waves No More—Back Come Banana Men—Skaal
-to the Vikings!” This is the text:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>While off the Honduranean coast, not far from Ruatan,
-the famous little fruiter Snyg on dirty weather ran.
-Her skipper, Wiig, was at the helm, the boatswain hove
-the lead; the air was thick; you could not see a half-ship’s
-length ahead. The mate said:</p>
-
-<p>“Reefs of Ruatan, I think, are off our bow.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">353</span></p>
-
-<p>The skipper answered:</p>
-
-<p>“You are right; they’re inside of us now.”</p>
-
-<p>The water filled the engine-room and put the fires
-out, and quickly o’er the weather rail the seas began
-to spout.</p>
-
-<p>When dawn appeared there also came three blacks
-from off the isle. They deftly managed their canoe,
-each wearing but a smile; but, clever as they were, their
-boat was smashed against the Snyg, and they were
-promptly hauled aboard by gallant Captain Wiig.</p>
-
-<p>“We had thirteen aboard this ship,” the fearful cook
-remarked. “I think we stand a chance for life, since
-three coons have embarked. Now let our good retriever,
-Nig, a life-line take ashore, and all hands of
-the steamship Snyg may see New York once more.”</p>
-
-<p>But Nig refused to leave the ship, and so the fearless
-crew the life-boat launched, but breakers stove the stout
-craft through and through. Said Captain Wiig:</p>
-
-<p>“Though foiled by Nig, our jig’s not up, I vow; I’ve
-still my gig, and I don’t care a fig—I’ll make the beach
-somehow!”</p>
-
-<p>And Mate Charles Christian of the Snyg (who got
-here yesterday) helped launch the stanch gig of the
-Snyg so the crew could get away. The gig was anchored
-far inshore; with raft and trolley-line all hands on the
-Snyg, including Nig, were hauled safe o’er the brine.</p>
-
-<p>Although the Snyg, of schooner rig, will ply the waves
-no more, let us hope that Wiig gets another Snyg for
-the sake of the bards ashore.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun’s</i> handling of the news of the brief war with
-Spain, in 1898, has an interest beyond the mere brilliance
-of its men’s work and the fact that this was the
-last war in which the newspaper correspondents had
-practically a free hand.</p>
-
-<p>For years “Cuba Libre” had been one of the <i>Sun’s</i>
-fights. From the first days of his control of the paper
-Mr. Dana had urged the overthrow of Spanish dominion
-in the island. His support of the revolutionists went<span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">354</span>
-back, as E. P. Mitchell has written, “to the dark remoteness
-of the struggles a quarter of a century before
-the war—the time of the Cespedes uprising, the Virginius
-affair, and the variegated activities of the New
-York Junta.” Mr. Mitchell adds:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The affection of the <i>Sun</i> and its editor for everything
-Cuban except Spanish domination lasted quite down to
-and after the second advent of Maximo Gomez; it was
-never livelier than in the middle seventies.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Dana was the warm friend of José Marti. He
-corresponded personally (with the assistance of his
-Fenian stenographer, Williams) with the leading revolutionists
-actually fighting in the island. He was the
-constant and unwearied intellectual resource of a swarm
-of patriots, adventurers, near-filibusters, bondholding
-financiers, lawyer-diplomats, and grafters operating exclusively
-in Manhattan. A Latin-American accent was
-a sure card of admission to the woven-bottomed chair
-alongside the little round table in the inner corner room
-of the series of four inhabited by the <i>Sun’s</i> entire force
-of editors and reporters.</p>
-
-<p>We were then the foremost if not the only American
-organ of Cuban independence. The executive journalistic
-headquarters of the cause was just outside Mr.
-Dana’s front door. The Cuba Libre editor, as I suppose
-he would be styled nowadays, was a gentleman of
-Latin-American origin, who bore the aggressive and appropriate
-name of Rebello. The Cuba Libre “desk”
-was about as depressing a seat of literary endeavor as
-the telegraph-blank shelf in a country railroad station,
-which it resembled in its narrowness, its dismal ink-wells,
-rusty pens, and other details of disreputable
-equipment. From this shelf there issued, by Mr. Dana’s
-direction, many encouraging editorial remarks to Rebello’s
-compatriots in the jungle.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Nor was free Cuba ungrateful to the <i>Sun</i>. A few
-years after the war, when Mr. Mitchell was walking
-about the interior Cuban town of Camaguey, formerly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">355</span>
-Puerto Principe, he came upon a modest little public
-square, the lamp-posts of which were labelled “Plaza
-Charles A. Dana.” At the corner of the church of Las
-Mercedes was a tablet with the following inscription:</p>
-
-<p class="p1 b1 center wspace" xml:lang="es" lang="es">
-TRIBUTO DEL PUEBLO A LA MEMORIA DE<br />
-<span class="larger">CHARLES A. DANA</span><br />
-ILLUSTRE PUBLICISTA AMERICANO<br />
-DEFENSOR INFATIGABLE DE LAS<br />
-LIBERTADES CUBANAS<br />
-ABRIL 10 DE 1899
-</p>
-
-<p>Dana was dead, without having seen the blooming of
-the flower he had watered, but Cuba had not wholly
-forgotten.</p>
-
-<div class="tb">* * * * *</div>
-
-<p>When the Maine was blown up in February, 1898,
-the <i>Sun</i> began preparations to cover a war. The managing
-editor, Chester S. Lord, assisted by W. J. Chamberlin,
-worked out the preliminary arrangements. John
-R. Spears, then thirty-eight years old and a reporter
-of wide experience, particularly in matters of the sea—he
-had already written “The History of Our Navy”—was
-sent to Key West, the headquarters of the fleet
-which was to blockade Havana. He was at Key West
-some weeks before war was declared.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> chartered the steam yacht Kanapaha and
-sent her at once to Key West, under the command of
-Captain Packard, to take on Spears and his staff, which
-included Harold M. Anderson, Nelson Lloyd, Walstein
-Root, Dana H. Carroll, and others. Besides the men
-named, who were to go with the Kanapaha on her voyage
-with Sampson’s fleet, the <i>Sun</i> sent Oscar King Davis
-with Schley’s squadron, and Thomas M. Dieuaide on
-board the Texas. Dieuaide got a splendid view of the
-great sea-fight of July 3, when Cervera came out of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">356</span>
-harbour of Santiago, and he wrote the <i>Sun’s</i> first detailed
-account of the destruction of the Spanish fleet.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> men ashore in Cuba were captained by W. J.
-Chamberlin, who succeeded Mr. Spears some time before
-the battle of Santiago. His force included H. M.
-Anderson, Carroll and Root of the <i>Sun</i>, and Henry M.
-Armstrong and Acton Davies of the <i>Evening Sun</i>.
-Armstrong, who was with Shafter, covered much of the
-attack and investment of Santiago and the surrender
-of that city. It was Chamberlin who sent to the United
-States the first news of the formal surrender of Santiago,
-but the message was not delivered to the <i>Sun</i>. The
-government censorship gently commandeered it and
-gave it out as an official bulletin. Chamberlin wrote
-the story of the battle of San Juan Hill on board a
-tossing boat that carried him from Siboney to the cable
-station at Port Antonio.</p>
-
-<p>The first American flag hoisted over the Morro at
-Santiago was the property of the <i>Sun</i>, but in this case
-there was no government peculation. Anderson and
-Acton Davies gave the flag, which was a boat ensign
-from the Kanapaha, to some sailors of the Texas, and
-the sailors fastened it to the Morro staff.</p>
-
-<p>When Schley’s squadron was united with Sampson’s
-fleet, some time before the battle of Santiago, O. K.
-Davis was ordered to Manila. He had the luck to sail
-on the cruiser Charleston, which, on June 21, 1898,
-made the conquest of the island of Guam. That famous
-but bloodless victory was described by Davis in a two-page
-article which was exclusively the <i>Sun’s</i>, and of
-which the <i>Sun</i> said editorially on August 9, 1898:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>No such story ever has been written or ever will be
-written of our conquest of the Ladrones as that of the
-Sun’s correspondent, published yesterday morning. It
-is the picture of a historic scene, in which not a single<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">357</span>
-detail is wanting. This far-away little isle of Guam,
-so much out of the world that it had not heard of our
-war with Spain, and mistook the Charleston’s shells
-for an honorary salute, is now a part of the United
-States of America, and destined to share in the greatness
-of a progressive country. The queer Spanish governor,
-who declined to go upon Captain Glass’s ship
-because it would be a breach of Spanish regulations, is
-now our prisoner at Manila.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Dieuaide, who wrote the <i>Sun’s</i> story of the Santiago
-sea-fight, is also distinguished as the author of the first
-published description of St. Pierre—or, rather, of the
-ashes that covered it—after that city and all but two
-persons of its thirty thousand had been buried by the
-eruption of Mont Pelée. The introductory paragraph
-of Dieuaide’s article gives an idea of his graphic power:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Fort de France, Martinique</span>, May 21—To-day we
-saw St. Pierre, the ghastliest ghost of the modern centuries.
-But yesterday the fairest of the fair of the
-wondrous cities of the storied Antilles, bright, beautiful,
-glorious, glistening and shimmering in her prism of
-tropical radiance, an opalescent city in a setting of
-towering forest and mountain, now a waste of ashen-gray
-without life, form, color, shape, a drear monotone,
-a dim blur on the landscape—it seems even more than
-the contrast between life and death.</p>
-
-<p>The dead may live. St. Pierre is not alive, and never
-will be. Out of shape has come a void. It is the
-apotheosis of annihilation. To one who sits amid the
-ruins and gazes the long miles upward over the seamed
-sides of La Pelée, still thundering her terrible wrath,
-may come some conception of the future ruin of the
-worlds.</p>
-
-<p>It has been a day of sharp impressions, one cutting
-into another until the memory-pad of the mind is
-crossed and crisscrossed like the fissured flanks of La
-Pelée herself; but most deeply graven of all, paradoxically,
-is the memory of a dimness, a nothingness, an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">358</span>
-emptiness, a lack of everything—the gray barrenness unrelieved
-of what was the rainbow St. Pierre. Mont
-Pelée, the most awful evidence of natural force to be
-seen in the world to-day—La Pelée, majestic, terrible,
-overpowering, has been in evidence from starlight to
-starlight, but it is the ashen blank that was once the
-city of the Saint of the Rock that stands out most
-clearly in the kaleidoscopic maze slipping backward and
-forward before our eyes.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>And thus on, without losing interest, for seven solid
-columns.</p>
-
-<p>Will Irwin’s great page story, printed beside the
-straight news of the San Francisco earthquake, is another
-<i>Sun</i> classic. Irwin had the fortune to be familiar
-with San Francisco, and he was able, without reference
-to book or map, to give to New York, through the <i>Sun</i>,
-a most vivid picture of “The City That Was.” It is
-a literary companion-piece of Thomas M. Dieuaide’s
-gray drawing of St. Pierre, but only the introduction
-must do here:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The old San Francisco is dead. The gayest, lightest-hearted,
-most pleasure-loving city of this continent, and
-in many ways the most interesting and romantic, is a
-horde of huddled refugees living among ruins. It may
-rebuild; it probably will; but those who have known
-that peculiar city by the Golden Gate, and have caught
-its flavor of the “Arabian Nights” feel that it can never
-be the same.</p>
-
-<p>It is as though a pretty, frivolous woman had passed
-through a great tragedy. She survives, but she is sobered
-and different. If it rises out of the ashes it must
-be a modern city, much like other cities and without
-its old flavor.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>There were less than five columns of the article, but
-it told the whole story of San Francisco; not in dry
-figures of commerce and paved streets, but of the people<span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">359</span>
-and places that every Eastern man had longed to see,
-but now never could see.</p>
-
-<p>Writers like Ralph and Chamberlin, Dieuaide and
-Irwin, are spoken of as “star” reporters, yet the saying
-that the <i>Sun</i> has no star men is not entirely fictional.
-Its best reporters are, and will be, remembered
-as stars, but no men were, or are, treated as stars. Big
-reporters cover little stories and cubs write big ones—if
-they can. A city editor does not send an inexperienced
-man on an assignment that requires all the skill
-of the trained reporter, yet it is <i>Sun</i> history that many
-new men have turned in big stories from assignments
-that appeared, at first blush, to be inconsequential.
-There are always two or three so-called star men in the
-office, but the days when there are two or three star
-assignments are comparatively few.</p>
-
-<p>Let us take, arbitrarily, one day twenty-five years
-ago—February 1, 1893—and see what some of the <i>Sun</i>
-reporters did:</p>
-
-<table id="t359" summary="reports from 1893">
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Jefferson Market Court</td>
- <td class="tdl">S. H. Adams</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Essex Market Court and Meeting of Irish Federalists</td>
- <td class="tdl">Rudolph E. Block</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">With R. Croker at Lakewood</td>
- <td class="tdl">George B. Mallon</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Custom-House News</td>
- <td class="tdl">E. G. Riggs</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">City Hall News</td>
- <td class="tdl">W. H. Olmsted</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Police Headquarters</td>
- <td class="tdl">Robert S. Yard</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Ship News</td>
- <td class="tdl">S. A. Wood</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Coroners and Post-Office</td>
- <td class="tdl">W. A. Willis</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Subway Project and Murder at East Eighty-Eighth Street</td>
- <td class="tdl">W. J. Chamberlin</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Magic Shell Swindle</td>
- <td class="tdl">E. W. Townsend</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Condition of Police Lodging-Houses</td>
- <td class="tdl">D. G. Phillips</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Carlyle Harris Case</td>
- <td class="tdl">F. F. Coleman</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Fire at Koster &amp; Bial’s</td>
- <td class="tdl">John Kenny</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">Bishop McDonnell’s Trip to Rome</td>
- <td class="tdl">Evans</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">360</span></p>
-
-<p>To gain an impression of the variety of work which
-comes to a <i>Sun</i> reporter, take the assignments given to
-David Graham Phillips in the last days of his service
-with the <i>Sun</i> in 1893:</p>
-
-<table id="t360" class="tnarrow30" summary="David Graham Phillips assignments">
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc">March</td>
- <td class="tdl">  1—Joseph Jefferson’s Lecture on the Drama</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdl">  2—Bear Hunt at Glen Cove</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdl">  3—Special Stories for the Sunday <i>Sun</i></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdl">  6—Obituary of W. P. Demarest</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdl">  7—Meeting of Russian-Americans</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdl">  8—Mystery at New Brunswick, New Jersey</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdl">  9—Special Stories for Sunday</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdl">10—Accident in Seventy-First St. Tunnel</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdl">11—More Triplets in Cold Spring</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdl">12—Services in Old Scotch Church</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdl">13—Furniture Sale</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdl">14—Opening of Hotel Waldorf</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdl">15—Married Four Days, Then False</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdl">17—Dinner, Friendly Sons of St. Patrick</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdl">18—Parade and Show, Barnum &amp; Bailey</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdc">”</td>
- <td class="tdl">19—Church Quarrel, Rutherford, N. J.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>Phillips was then one of the <i>Sun’s</i> best reporters;
-not as large a figure in the office as Ralph, or Chamberlin,
-or Spears, but one entitled to assignments of the
-first class. A list of his assignments soon after he
-joined the staff in the summer of 1890 would be monotonous—Jefferson
-Market police-court day after day;
-the kind of work with which the <i>Sun</i> broke in a new
-man. Once on space, with eight dollars a column instead
-of fifteen dollars a week, Phillips got what he
-wanted—a peep at every corner of city life. In a little
-more than two years as a space man he picked up much
-of the material that is seen in his novels.</p>
-
-<p>A <i>Sun</i> man takes what comes to his lot. When W.
-J. Chamberlin returned from Cuba, his first assignment
-was a small police case. But a really good reporter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">361</span>
-finds his opportunity and his “big” stories for himself.</p>
-
-<p>It would take a small book to give a list of the “big”
-stories that the <i>Sun</i> has printed, and a five-foot shelf
-of tall volumes to reprint them all. Some of them
-were written leisurely, like Spears’s stories of the Bad
-Lands, some in comparative ease, like Ralph’s stories
-of Presidential inaugurations and the Grant funeral,
-or W. J. Chamberlin’s eleven-column report of the
-Dewey parade in 1899. In these latter the ease is only
-comparative, for the writer’s fingers had no time to rest
-in the achievement of such gigantic tasks. And the
-comparison is with the work done by reporters on occasions
-when there was no time to arrange ideas and
-choose words; when the facts came in what would be
-to the layman hopeless disorder.</p>
-
-<p>Such an occasion, for instance, was the burning of
-the excursion steamer General Slocum, the description
-of which—in the end a marvellous tale of horror—was
-taken page by page from Lindsay Denison as his typewriter
-milled it out. Such an occasion was Edwin C.
-Hill’s opportunity to write his notable leads to the
-stories of the Republic wreck in 1909 and the Titanic
-disaster in 1912. But the <i>Sun</i> and <i>Sun</i> men never have
-hysterics. Tragedy seems to tighten them up more
-than other newspapers and newspapermen.</p>
-
-<p>Introductions to big stories tell the pulse of the
-paper. Read, for example, the <i>Sun</i> introduction to the
-great ocean tragedy of 1898:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Halifax, Nova Scotia</span>, July 6—The steamship La
-Bourgogne of the Compagnie Générale Transatlantique,
-which left New York on Saturday last bound for Havre,
-was sunk at five o’clock on Monday morning after a
-collision with the British ship Cromartyshire in a dense
-fog about sixty miles south of Sable Island. The ship
-had 750 persons aboard. The number of first and second<span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">362</span>
-cabin passengers was 220 and of the steerage passengers
-297, a total of 517. The number of officers was
-11, of the crew 222. Eleven second-cabin and 51 steerage
-passengers and 104 of the crew, a total of 166, were
-saved. All the officers but four, all the first-cabin passengers,
-and all but one of the more than one hundred
-women on board, were lost. The number of lost is believed
-to be 584.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>This was more detailed, but not more calm than the
-opening of Edwin C. Hill’s story on the loss of the
-Titanic:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The greatest marine disaster in the history of ocean
-traffic occurred last Sunday night, when the Titanic
-of the White Star Line, the greatest steamship that ever
-sailed the sea, shattered herself against an iceberg and
-sank with, it is feared, fifteen hundred of her passengers
-and crew in less than four hours. The monstrous
-modern ships may defy wind and weather, but ice and
-fog remain unconquered.</p>
-
-<p>Out of nearly twenty-four hundred people that the
-Titanic carried, only eight hundred and sixty-six are
-known to have been saved, and most of these were
-women and children.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Probably the most restrained lead on a <i>Sun</i> account
-of a great disaster was the introduction to the article
-on the Brooklyn Theatre fire of 1876:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The Brooklyn Theatre was built in September, 1871,
-opened for public entertainment October 2, 1871, and
-burned to the ground with the sacrifice of three hundred
-lives on the night of Tuesday, December 5, 1876.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Of a more literary character, yet void of excitement,
-was the way Julian Ralph began his narrative of the
-blizzard of March, 1888:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">363</span></p><div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>It was as if New York had been a burning candle
-upon which nature had clapped a snuffer, leaving nothing
-of the city’s activities but a struggling ember.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>While on this subject, it is as well to say that the <i>Sun</i>,
-in ordinary stories, does without introductions. “Begin
-at the beginning” has been one of its unwritten rules;
-or, as a veteran copy-reader remarked to a new reporter
-who told it all in the first paragraph:</p>
-
-<p>“For the love of Mike, can’t you leave something for
-the head-writer to say?”</p>
-
-<p>Every young newspaper man hears a good deal about
-“human-interest stories.” Some of the professors of
-journalism tell their pupils what human-interest stories
-are; others advise the best way to know one, or to get
-one. It is not evident, however, that any one has devised
-an infallible formula for taking a trivial or commonplace
-event and, by reason of the humour, pathos,
-or liveliness thereof, lifting it to a higher plane.</p>
-
-<p>Amos Cummings is believed to have been the first
-newspaperman to see the news value of the lost child
-or the steer loose in the street. Amos himself wrote
-a story about the steer. Ralph wrote another one, and
-got his first job in New York on the strength of it.
-Frank W. O’Malley wrote one recently, and made New
-York laugh over it. But your newspaperman needs
-something besides a frightened steer and some streets;
-he must have “something in his noddle,” as Mr. Dana
-used to say.</p>
-
-<p>Every reporter gets a chance to write a story about
-a lost child, but there are perhaps only two lost-child
-stories of the last thirty years that are remembered,
-and both were <i>Sun</i> stories. David Graham Phillips
-found his lost child in the Catskills and wrote an article
-over which women wept. The next time a child was
-lost, Phillips’s city editor sent him on the assignment,
-and he fell down. The child was there, and the woods,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">364</span>
-and the bloodhounds, but the reporter’s brain would
-not turn backward and go again through the processes
-that made a great story. Hill’s story, which is remembered
-by its head—“A Little Child in the Dark”—will
-never be repeated—by Hill.</p>
-
-<p>The tear-impelling article is the most difficult thing
-for a good reporter to write or a bad reporter to avoid
-trying to write. It might be added that good reporters
-write a “sob story” only when it fastens itself on them
-and demands to be written; and then they write the
-facts and let the reader do the weeping. O’Malley’s
-story of the killing of Policeman Gene Sheehan, which
-has been reprinted from the <i>Sun</i> by several text-books
-for students of journalism, is good proof of this. Practically
-all of it—and it was a column long—was a
-straightforward report of the story told by the policeman’s
-mother. This is a part:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Mrs. Catherine Sheehan stood in the darkened parlor
-of her home at 361 West Fifteenth Street late yesterday
-afternoon and told her version of the murder of her son
-Gene, the youthful policeman whom a thug named Billy
-Morley shot in the forehead down under the Chatham
-Square elevated station early yesterday morning.
-Gene’s mother was thankful that her boy hadn’t killed
-Billy Morley before he died, “because,” she said, “I
-can say honestly, even now, that I’d rather have Gene’s
-dead body brought home to me, as it will be to-night,
-than to have him come to me and say, ‘Mother, I had
-to kill a man this morning.’</p>
-
-<p>“God comfort the poor wretch that killed the boy,”
-the mother went on, “because he is more unhappy to-night
-than we are here. Maybe he was weak-minded
-through drink. He couldn’t have known Gene, or he
-wouldn’t have killed him. Did they tell you at the
-Oak Street Station that the other policemen called Gene
-‘Happy Sheehan’? Anything they told you about him
-is true, because no one would lie about him. He was
-always happy, and he was a fine-looking young man.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">365</span>
-He always had to duck his helmet when he walked
-under the gas-fixture in the hall as he went out the door.</p>
-
-<p>“After he went down the street yesterday I found
-a little book on a chair—a little list of the streets or
-something that Gene had forgot. I knew how particular
-they are about such things, and I didn’t want the
-boy to get in trouble, so I threw on a shawl and walked
-over through Chambers Street toward the river to find
-him. He was standing on a corner some place down
-there near the bridge, clapping time with his hands for
-a little newsy that was dancing; but he stopped clapping—struck,
-Gene did, when he saw me. He laughed
-when I handed him a little book and told him that was
-why I’d searched for him, patting me on the shoulder
-when he laughed—patting me on the shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>“‘It’s a bad place for you here, Gene,’ I said. ‘Then
-it must be bad for you, too, mammy,’ said he; and as
-he walked to the end of his beat with me—it was dark
-then—he said, ‘There are lots of crooks here, mother,
-and they know and hate me, and they’re afraid of me’—proud,
-he said it—‘but maybe they’ll get me some
-night.’</p>
-
-<p>“He patted me on the back and turned and walked
-east toward his death. Wasn’t it strange that Gene
-said that?</p>
-
-<p>“You know how he was killed, of course, and how—now
-let me talk about it, children, if I want to. I
-promised you, didn’t I, that I wouldn’t cry any more
-or carry on? Well, it was five o’clock this morning
-when a boy rang the bell here at the house, and I looked
-out the window and said:</p>
-
-<p>“‘Is Gene dead?’</p>
-
-<p>“‘No, ma’am,’ answered the lad; ‘but they told me
-to tell you he was hurt in a fire and is in the hospital.’</p>
-
-<p>“Jerry, my other boy, had opened the door for the
-lad, and was talking to him while I dressed a bit. And
-then I walked down-stairs and saw Jerry standing silent
-under the gaslight; and I said again, ‘Jerry, is Gene
-dead?’ And he said ‘Yes,’ and he went out.</p>
-
-<p>“After a while I went down to the Oak Street Station
-myself, because I couldn’t wait for Jerry to come<span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">366</span>
-back. The policemen all stopped talking when I came
-in, and then one of them told me it was against the
-rules to show me Gene at that time; but I knew the
-policeman only thought I’d break down. I promised
-him I wouldn’t carry on, and he took me into a room
-to let me see Gene. It was Gene.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> has been richly fortunate in the humour that
-has tinged its news columns since its very beginning.
-Even Ben Day, with all the worries of a pioneer journalist,
-made the types exact a smile from his readers.
-With Dana, amusing the people was second only to instructing
-them. Julian Ralph and Wilbur Chamberlin
-both had the trick of putting together the bricks of fact
-with the mortar of humour. Chamberlin had several
-characters, like his <i>Insec’ O’Connor</i>, whose strings he
-pulled and made to dance. Hardly a sea-story of Sam
-Wood’s—except where there is tragedy—does not contain
-something to be laughed over. Samuel Hopkins
-Adams was an adept at the comic twist. Lindsay
-Denison once wrote a story of a semipublic celebration
-of an engagement so delightfully that the bride’s father,
-perhaps the only person in New York who did not see
-the humour of the affair, threatened to break the pledge
-of troth, although the groom was a public character
-who had courted publicity all his life.</p>
-
-<p>Charles Selden, as grave a reporter as ever glowered
-at a poor space-bill, had a vein of structural humour
-perhaps unsurpassed by any reporter. His account of
-a press reception at the home of Miss Lillian Russell
-has been approached in delicacy only by O’Malley’s
-interview with Miss Laura Jean Libbey. Selden’s story
-of the occasion when creditors took away all the furniture
-of John L. Sullivan’s café—except the one chair
-upon which the champion snoozed—was a model of dry,
-unlaboured humour.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">367</span></p>
-
-<p>As an example of the drollness with which O’Malley
-has delighted <i>Sun</i> readers for ten years, take this extract
-from his report of the East Side Passover parade
-of 1917, referring to Counselor Levy, the Duke of Essex
-Street, whose title was conferred by the <i>Sun</i> twenty
-years ago:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>It was difficult for a time to get the details of the
-duke’s Passover garb, owing to the fact that the interior
-of his Nile-green limousine has recently been fitted up
-with book-shelves, so that the duke can be surrounded
-with his law library even when motoring to and from
-his office on the East Side. Furthermore, every space
-not occupied by the duke and duchess and the law
-library yesterday was decorated with floral set pieces
-in honor of Easter, a large pillow of tuberoses inscribed
-with the words “Our Duke” in purple immortelles,
-and presented by the Essex Market Bar Association to
-their dean, being the outstanding piece among the interior
-floral decorations of the duke’s Rolls-Royce. Beside
-Ittchee, the duke’s Jap valet and chauffeur, was
-a large rubber-plant, which shut off the view, the rubber-plant
-being the Easter gift of Solomon, Solomon, Solomon,
-Solomon, Solomon and Solomon, who learned all
-their law as students in the offices of the duke.</p>
-
-<p>Little or nothing remains to be told about the duke’s
-Easter scenery. He was dressed in the mode, that’s
-all—high hat, morning coat, trousers like Martin Littleton’s,
-mauve spats, corn-colored gloves, patent-leather
-shoes, Russian-red cravat, set off with a cameo showing
-the face of Lord Chief Justice Russell in high relief.
-His only distinctive mark was the absence of a gardenia
-on his lapel.</p>
-
-<p>He was off then, waving his snakewood cane jauntily,
-while the East Side scrambled after the car to try to
-feel the Nile-green varnish. And with a final direction
-to Ittchee, “Go around by Chauncey Depew’s house on
-the way home, my good man,” the car exploded northward,
-and the Passover parade on Delancey Street
-officially ended for the day.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">368</span></p>
-
-<p>There is hardly a man who has lived five years as a
-<i>Sun</i> reporter but could write his own story of the <i>Sun</i>
-just as he has written stories of life. Here but a few
-of these men and their work have been touched. It has
-been a long parade from Wisner of 1833 to Hill of 1918.
-Many of the great reporters are dead, and of some of
-these it may be said that their lives were shortened by
-the very fever in which they won their glory. Some
-passed on to other fields of endeavour. Others are
-waiting to write “the best story ever printed in the
-<i>Sun</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>What was the best story ever printed in the <i>Sun</i>?
-It may be that that story has been quoted from in these
-articles; and yet, if a thousand years hence some super-scientist
-should invent a literary measure that would
-answer the question, the crown of that high and now
-unbestowable honour of authorship might fall to some
-man here unmentioned and elsewhere unsung. Perhaps
-it was an article only two hundred words long.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_369" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">369</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">SOME GENIUS IN AN OLD ROOM</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>Lord, Managing Editor for Thirty-Turn Years.—Clarke,
-Magician of the Copy Desk.—Ethics, Fair Play and Democracy.—“The
-Evening Sun” and Those Who Make It.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">For</span> forty-seven years the city or news room of the
-<i>Sun</i> was on the third floor of the brick building
-at the south corner of Nassau and Frankfort Streets,
-a five-story house built for Tammany Hall in 1811, when
-that organization found its quarters in Martling’s Tavern—a
-few doors south, on part of the site of the present
-Tribune Building—too small for its robust membership.</p>
-
-<p>In the days of Grand Sachems William Mooney,
-Matthew L. Davis, Lorenzo B. Shepard, Elijah F.
-Purdy, Isaac V. Fowler, Nelson J. Waterbury, and
-William D. Kennedy, and the big and little bosses,
-including Tweed, this third-floor room had been used
-as a general meeting-hall. It was here, in 1835, that
-the Locofoco—later the Equal Rights—party was born
-after a conflict in which the regular Tammany men,
-finding themselves in the minority, turned off the gas
-and left the reformers to meet by the light of locofoco
-matches. It was a room from which many a Democrat
-was hurled because he preferred De Witt Clinton to
-Tammany’s favourite, Martin Van Buren. Two flights
-of long, straight stairs led to the ground floor. They
-were hard to go up; they must have been extremely
-painful to go down bouncing.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">370</span></p>
-
-<p>It was a long, wide, barnlike room, lighted by five
-windows that looked upon Park Row and the City Hall.
-The stout old timbers were bare in the ceiling and in
-them were embedded various hooks and ring-bolts to
-which, once upon a time, was attached gymnasium apparatus
-used by a <em>turn verein</em>, which hired the room
-when the Tammanyites did not need it.</p>
-
-<p>It was not a beautiful room. Mr. Dana never did
-anything to improve it except in a utilitarian way, and
-from the time when he bought the building from the
-Tammany Society, in 1867, until it was torn down in
-1915, the old place looked very much the same. Of
-course, new gas-jets were added, these to be followed
-by electric-light wires, until the upper air had a jungle-like
-appearance, and there were rude, inexpensive desks
-and telephone-booths.</p>
-
-<p>The floor was efficient, for it was covered with rubber
-matting that deadened alike the quick footstep of Dana
-and the thundering stride of pugilistic champions who
-came in to see the sporting editor. But the city room’s
-only ornaments were men and their genius. Here wrote
-Ralph and Chamberlin, Spears and Irwin, and all
-the rest of the fine reporters of the old building’s
-years.</p>
-
-<p>Near the windows of this shabby room were the desks
-of the men who planned news-hunts, chose the hunters,
-and mounted their trophies. Six desks handled all the
-news-matter in the old city room of the <i>Sun</i>. The
-managing editor sat at a roll-top in the northwest corner,
-near a door that led to Mr. Dana’s room. A little
-distance to the east was the night editor’s desk. At
-the large flat-top desk near the managing editor three
-men sat—the cable editor, who handled all foreign news;
-the “Albany man,” who edited articles from the State
-and national capitals and all of New York State; and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">371</span>
-the telegraph editor, who took care of all other wire
-matter.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_370" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 34em;">
- <img src="images/i_370a.jpg" width="1622" height="2166" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
- <p>CHESTER SANDERS LORD</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>In the southwest corner of the room was a double
-desk at which the city editor sat from 10 <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span> until
-5 <span class="allsmcap">P.M.</span>, when the night city editor came in. Next to
-the city editor’s desk was the roll-top of the assistant
-city editor, also used by the assistant night city editor.
-Beyond that was the desk of the suburban or “Jersey”
-editor. Nearest the door, so that the noise of ten-thousand-dollar
-challenges to twenty-round combat
-would not disturb the whole room, was the desk of the
-sporting editor.</p>
-
-<p>In the fifty years that have passed since Dana bought
-the <i>Sun</i>, the changes in the heads of the news departments
-have been comparatively few. True, the news
-office has not been as fortunate as the editorial rooms,
-where only three men, Charles A. Dana, Paul Dana,
-and Edward P. Mitchell, have been actual editors-in-chief;
-but the list of managing editors and night city
-editors is not long. Before the day of Chester S. Lord,
-the managing editors were, in order: Isaac W. England,
-Amos J. Cummings, William Young, and Ballard Smith.
-Since Lord’s retirement the managing editors have been
-James Luby, William Harris, and Keats Speed.</p>
-
-<p>The city editors have been John Williams, Larry
-Kane, W. M. Rosebault, William Young, John B.
-Bogart (1873–1890), Daniel F. Kellogg (1890–1902),
-George B. Mallon (1902–1914), and Kenneth Lord, the
-present city editor, a son of Chester S. Lord.</p>
-
-<p>The night city editors before the long reign of Selah
-Merrill Clarke—of whom more will be said presently—were
-Henry W. Odion, Elijah M. Rewey, and Ambrose
-W. Lyman, all of whom had previously been <i>Sun</i> reporters,
-and all of whom remained with the <i>Sun</i>, in
-various capacities, for many years. Rewey was the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">372</span>
-exchange editor from 1887 to 1903, and was variously
-employed at other important desk posts until his death
-in 1916. Since Mr. Clarke’s retirement, in 1912, the
-night city editors have been Joseph W. Bishop, J. W.
-Phoebus, Eugene Doane, Marion G. Scheitlin, and M.
-A. Rose.</p>
-
-<p>The night editors of the <i>Sun</i>, whose function it is to
-make up the paper and to “sit in” when the managing
-editors are absent, have been Dr. John B. Wood, the
-“great American condenser”; Garret P. Serviss, now
-with the <i>Evening Journal</i>; Charles M. Fairbanks, Carr
-V. Van Anda (1893–1904), now managing editor of the
-New York <i>Times</i>; George M. Smith (1904–1912), the
-present managing editor of the <i>Evening Sun</i>; and
-Joseph W. Bishop.</p>
-
-<p>In the eighties, the nineties, and the first decade of
-the present century the front corners of the city room
-were occupied, six nights a week, by two men closely
-identified with the <i>Sun’s</i> progress in getting and preparing
-news. These, Chester S. Lord and S. M. Clarke,
-were looked up to by <i>Sun</i> men, and by Park Row generally,
-as essential parts of the <i>Sun</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Lord, through his city editors, reporters, and correspondents,
-got the news. If it was metropolitan news—and
-until the latter days of July, 1914, New York
-was the news-centre of the world, so far as American
-papers were concerned—Clarke helped to get it and
-then to present it after the unapproachably artistic
-manner of the <i>Sun</i>. In the years of Lord and Clarke
-more than a billion copies of the <i>Sun</i> went out containing
-news stories written by men whom Lord had hired
-and whose work had passed beneath the hand of Clarke.</p>
-
-<p>Chester Sanders Lord, who was managing editor of
-the <i>Sun</i> from 1880 to 1913, was born in Romulus, New
-York, in 1850, the son of the Rev. Edward Lord, a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">373</span>
-Presbyterian clergyman who was chaplain of the One
-Hundred and Tenth Regiment of New York Volunteer
-Infantry in the Civil War. Chester Lord studied at
-Hamilton College in 1869 and 1870, and went from
-college to be associate editor of the Oswego <i>Advertiser</i>.
-In 1872 he came to the <i>Sun</i> as a reporter, and covered
-part of Horace Greeley’s campaign for the Presidency
-in that year. After nine months as a reporter he was
-assigned by the managing editor, Cummings, to the suburban
-desk, where he remained for four years.</p>
-
-<p>In the fall of 1877 he bought the Syracuse <i>Standard</i>,
-but in six weeks he returned to the <i>Sun</i> and became
-assistant night city editor under Ambrose W. Lyman,
-the predecessor of S. M. Clarke. Ballard Smith, who
-succeeded William Young as managing editor in 1878,
-named Lord as his assistant, and Lord succeeded Ballard
-Smith as managing editor on December 3, 1880.</p>
-
-<p>For thirty-three years Lord inspected applicants for
-places in the news departments of the <i>Sun</i>, and decided
-whether they would fit into the human structure that
-Dana had built. Edward G. Riggs, who knew him as
-well as any one, has written thus of him:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Like Dana, he has been a great judge of men. His
-discernment has been little short of miraculous. Calm,
-dispassionate, without the slightest atom of impulse,
-as wise as a serpent and as gentle as a dove, Lord got
-about him a staff that has been regarded by newspapermen
-as the most brilliant in the country. Independent
-of thought, with a placid idea of the dignity of his place,
-ever ready to concede the other fellow’s point of view
-even though maintaining his own, Lord was never
-known in all the years of his managing editorship of
-the <i>Sun</i> to utter an unkind word to any man on the
-paper, no matter how humble his station.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>One of Lord’s notable performances as managing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">374</span>
-editor was the perfecting of the <i>Sun’s</i> system of collecting
-election returns. Before 1880 the correspondents
-had sent in the election figures in a conscientious but
-rather inefficient manner—by towns, or cities. Lord
-picked out a reliable correspondent in each county of
-New York State and gave to the chosen man the responsibility
-of sending to the <i>Sun</i>, at nine o’clock on
-election night, an estimate of the result in his particular
-county. This was to be followed at eleven o’clock, if
-necessary, with the corrected figures.</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t tell us how your city, or township, or village
-went,” he said to the correspondents. “Let us have
-your best estimate on the county. Don’t spare the telephone
-or the telegraph, either to collect the returns or
-to get them into the <i>Sun</i> office.”</p>
-
-<p>The telephone was just coming into general use for
-the transmission of news, and Lord saw its possibilities
-on an election night.</p>
-
-<p>As a result of the new system, improved from year
-to year, the <i>Sun</i> became what it is—the election-night
-authority on what has happened. So confident was the
-<i>Sun</i> of its figures on the night of the Presidential election
-of 1884 that it, alone of all the New York papers,
-declared the next morning that Mr. Cleveland had defeated
-Mr. Blaine, although the <i>Sun</i> had been one of
-the most strenuous opponents of the Democratic candidate.
-Blaine, who had wired to the <i>Sun</i> for its estimates,
-got the first news of his defeat from Lord. Eight
-years later, when Mr. Cleveland defeated President
-Harrison, the winner’s political chief of staff, Daniel
-S. Lamont, received the first tidings of the great and
-unexpected victory from Mr. Lord.</p>
-
-<p>In the late eighties the <i>Sun</i> was supplementing its
-Associated Press news service with a valuable corps of
-special correspondents scattered all over America and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">375</span>
-Europe. The news received from these <i>Sun</i> men led
-to the establishment, by William M. Laffan, then publisher
-of the <i>Sun</i>, of a <i>Sun</i> news agency which was
-called the Laffan Bureau. This service, originated for
-the purpose of covering special events in the live way
-of the <i>Sun</i>, was suddenly called upon to cover the whole
-news field of the world in a more comprehensive way.</p>
-
-<p>Lord’s part in this work, when Dana decided to break
-with the Associated Press, has been graphically described
-by Mr. Riggs:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“Chester,” said Mr. Dana one afternoon early in the
-nineties, leaning over Lord’s desk, “I have just torn
-up my Associated Press franchise. We’ve got to have
-the news of the world to-morrow morning, and we’ve
-got to get it ourselves.”</p>
-
-<p>“Don’t let that fret you, Mr. Dana,” replied Lord.
-“You’ve got a Dante class on hand to-night. You just
-go home and enjoy yourself. I’ll have the news for
-you all right.”</p>
-
-<p>Dana always said that he didn’t enjoy his Dante class
-a single bit that night; but he didn’t go near the <i>Sun</i>
-office, neither did he communicate with the office. He
-banked on Lord, and the next morning and ever afterward
-Lord made good on the independent service. He
-built up the Laffan Bureau, which more recently has
-become the Sun News Service, and the special correspondents
-of the paper in all parts of the world see to
-it that the <i>Sun</i> gets the news.</p>
-
-<p>A task like that which Dana thrust on Lord might
-have paralyzed the average managing editor of a great
-metropolitan newspaper confronted by keen and powerful
-competitors. It was unheard of in journalism. It
-had never been attempted before. Lord, with calm
-courage and confidence, sent off thousands of telegrams
-and cable despatches that night. Many were shots in
-the air, but the majority were bull’s-eyes, as the next
-morning’s issue of the <i>Sun</i> proved.</p>
-
-<p>Was Dana delighted? If you had seen him hop,
-skip, and jump into the office that morning, you’d have<span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">376</span>
-received your answer. When Lord turned up at his
-desk in the afternoon, Dana rushed out from his chief
-editor’s office, grasped him about the shoulders, and
-chuckled:</p>
-
-<p>“Chester, you’re a brick, you’re a trump. You’re the
-John L. Sullivan of newspaperdom!”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Laffan Bureau, which assimilated the old United
-Press, became a news syndicate the service of which
-was sought by dozens of American papers whose editors
-admired the <i>Sun’s</i> manner of handling news. The Laffan
-Bureau lasted until 1916, when the <i>Sun</i>, through
-its purchase by Frank A. Munsey, absorbed Mr. Munsey’s
-New York <i>Press</i>, which had the Associated Press
-service.</p>
-
-<p>Among Mr. Lord’s fortunate traits as managing editor
-were his ability to choose good correspondents all over
-the world and his entire confidence in them after they
-were selected. No matter what other correspondents
-wrote, the <i>Sun</i> stood by its own men. They were on
-the spot; they should know the truth as well as any
-one else could.</p>
-
-<p>Months before Aguinaldo’s insurrection the <i>Sun</i> man
-at Manila, P. G. McDonnell, kept insisting that the
-Filipino chieftain would revolt. The other New York
-newspapers laughed at the <i>Sun</i> for seeing ghosts, but
-McDonnell was right.</p>
-
-<p>Newspaper readers will remember that in 1904 the
-fall of Port Arthur was announced three or four times
-in about as many months, and each time the <i>Sun</i> appeared
-to be beaten on the news until the next day,
-when it was discovered that the Russians were still
-holding out. All the <i>Sun</i> did about the matter was
-to notify its Tokyo correspondent, John T. Swift, that
-when Port Arthur really fell it would expect to hear
-from him by cable at “double urgent” rates. At midnight<span class="pagenum" id="Page_377">377</span>
-of January 1, 1905, four months after these instructions
-were given to Swift, the <i>Sun</i> got a “double
-urgent” message:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Port Arthur fallen—<span class="smcap">Swift</span>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>No other paper in New York had the news. The <i>Sun</i>
-rubbed it in editorially on January 3:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Deeply conscious as we are of the deplorable lack of
-modern enterprise which has hitherto deprived the <i>Sun</i>
-of the distinction of repeatedly announcing the fall of
-Port Arthur, we have to content ourselves with the
-reflection that when finally the <i>Sun</i> did print the fall
-of Port Arthur, it was so.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Soon after the election of Woodrow Wilson, in 1912,
-the head of the <i>Sun</i> bureau in Washington, the late
-Elting A. Fowler, made the prediction that William
-Jennings Bryan would be named as Secretary of State.
-Nearly every other metropolitan newspaper either ignored
-the story, or ridiculed it as absurd and impossible.
-The <i>Sun</i> never made inquiry of Fowler as to the source
-of his information. He had been a <i>Sun</i> man for ten
-years, and that was enough. Fowler repeated and reiterated
-that Bryan would be the head of the new
-Cabinet, and sure enough, he was.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> correspondent in a city five hundred miles
-from New York was covering a great murder mystery.
-Every other New York newspaper of importance had
-sent from two to five men to handle the story; the <i>Sun</i>
-sent none. The correspondent saw that the New York
-men were getting sheaves of telegrams from their newspapers,
-directing them in detail how to tell the story,
-and to what length; so he sent a message to the <i>Sun</i>
-advising it of the large numbers of New York reporters
-engaged on the mystery, and of the amount of matter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_378">378</span>
-they were preparing to send. Had the <i>Sun</i> any instructions
-for him? Yes, it had. The reply came
-swiftly:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Use your own judgment—<span class="smcap">Chester S. Lord</span>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>That was the <i>Sun</i> way, and the <i>Sun</i> printed the correspondent’s
-stories, whether they were one column long,
-or six. The <i>Sun</i> could not see how an editor in New
-York could know more about a distant murder than a
-correspondent on the spot.</p>
-
-<p>It was the <i>Sun’s</i> way, once a man was taken on, to
-keep him as long as it could. One day Mr. Lord sent
-for Samuel Hopkins Adams, then a reporter, and asked
-him whether he would like to go away fishing.</p>
-
-<p>“A Sunday story?” inquired Adams.</p>
-
-<p>“No, not exactly,” said Mr. Lord. “A vacation,
-rather. You’ve been fired. Go away, but come back,
-say, next Tuesday, and go to work, and it’ll be all
-right. Don’t worry!”</p>
-
-<p>Adams learned that a suit for libel had been brought
-against the paper by an individual who had been made
-an unpleasant figure in a police story which Adams
-had written.</p>
-
-<p>A few days after Adams returned to his duties Mr.
-Dana came out of his room and asked the city editor,
-Mr. Kellogg, the name of the reporter who had written
-an article to which he pointed. Kellogg told Dana that
-Adams was the author, and Dana strode across the
-room and bestowed upon the reporter one of his brief
-and much prized commentaries of approval. Then he
-looked at Adams more closely, and, with raised eyebrows,
-walked to the managing editor’s desk.</p>
-
-<p>“Who is that young man?” he asked Mr. Lord, indicating
-Adams with a movement of the head.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Lord murmured something.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_379">379</span></p>
-
-<p>“Didn’t I order him discharged a few days ago?”
-said Mr. Dana.</p>
-
-<p>Another but more prolonged murmur from Mr. Lord.
-Adams got up from his desk to efface himself, but as
-he left the room he caught the voice of Mr. Dana, a
-trifle higher and a bit plaintive:</p>
-
-<p>“Why is it, Mr. Lord, that I never succeed in discharging
-any of your bright young men?”</p>
-
-<p>Adams did not wait for the answer.</p>
-
-<p>This story, while typical of Lord, is not typical of
-Dana. For every word of censure he had a hundred
-words of praise. He read the paper—every line of it—for
-virtues to be commended rather than for faults to
-be condemned.</p>
-
-<p>“Who wrote the two sticks about the lame girl? A
-good touch; that’s the <i>Sun</i> idea!”</p>
-
-<p>If a new man had written something he liked—even
-a ten-line paragraph—the editor of the <i>Sun</i> would cross
-the room to shake the man’s hand and say:</p>
-
-<p>“Good work!”</p>
-
-<p>The spirit he radiated was contagious. The men,
-encouraged by Dana, spread faith to one another. The
-“<i>Sun</i>” spirit—the envious of other newspapers were
-wont to refer to those who had it as “the <i>Sun’s</i> Mutual
-Admiration Society”—did and does much to make the
-<i>Sun</i>. The men lived the socialism of art. If a new
-reporter received a difficult assignment, ten older men
-were ready to tell him, in a kindly and not at all didactic
-way, how to find the short cut.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps some part of the democracy of the <i>Sun</i> office
-has come from the fact that men have rarely been taken
-in at the top. It was Dana’s plan to catch young men
-with unformed ideas of journalism and make <i>Sun</i> men
-of them. They went on the paper as cubs at fifteen
-dollars a week—or even as office-boys—and worked their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_380">380</span>
-way to be “space men,” if they had it in their noddles.</p>
-
-<p>All space men were free and equal in the Jeffersonian
-sense. Their pay was eight dollars a column. That
-one man made one hundred and fifty dollars in a week
-when his neighbour made only fifty was usually the
-result, not of the system, but of the difference between
-the men. Some were harder workers than others, or
-better fitted by experience for more important stories;
-and some were born money-makers. If a diligent reporter,
-through no fault of his own, was making small
-“bills,” the city editor would see to it that something
-profitable fell to him—perhaps a long and easily written
-Sunday article.</p>
-
-<p>Through changed conditions in newspaper make-up
-and policies, the space system in the payment of reporters
-is now practically extinct. It had good points
-and bad ones. Undoubtedly it developed a large number
-of men to whom a salary would not have been
-attractive. Some, to whose style and activities the
-space system lent itself, remained in the profession
-longer than they would otherwise have stayed. On the
-other hand, it was not always fair to reporters with
-whom a condensed style was natural. The dynamics
-of a two-inch article, the very value of which lies in
-its brevity, cannot be measured with a space-rule.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun’s</i> ideas of fairness do not end with itself and
-its men. It has always had a proper consideration for
-the feelings of the innocent bystander. It never harms
-the weak, or stoops to get news in a dishonourable or
-unbecoming way. It would be hard to devise a set of
-rules of newspaper ethics, but a few examples of things
-that the <i>Sun</i> doesn’t do may illuminate.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_380" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 34em;">
- <img src="images/i_380a.jpg" width="1617" height="2138" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
- <p>SELAH MERRILL CLARKE</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Soon after one of the <i>Sun’s</i> most brilliant reporters
-had come on the paper, he was sent to report the wedding
-of a noted sporting man and a famous stage beauty,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_381">381</span>
-the marriage ceremony being performed by a picturesque
-Tammany alderman. The reporter returned to the
-office with a lot of amusing detail, which he recited in
-brief to the night city editor.</p>
-
-<p>“Just the facts of the marriage, please,” said Mr.
-Clarke. “The two most important events in the life
-of a woman are her marriage and her death. Neither
-should be treated flippantly.”</p>
-
-<p>Another reporter wrote an amusing story about a fat
-policeman posted at the Battery, who chased a tramp
-through a pool of rain-water. The policeman fell into
-the water, and the tramp got away. No report of the
-occurrence was made at police headquarters, but a <i>Sun</i>
-man saw the incident and wrote it.</p>
-
-<p>“It’s an amusing story,” said Clarke to the reporter,
-“but they read the papers at police headquarters, and
-this policeman may be put on trial for not reporting
-the escape of the hobo. Suppose we drop this classic
-on the floor?”</p>
-
-<p>A telegraph messenger-boy once wrote a letter to the
-police commissioner, telling him how to break up the
-cadets (panders) of the East Side. A <i>Sun</i> man found
-the lad and got an interesting interview with him.</p>
-
-<p>“Leave my name out, won’t you?” the messenger
-said to the reporter. “If you print it, I may lose my
-job.”</p>
-
-<p>He was told that his name was known in the <i>Sun</i>
-office, but that the reporter would present his appeal.</p>
-
-<p>“Did you find the messenger?” Clarke asked the reporter
-on his arrival.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> man replied that he had found him, and
-that the interview was interesting and exclusive. Before
-he had an opportunity to repeat the boy’s plea for
-anonymity, Clarke said:</p>
-
-<p>“Is it going to hurt the boy if we print his name?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_382">382</span>
-If it is, leave it out, and refer to him by a fictitious
-number.”</p>
-
-<p>Two reporters, one from the <i>Sun</i> and one from another
-big daily, went one night to interview a famous
-man on an important subject. The <i>Sun</i> man returned
-and wrote a brief story containing none of the big news
-which it had been hoped he might get. The other newspaper
-came out with some startling revelations, gleaned
-from the same interview. Mr. Lord showed the rival
-paper’s article to the <i>Sun</i> reporter, with a mild inquiry
-as to the reason for the <i>Sun’s</i> failure to get the news.</p>
-
-<p>“We both gave our word,” said the reporter, “that
-we would keep back that piece of news for three days,
-even from our offices.”</p>
-
-<p>“Son,” said Mr. Lord, “you are a great man!”</p>
-
-<p>That was the Lord phrase of acquittal.</p>
-
-<p>One of the big occurrences in the investigation of the
-life-insurance companies in 1905 was a report which
-was read to the investigating committee in executive
-session. Every newspaper yearned for the contents of
-the document. After the committee adjourned, a member
-of it whispered to a <i>Sun</i> reporter:</p>
-
-<p>“There is a bundle of those reports just inside the
-door of the committee room. I should think that five
-dollars given to a scrub-woman would probably get a
-copy for you.”</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> man, knowing the value of the report, and
-not content to act on his own estimate of <i>Sun</i> ethics,
-telephoned the temptation to the city editor, Mr. Mallon.</p>
-
-<p>“A <i>Sun</i> man who would do that would lose his job,”
-was the instant decision.</p>
-
-<p>A couple of days after Stephen Tyng Mather, recently
-First Assistant Secretary of the Interior, went on the
-<i>Sun</i> as a reporter, the city editor, Mr. Bogart, called
-him to his desk.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_383">383</span></p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Mather,” said Bogart, “an admirer of the <i>Sun</i>
-has sent me a turkey. Of course, I cannot accept it.
-Please take it to his house in Harlem and explain why;
-but don’t hurt his feelings.”</p>
-
-<p>Mather had just come from college, where he had
-never learned that the ethics of journalism might require
-a reporter to become a deliverer of poultry, but
-he took the turkey. It does not detract from the moral
-of the story to say that Mather and another young reporter,
-neither quite understanding the <i>Sun’s</i> stern
-code, took the bird to the Fellowcraft Club and had it
-roasted—a fact of which Mr. Bogart may have been
-unaware until now.</p>
-
-<p>The best news-handler that journalism has seen, Selah
-Merrill Clarke, was night city editor of the <i>Sun</i> for
-thirty-one years. He came to the paper in 1881 from
-the New York <i>World</i>, where he had been employed as
-a reporter, and later as a desk man. In the early seventies
-he wrote for the <i>World</i> a story of a suicide, and
-one of the newspapers of that day said of it that neither
-Dickens nor Wilkie Collins, with all the time they could
-ask, could have surpassed it. His story of the milkman’s
-ride down the valley of the Mill River, warning
-the inhabitants that the dam had broken at the Ashfield
-reservoir, near Northampton, Massachusetts (May 16,
-1874), was another classic that attracted the attention
-of editors, including Dana.</p>
-
-<p>Clarke never thought well of himself as a reporter,
-and often said that in that capacity he was a failure.
-As a judge of news values, or news presentation, or as
-a giver of the fine literary touch which lent to the <i>Sun’s</i>
-articles that indescribable tone not found in other papers,
-Clarke stood almost alone.</p>
-
-<p>The city editor of a New York newspaper sows seeds;
-the night city editor re-seeds barren spots, waters wilting<span class="pagenum" id="Page_384">384</span>
-items, and cuts and bags the harvest. The city
-editor sends men out all day for news; the night city
-editor judges what they bring in, and decides what space
-it shall have. In the handling of a big story, on which
-five or fifteen reporters may be engaged, the night city
-editor has to put together as many different writings
-in such a way that the reader may go smoothly from
-beginning to end. Chance may decree that the poorest
-writer has brought in the biggest news, and the
-man on the desk must supply quality as well as judgment.</p>
-
-<p>At such work Clarke was a master. It has been said
-of him that by the eliding stroke of his pencil and the
-insertion of perhaps a single word he could change the
-commonplace to literature. No reporter ever worked
-on the <i>Sun</i> but wished, at one time or another, to thank
-Clarke for saving him from himself. Clarke had the
-faculty of seeing instantly the opportunity for improvement
-that the reporter might have seen an hour or a
-day later.</p>
-
-<p>Clarke got about New York very little, but he knew
-the city from Arthur Kill to Pelham Bay; knew it just
-as a general at headquarters knows the terrain on which
-his troops are fighting, but which he himself has never
-seen. He had the map of New York in his brain.
-When an alarm of fire came in from an obscure corner,
-he knew what lumber-yards or oil-refineries were near
-the blaze, and whether that was a point where the water
-pressure was likely to fail.</p>
-
-<p>Clarke’s memory was uncanny; it seemed to have
-photographed every issue of the <i>Sun</i> for years. It was
-a saying that while Clarke stayed the <i>Sun</i> needed
-neither an index nor a “morgue”—that biographical
-cabinet in which newspapers keep records of men and
-affairs.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_385">385</span></p>
-
-<p>Twenty-five years after the Beecher-Tilton trial a
-three-line death-notice came to Clarke’s desk. He read
-the dead man’s name and summoned a reporter.</p>
-
-<p>“This man was a juror in the Beecher case,” said
-Clarke. “Look in the file of February 6 or 7, 1875,
-and I think you’ll find that this man stood up and made
-an interruption. Write a little piece about it.”</p>
-
-<p>A <i>Sun</i> man who reported the funeral of Russell Sage
-at Lawrence, Long Island, in July, 1906, returned to
-the office and told Mr. Clarke that an acquaintance of
-the Sage family had told him, on the train coming back,
-the contents of the old man’s will—a document for
-which the reading public eagerly waited. The reporter
-laid his informant’s card before the night city editor.
-Clarke studied the name on it for a minute, and then
-said:</p>
-
-<p>“We won’t print the story. Dig out the file for June,
-1899, and somewhere on the front page—I think it will
-be in the third or fourth column—on the 1st or 2nd of
-June you’ll find a story telling that this man was sent
-to Sing Sing for forgery.”</p>
-
-<p>Clarke’s memory was right. Although it is anti-climactic
-to relate it, the ex-convict’s description of
-what the will contained was also correct.</p>
-
-<p>Will Irwin, while reporting a small war between two
-Chinese societies, wrote an article one night about the
-arrest of two Hip Sing tong men who were wearing
-chain armour under their blouses. Clarke, much interested,
-asked Irwin all about the armour.</p>
-
-<p>“It reminds me of ‘King Solomon’s Mines,’” remarked
-Irwin, “and the chain armour that the heroes
-had made in Sheffield to wear in Africa.”</p>
-
-<p>“Yes,” replied Clarke, who had not read the Haggard
-novel in fifteen years; “but it wasn’t Sheffield—it was
-Birmingham.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_386">386</span></p>
-
-<p>Clarke had a sense of responsibility that showed itself
-in nervousness. On a night when news was breaking,
-that nervousness was exhibited in his trips, every ten
-minutes, to the ice-water tank; in the constant lighting
-and relighting of his pipe; in the quick turn of his
-head at the approach of a reporter. Yet his nervousness
-was not contagious. So long as Clarke was nervous,
-the men under him felt that they need not be. He
-did all the worrying, and, unlike most worriers, got
-results from it.</p>
-
-<p>Let him know that something had happened in the
-city, and his drag-net system was started. No matter
-how remote the happening, how apparently hopeless the
-clue, he let neither man nor telephone rest until every
-possible corner had been searched for the guilty news
-item. Once the situation was in hand he would return
-to the adornment of a head-line or the working out of
-some abstruse problem in mathematics—perhaps the
-angles of a sun-dial, for Clarke’s hobby was gnomonics,
-and he knew dials from Ptolemy’s time down. As a
-rest from mathematics he might write a limerick in
-Greek, and then carefully tear it up.</p>
-
-<p>Almost every newspaper in New York tried, at one
-time or another, to take Clarke from the <i>Sun</i>. One
-night an emissary from one of the apostles of the then
-new journalism entered the <i>Sun</i> office and sent his card
-to Mr. Clarke. When the night city editor appeared,
-he whispered:</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. —— says that if you’ll ascertain the highest
-salary the <i>Sun</i> will pay you to stay, he’ll double it.”</p>
-
-<p>Clarke uttered the strange sound that was his indulgence
-when disagreeably disturbed—a cross between
-a growl and a grunt—and turned back toward his desk.</p>
-
-<p>“He’ll triple it!” cried the tempter.</p>
-
-<p>Although Clarke heard the words, he kept on to his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_387">387</span>
-desk, and not only never mentioned the matter, but
-probably never thought of it again.</p>
-
-<p>On another occasion he made a notable trip to the
-gate at the entrance to the big room. A drunken visitor
-was making the place ring with yells, and the office-boys
-could not stop him. Clarke bore the noise for ten
-minutes, and then, remarking, “This is unendurable!”
-went and threw the man down the stairs.</p>
-
-<p>Clarke was the hero of a dozen newspaper stories,
-which he scorned to read.</p>
-
-<p>“Do you know, Mr. Clarke,” said a reporter who did
-not know how shy “the boss” was, “that Blank has
-put you into a short story in <i>Space’s Magazine</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>“Who is Blank?” said Clarke shortly.</p>
-
-<p>“Why,” said his informant, “he worked here for
-several weeks.”</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, Lord!” said Clarke. “I can’t be expected,
-can I, to remember all the geniuses that come and
-go?”</p>
-
-<p>There was a mild ferocity about him that caused
-more than one cub to think that the night boss was unfriendly,
-but this attitude had a good effect. No young
-reporter ever made the same mistake twice.</p>
-
-<p>“If you mean ‘child,’ write it so,” he would say.
-“Don’t write it ‘tot.’ And please have more variety
-in your motor cars. I have seen several that were not
-large and red and high-powered.”</p>
-
-<p>The head-lines of the <i>Sun</i> have been well written since
-the first days of Dana, and Clarke, for thirty years, was
-the best of the head-line writers. He wrote rhyming
-heads for Sam Wood’s prose verse, satirical heads for
-satires, humorous heads for the funny men’s articles.
-A <i>Sun</i> reader could gauge almost exactly the worth of
-an article by the quality of the heading. A <i>Sun</i> reporter
-could tell just what Clarke thought of his story<span class="pagenum" id="Page_388">388</span>
-by the cleverness of the lines that the night city editor
-wrote above it.</p>
-
-<p>Clarke would put the obvious heading on a long,
-matter-of-fact yarn in two minutes, but he might spend
-half an hour—if he had it to spare—polishing a head
-for a short and sparkling piece of work. Two architects
-who did city work pleaded poverty, but admitted
-having turned over property to their wives. Clarke
-headed the story:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>“We’re Broke,” Says Horgan.—“Sure,” Says Slattery,
-“But Our Wives Are Doing Fine.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A brief item about the arrest of some boys for stealing
-five copies of “The Simple Life” he headed
-“Tempted Beyond Their Strength.” Over a paragraph
-telling of the killing of a Park Row newsboy
-by a truck he wrote: “A Sparrow Falls.”</p>
-
-<p>Clarke had a besetting fear that Russell Sage would
-die suddenly late at night, and that the <i>Sun</i> would not
-learn of it in time. Again and again false “hunches”
-caused him to send men to the Sage home on Fifth
-Avenue to discover the state of the old millionaire’s
-health. When Mr. Sage became seriously ill, reporters
-were sent in relays to watch the house. One man who
-had such an assignment turned up at the <i>Sun</i> office at
-one o’clock in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>“I left Mr. Sage’s house,” he explained to Clarke,
-“because Dr. Blank just came out and I had a little
-talk with him. He asked me if S. M. Clarke was still
-night city editor of the <i>Sun</i>; and when I told him that
-you were, he said:</p>
-
-<p>“‘Tell Selah for me that I will call him personally
-on the ’phone if there is the least change in Mr. Sage’s
-condition. Selah and I are old friends; we used to be
-room-mates in college.’”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_389">389</span></p>
-
-<p>“Blank always was a darn liar!” said Mr. Clarke.
-“Go back to the house and sit on the door-step.”</p>
-
-<p>On February 28, 1917, five years after Clarke retired,
-the Sun Alumni Association gave a dinner in his honour,
-with Mr. Lord presiding. Men came five hundred miles
-for the event, and the speeches were entirely about
-Clarke and his work. Mr. Clarke himself, who was
-only five miles away, sent a kindly letter to say that
-he was pleased, but that he could not imagine anything
-more absurd than a man’s attending a dinner given in
-his own honour.</p>
-
-<p>Clarke was a factor in that nebulous institution so
-frequently referred to as the “<i>Sun</i> school of journalism,”
-a college in which the teaching was by example
-rather than precept. Clarke occasionally told the
-young reporters how not to do it, but his real lessons
-were given in the columns of the <i>Sun</i>. There, in cold
-type, the man could see that Clarke had thrown his
-beautiful introduction on the floor, had lifted a word
-or a phrase from the middle of the article and put it
-to the fore, or had, by one of the touches which marked
-the great copy-reader’s genius, breathed life into the
-narrative. Clarke had no rules for improving a story,
-but he had a faculty, not uncommon among the finest
-copy-readers, of seeing an event more clearly than it
-had appeared to the reporter who described it, even
-when the desk man’s information came entirely from
-the reporter’s screed.</p>
-
-<p>If a reporter found his story in the paper almost
-untouched by Clarke’s pencil and adorned with a typical
-Clarkean head, it was a signal to him that he had done
-well. He was sure not to get verbal approbation from
-Clarke. There is a legend that Clarke once cried
-“Fine!” after skimming over a sheet of well-written
-copy, but it is only a legend. With a reporter who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_390">390</span>
-never wrote introductions and never padded his articles
-Clarke would sometimes crack a joke. <i>Sun</i> traditions
-have it that once, after a reporter had turned New York
-inside out to dig out a particularly difficult piece of
-news, the night city editor remarked to his assistant
-that that reporter “was a handy man to have around
-the office.” Although Clarke has been referred to by
-an excellent judge, Will Irwin, as “the greatest
-living schoolmaster of newspapermen,” his methods
-could never be adapted to the academies of journalism.</p>
-
-<p>As a schoolmaster of a more positive type, <i>Sun</i> men
-remember the late Francis T. Patton, who edited suburban
-news for twenty years. Staff men on assignments
-in New Jersey, Westchester, Long Island, and
-other places just beyond the city turned in their copy
-to “Boss” Patton, a cultured man who spent his spare
-hours reading old Latin works in the original or working
-out chess problems. It was to him that the bewildered
-cub turned in his hour of torment, and Patton
-would tell him how long his story ought to run, how
-he might begin it, how end it.</p>
-
-<p>“I know it isn’t right to fake, Mr. Patton,” said
-a new reporter; “but is exaggeration never permissible?”</p>
-
-<p>“It is,” said Patton. “You may use exaggeration
-whenever it is needed to convey to the reader an adequate
-but not exaggerated picture of the event you are
-describing. For instance, if you are reporting a storm
-at Seabright, and the waves are eight and one-half feet
-high by the tape which you surely carry in your hip-pocket
-for such emergencies, it will hardly do to inform
-the reader that the waves are eight and one-half feet
-high; his visualization of the scene would not be perfect.
-Yet, if you write that the waves ran mountain-high,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_391">391</span>
-I shall change your copy if it comes to me. The
-expression would be too stale. Hyperbole is one of
-the gifts.”</p>
-
-<div class="center"><div class="ilb2">
-<div id="ip_390a" class="figleft">
- <img src="images/i_390a.jpg" width="800" height="1244" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">SAMUEL A. WOOD</div></div>
-
-<div id="ip_390b" class="figleft noclear">
- <img src="images/i_390b.jpg" width="800" height="1244" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">OSCAR KING DAVIS</div></div>
-</div></div>
-
-<div class="center"><div class="ilb2">
-<div id="ip_390c" class="figleft">
- <img src="images/i_390c.jpg" width="800" height="1244" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">THOMAS M. DIEUAIDE</div></div>
-
-<div id="ip_390d" class="figleft noclear">
- <img src="images/i_390d.jpg" width="800" height="1244" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">SAMUEL HOPKINS ADAMS</div></div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Patton’s droll humour was one of the delights of the
-<i>Sun</i> office. One night Charles M. Fairbanks was writing,
-for the <i>Herald</i>, a story about “The Men Who Make
-the <i>Sun</i> Shine.” He asked Patton for something about
-himself.</p>
-
-<p>“You may say,” replied the boss of the suburban
-desk, “that my characteristics are brilliancy, trustworthiness,
-accuracy, and poetic fervour.”</p>
-
-<p>“Boss,” said a young reporter to Mr. Patton, “I
-often think you and I could run this paper better than
-the men who are running it.”</p>
-
-<p>“How strange!” said Mr. Patton, looking surprised.
-“I know that I could, but it has never occurred to me
-that you would not do worse than they do.”</p>
-
-<p>The sports department has been one of the <i>Sun’s</i>
-strongholds since Mr. Dana’s first years. Dana would
-let Amos Cummings give half a page to a race at Saratoga
-or Monmouth Park, and would encourage Amos
-to neglect his executive duties so that the paper might
-have a good report of a boxing-match. When William I
-lay dead in Berlin, the <i>Sun’s</i> principal European correspondent,
-Arthur Brisbane, was concerned, not with
-the future of the continent, but with the aftermath of
-the Sullivan-Mitchell fight at Chantilly.</p>
-
-<p>The stories of the international yacht-races have always
-been told best in the <i>Sun</i>, whether the reporter
-was John R. Spears or William J. Henderson. Mr.
-Henderson, who is the ablest musical critic in America,
-is probably the best yachting reporter, too. While the
-world of music knows him through his distinguished
-critiques, particularly of opera, the <i>Sun</i> knows him as
-a great reporter—one who would rank high among<span class="pagenum" id="Page_392">392</span>
-the best it has ever had. Another <i>Sun</i> man who
-wrote yachting well is Duncan Curry, later of the
-<i>American</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In turf matters the <i>Sun</i> has long been looked upon
-as an authority. In the heyday of racing the paper
-enjoyed the services of Christopher J. Fitzgerald, since
-then familiar as a starter on many race-tracks, and
-of Joseph Vila, now sporting editor of the <i>Evening
-Sun</i>. Fitzgerald, although a specialist in sports, was
-also a first-class general reporter. He is the hero
-of a story of the proverbial “<i>Sun</i> luck,” which in
-this case might better be called <i>Sun</i> persistence and
-activity.</p>
-
-<p>In the latter part of December, 1892, the steamship
-Umbria, the fastest transatlantic boat of her day, was
-two weeks overdue at New York. Every newspaper
-had tugs out to watch for her first appearance. On the
-night of December 28 Fitzgerald was assigned to tug
-duty. The first tug he took down the moonlit bay
-broke her propeller in the ice; with the second tug he
-ran twenty miles beyond Sandy Hook. Presently an
-inward-bound liner appeared in the dark, and the other
-newspaper boats followed her; but this was not the
-Umbria, but the Britannic. An hour later a tank
-steamer came along, and Fitzgerald hailed her on the
-chance that she knew something about the missing
-ship.</p>
-
-<p>“The Umbria,” came back the answer, “is about five
-miles astern, coming in slowly.”</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun’s</i> tug raced to sea and soon came alongside
-the overdue steamer. On board was Frank Marshall
-White, the <i>Sun’s</i> London correspondent, and he had,
-all ready written, a story telling how the Umbria broke
-her machinery, and how the chief engineer lay on his
-back for five days trying to mend the break. Fitzgerald<span class="pagenum" id="Page_393">393</span>
-took White’s story and raced to Quarantine,
-where there was a telegraph-station, but, at that hour,
-no operator. Fitzgerald, himself an expert telegrapher,
-pounded the <i>Sun’s</i> call, “SX,” for ten minutes, but the
-<i>Sun</i> operator had gone home.</p>
-
-<p>Fitzgerald returned to the tug and went under full
-speed to the Battery, landing at 3.35 <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span> Running to
-Park Row, he found an assistant foreman of the <i>Sun</i>
-composing-room enjoying his lemonade in Andy Horn’s
-restaurant. This man rounded up four or five printers,
-and they began setting up the story at 4 <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span> The <i>Sun</i>
-had a complete and exclusive story, and twenty thousand
-copies were sold of Fitzgerald’s extra.</p>
-
-<p>Vila, like Fitzgerald a man of large physique and
-a former athlete, wrote the descriptions of a dozen Suburban
-Handicaps and Futurities, of a score of great
-college rowing-matches, of a thousand baseball and football
-games. Damon Runyon, the poet and sporting
-editor, once remarked that “Vila is the only sporting
-writer I have ever seen who knows exactly, at the end
-of a sporting event, just what he is going to write,
-when he is going to write it, and how much he is going
-to write.”</p>
-
-<p>When John W. Gates and John A. Drake came to the
-New York race-tracks and made bets of sensational
-magnitude, Vila was the only turf reporter able to give
-the exact figures of the amounts bet by the Western
-plungers. The printing of these in the <i>Sun</i> so aroused
-the Jockey Club that a curb was put on big betting.</p>
-
-<p>The present sports staff includes some of the writers,
-like Nat Fleischer, “Daniel,” Frederick G. Lieb, and
-George B. Underwood, who were on the big sports staff
-of the New York <i>Press</i> when that paper was amalgamated
-with the <i>Sun</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Returning to the big, bare room in the old Sun Building,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_394">394</span>
-cast the eye of memory through the thin forest of
-chandeliers entwined with lianas of electric wiring, and
-across the dull desks. Boss Lord has come in from
-dinner and is reading telegraphic bulletins from out-of-town
-correspondents or glancing at a growing pile
-of proofs. At the Albany desk Deacon Stillman is
-editing a batch of Congress news from Walter Clarke
-or Richard V. Oulahan in Washington, or of legislative
-news from Joseph L. McEntee in Albany, or is trying to
-think out an apt head for a double murder in Herkimer
-County. At the cable desk Cyrus C. Adams, long secretary
-of the American Geographical Society, is looking
-in a guide-book to discover whether the name of a street
-in Naples has not been distorted by the operators while
-in transit between the Rome correspondent and New
-York. The telegraph editor is telling the night editor,
-Van Anda or Smith, that he has “nothing much but
-yellow fever,” and the night editor is replying that
-“three-quarters of a column of yellow fever will be
-plenty.”</p>
-
-<p>At the city desk Clarke, who has half finished the
-heading on a bit about a green heron seen in Bronx
-Park, picks up the telephone to tell an East Side police-station
-reporter to investigate the report of an excursion
-boat gone aground on Hart’s Island, and then turns
-away to tell Ralph, or Chamberlin, or Joseph Fox, or
-Irwin, or Hill, or O’Malley, that a column and a half
-lead will do for the police investigation, or the great
-public dinner, or whatever his task may have been.
-As he finishes, a reporter lays on his desk a long story,
-and Clarke, reading the substance of the first page of it
-in an instant, hands it over to his assistant to edit.</p>
-
-<p>At the Jersey desk Boss Patton has polished the disquisitions
-of a suburban correspondent on the antics
-of a shark in Barnegat Bay, and is explaining to a space<span class="pagenum" id="Page_395">395</span>
-man, almost with tears, why it was necessary to cut
-down his article about the picnic of the Smith family
-at Peapack.</p>
-
-<p>The sporting editor, John Mandigo, has just bade
-good night to some distinguished visitor—say Mr. Fitzsimmons—and
-is bending over some copy from Fitzgerald
-or Vila. Perhaps Henry of Navarre and Domino
-are nose-and-nose in the stretch at Gravesend, or Amos
-Rusie has struck out seventeen opposing batters, or Kid
-Lavigne has lambasted Joe Walcott quite properly at
-Maspeth.</p>
-
-<p>At a side desk a copy-reader on local news is struggling
-with a mass of writing from various youthful reporters.
-“At seven ten o’clock last evening, as Policeman
-McGuffin was patrolling his beat, his attention was attracted
-by a cry of fire,” etc. The copy-reader knows
-that smoke will presently issue from the upper windows;
-knows, too, that he presently will boil the seven
-pages down to three lines and gently tell the reporter
-why he did it.</p>
-
-<p>The chess expert is turning a cabalistic cablegram
-from St. Petersburg into a detailed story of the contest
-between a couple of the masters of the game. The
-bowling man is writing a description, which may never
-see the light, of a desperate struggle between the Harlem
-Pin Kings and the Bensonhurst Alley Scorchers.
-H. L. Fitzpatrick is writing a golf story with such
-magnificent technique that Mandigo will not dare to
-cut a line out of it.</p>
-
-<p>A dozen reporters, great and small, are at the desks
-in the middle of the room, busy with pencils. In a side
-room three or four others, converts to the typewriter,
-are pounding out copy. In another room Riggs is dictating
-to a stenographer the day’s doings in political
-life.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_396">396</span></p>
-
-<p>Four or five “rewrite men,” the “long wait” and
-his helpers, the “short waits,” are slipping in and out
-of the telephone-booths, taking and writing news articles
-from twenty points in the city where the Mulberry
-Street reporter, the police-station reporters, the Tenderloin
-man—who covers the West Thirtieth Street police-station,
-the Broadway hotels, and the theatrical district—and
-the Harlem man are still busy gathering news.</p>
-
-<p>From a room wisely distant comes the rattle of the
-telegraph. Half a dozen wires are bringing in the continent’s
-news. Half a dozen boys, spurred by their chief,
-Dan O’Leary, carry the typed sheets to the proper desks.</p>
-
-<p>The dramatic critic comes in and sits down at his
-desk to write two-thirds of a column about a first performance.
-The music critic has sent down a brief
-notice of the night’s opera.</p>
-
-<p>Most of the reporters finish their work and go out.
-One or two remain to write special articles for the Sunday
-papers. A sporting reporter is spinning a semi-fictional
-yarn of life in Chinatown. A police reporter
-is composing little classics of life in Dolan’s Park Row
-restaurant.</p>
-
-<p>At one o’clock there is a rumbling of the presses in
-the basement, and soon copies of the first edition come
-to the desks of the news-masters. Lord suggests to the
-night editor a shift of front-page articles. Clarke, his
-pencil flashing, marks in additions to the story of a late
-accident. A cub waits patiently for a discarded paper,
-to see whether his piece has got in. An older reporter,
-who wrote the story in the first column of the first page,
-does not look at his own work, but turns to the sporting
-page to read the racing entries for the next day—his
-day off.</p>
-
-<p>At 1.27 <span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span> Clarke rises and goes home. At two
-o’clock Lord closes his desk. Most of the desk men<span class="pagenum" id="Page_397">397</span>
-disappear; the work is done. The night editor—Van
-Anda or the imperturbable Smith—remains at his desk,
-with the “long wait” reporter to bear him company.
-At half past three they also go, and the watchman begins
-to turn out the lights. Down below, the presses
-are tossing forth the product of a night’s work in the
-big, bare, old room.</p>
-
-<p>A story of the <i>Sun</i> would be incomplete without a
-sketch of its little sister. The <i>Evening Sun</i> was established
-by Mr. Dana nearly twenty years after he bought
-the <i>Sun</i>. He saw a place for a one-cent evening newspaper,
-for the only journal of that description then
-published in New York was the <i>Daily News</i>, which was
-largely a class publication. The leading evening newspapers
-were the <i>Evening Post</i>, the <i>Commercial Advertiser</i>,
-and the <i>Mail and Express</i>, selling for three cents
-and catering to a highbrow or a partisan clientele.</p>
-
-<p>The first <i>Evening Sun</i> was issued on March 17, 1887,
-at an hour when the St. Patrick’s Day parade was being
-reviewed by Mayor Hewitt. With its four pages of six
-columns each, its brief, lively presentation of general
-news, and its low price, the paper was an immediate
-success—though not the success that it is to-day, with
-its sixteen pages, its wealth of special articles, and the
-many features that make it one of America’s best evening
-newspapers.</p>
-
-<p>The new paper had no titular editor-in-chief. Mr.
-Dana was the editor of the <i>Sun</i> and had the general
-guidance of the evening paper. Dana’s associate, the
-publisher of the <i>Sun</i>, William M. Laffan, took a deep
-interest in the welfare of the new venture, and the
-<i>Evening Sun</i> was often referred to as his “baby.”</p>
-
-<p>The first managing editor of the paper was Amos J.
-Cummings, with Allan Kelly as city editor and John
-McCormick as sporting editor. When Cummings went<span class="pagenum" id="Page_398">398</span>
-to Congress, E. J. Edwards took his place and remained
-as managing editor until August, 1889, when Arthur
-Brisbane returned from the post of London correspondent
-of the <i>Sun</i> to manage the evening paper.</p>
-
-<p>It was Brisbane who induced Richard Harding Davis,
-then a young reporter in Philadelphia, to come to New
-York. As Davis was walking up from the ferry one
-morning in October, 1889, on his way to take up his
-new duties, he was taken in hand, in City Hall Park,
-by a bunco-steerer. Davis listened to the man’s wiles,
-turned him over to the police of the City Hall station,
-and then hurried to the <i>Evening Sun</i> office to write a
-story about it for the paper. Davis’s <i>Van Bibber</i> stories,
-the first of his fiction to attract wide attention, were
-originally printed in the <i>Evening Sun</i>, in 1890. As a
-reporter under Brisbane, Davis picked up much of the
-information and experiences that coloured his fiction.</p>
-
-<p>When Brisbane went to the Pulitzer forces, he was
-succeeded as managing editor by W. C. McCloy, who
-had been city editor, and who remained at the head
-of the news department for more than twenty years.</p>
-
-<p>Jacob A. Riis, who had been the police-headquarters
-reporter of the <i>Tribune</i> since 1877, went to the <i>Evening
-Sun</i> in 1890, coincident with the publication of his first
-popular work, “How the Other Half Lives.” Other
-of his works, including “The Children of the Poor”
-and “Out of Mulberry Street,” were written while he
-was the chief police reporter of the <i>Evening Sun</i>. Riis’s
-work was valuable, not only to the paper, but to the
-city itself. His writings attracted the attention of
-Theodore Roosevelt when the future President was head
-of the police board of New York (1895–1897), and the
-men became close friends. Together they worked to
-improve conditions in the tenement districts, and Roosevelt
-called Riis “New York’s most useful citizen.”</p>
-
-<div class="center"><div class="ilb">
-<div id="ip_398a" class="figleft">
- <img src="images/i_398a.jpg" width="846" height="1502" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">WILL IRWIN</div></div>
-
-<div id="ip_398b" class="figleft noclear">
- <img src="images/i_398b.jpg" width="846" height="1502" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">FRANK WARD O’MALLEY</div></div>
-
-<div id="ip_398c" class="figleft noclear">
- <img src="images/i_398c.jpg" width="846" height="1502" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">EDWIN C. HILL</div></div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_399">399</span></p>
-
-<p>Thomas M. Dieuaide, whose work for the <i>Sun</i> in the
-Spanish War has been referred to in this volume, and
-who became city editor of the <i>Evening Sun</i>, was one of
-Riis’s colleagues. Dieuaide was the author of the
-<i>Evening Sun’s</i> broadside against the black vice of the
-East Side. Printed in 1901, shortly before the beginning
-of a mayoralty campaign, it was a prime
-factor in the election of a reforming administration.</p>
-
-<p>Richard Harding Davis was not the only fiction-writer
-to graduate from the <i>Evening Sun’s</i> school.
-Irvin S. Cobb got his start in the North as an <i>Evening
-Sun</i> reporter. He came to New York from Paducah,
-Kentucky, rented a hall room, and sat down and wrote
-to the managing editor of the <i>Evening Sun</i> a letter of
-application so humorous that he was employed immediately.
-His report of the peace conference at Portsmouth,
-New Hampshire, following the Russo-Japanese
-War, attracted wide attention. Stephen French Whitman
-and Algernon Blackwood, the novelists, were also
-<i>Evening Sun</i> men.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Evening Sun’s</i> list of former dramatic critics
-includes Acton Davies and Edward Fales Coward, both
-playwrights, and Charles B. Dillingham, the theatrical
-manager. Arthur Woods, recently police commissioner
-of New York, and Robert Adamson, recently fire commissioner,
-were old <i>Evening Sun</i> men. Frederick
-Palmer, Associated Press correspondent with the
-British forces in the great war, and Arthur Ruhl, a
-special correspondent at the front, are <i>Evening Sun</i>
-alumni.</p>
-
-<p>In the early years of the <i>Evening Sun</i> the chief editorial
-writer was James T. Watkins, whom Mr. Laffan
-had known in California as a man of wide scholarship
-and an economic expert. He was so prolific that it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_400">400</span>
-was a common saying in the office that, with Watkins
-at his desk, the <i>Evening Sun</i> needed no other writers
-of editorial articles. Frank H. Simonds, who had been
-an editorial writer for the <i>Sun</i> since 1908, became chief
-editorial writer for the <i>Evening Sun</i> in 1913. In 1914
-his war articles attracted wide attention. He was
-afterward editor of the <i>Tribune</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Other writers for the editorial page were Edward H.
-Mullin, an Irishman from Dublin, and Frederic J.
-Gregg. The chief editorial writer is now James Luby,
-who is assisted by an <i>Evening Sun</i> veteran, Winfield
-S. Moody.</p>
-
-<p>The managing editors since W. C. McCloy have been
-Charles P. Cooper, James Luby, and the present incumbent,
-George M. Smith, for many years night editor
-of the <i>Sun</i>, and its managing editor in the absence of
-Mr. Lord.</p>
-
-<p>After Allan Kelly, the city editors were W. C. McCloy,
-Charles P. Cooper, Ervin Hawkins, Nelson Lloyd,
-and T. M. Dieuaide. Mr. Lloyd, who left the paper
-to write fiction, had served as city editor from 1897
-to 1904.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Evening Sun</i> has always had a particular appeal
-to the woman reader. Its first woman reporter, Miss
-Helen Watterson, of Cleveland, Ohio, was induced to
-come East in Brisbane’s régime to write a column called
-“The Woman About Town,” and ever since 1890 the
-staff of women writers on the paper has been increasing.
-The <i>Evening Sun</i> has a page or two a day of
-feature articles written for women, by women, about
-women.</p>
-
-<p>The financial and sports departments of the <i>Evening
-Sun</i> make it a man’s paper, too. No home-going broker
-would dare to board the subway without a copy of the
-Wall Street edition of the <i>Evening Sun</i>. A large staff<span class="pagenum" id="Page_401">401</span>
-of sporting writers, captained by Joseph Vila, provides
-each day a page or two of authoritative athletic news.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> and the <i>Evening Sun</i> are run as separate
-publications, each with a complete staff, but their
-presses and purposes are one.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_402" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_402">402</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">THE FINEST SIDE OF “THE SUN”</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>Literary Associations of an Editorial Department That Has
-Encouraged and Attracted Men of Imagination and Talent.—Mitchell,
-Hazeltine, Church, and Their Colleagues.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">The</span> <i>Sun’s</i> association with literature, particularly
-with fiction, has been more intimate than that of
-any other daily American newspaper. Ben Day had
-a taste for fiction, else the moon hoax, a bit of good
-writing as well as the greatest of fakes, would not have
-appeared. In the time of Moses Y. Beach the balloon
-hoax and other writings of Poe were in the <i>Sun</i>. Moses
-S. Beach, who owned or controlled the paper for twenty
-years, brought popularity and profit to it through
-stories written exclusively for the <i>Sun</i> by Mary J.
-Holmes, Horatio Alger, Jr., and a dozen other authors
-whose tales compelled readers to burn the midnight gas.</p>
-
-<p>Under Dana the <i>Sun’s</i> interest in literature became
-broader, more intense. Dana’s knowledge that the most
-avid appetite of the public was for the short story and
-the novel, led him to encourage his men to adopt, when
-feasible, the fiction form in news writing. In his four-page
-daily there was not much room for romance proper,
-but when the Sunday <i>Sun</i> was under way, its eight
-pages afforded space for tales of fancy.</p>
-
-<p>In the first few years of Dana’s ownership the walks
-of American literature were not crowded. As late as
-1875 the <i>Sun</i> lamented:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>For younger rising men we look almost in vain. Bret
-Harte gives no promise of lasting fecundity. Howells<span class="pagenum" id="Page_403">403</span>
-does charming work, and will probably long remain in
-position as a dainty but not suggestive or formative
-writer. Aldrich is very slight. John Hay easily won
-whatever name he has, and it will easily pass away.
-Henry James the younger is one of the rising men, the
-youth of literature.</p>
-
-<p>But of all these there is not one who has yet discovered
-the stuff out of which the kings and princes, or
-even the barons, of literature are made.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Harte, having written his most famous short stories,
-had come East. Howells, then thirty-eight, had published
-three or four novels, but “The Rise of Silas
-Lapham” was ten years ahead. John Hay, then on
-the <i>Tribune</i> editorial staff, had written his “Pike
-County Ballads” and “Castilian Days.” Henry James
-had put forth only “Watch and Ward.” To these
-budding geniuses the general public was rather inclined
-to prefer Augusta Evans’s “St. Elmo,” E. P. Roe’s
-“Barriers Burned Away,” and Edward Eggleston’s
-“Hoosier Schoolmaster.”</p>
-
-<p>Notwithstanding the expressed doubt as to Harte’s
-fecundity, Dana admired his work and printed his
-stories in the <i>Sun</i> for years afterward. Late in the
-seventies he bought Harte’s output and syndicated it—probably
-the first successful application of the newspaper
-syndicate system to fiction. About the same
-period Robert Louis Stevenson’s earlier successes, such
-as “The Treasure of Franchard” and “The Sire de
-Maletroit’s Door,” were having their first American
-printing in the <i>Sun</i>, their original appearance having
-been in <i>Temple Bar</i> and other English magazines.</p>
-
-<p>The files of the <i>Sun</i> for 1891 contain writings of
-Stevenson that are omitted from most, if not from all
-of the collections of his works. These are parts of his
-articles on the South Seas, an ambitious series which
-he was unable to finish. Some of them were printed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_404">404</span>
-in the London <i>Black and White</i>. All of them appeared
-in the <i>Sun</i>. Through the <i>Sun’s</i> literary syndicate the
-American public gained some of its earliest acquaintance
-with Harte and Henry James. Kipling’s “Light
-That Failed” had its first American appearance in the
-<i>Sun</i> in the autumn of 1890. It may interest Mr. James’s
-admirers to know that one of the Middle Western newspapers,
-having bought a James novel from the <i>Sun</i>,
-played it up with a gingery head-line:</p>
-
-<div class="p2 b1 center bold">
-<p class="larger wspace">
-GEORGINA’S REASONS!</p>
-<hr class="narrow" />
-<p>HENRY JAMES’S LATEST STORY!</p>
-<hr class="narrow" />
-<p>A Woman Who Commits Bigamy and Enforces Silence on
-Her Husband!</p>
-<hr class="narrow" />
-<p>Two Other Lives Made Miserable by Her Heartless Action!
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Among the literary men given less to fiction and more
-to history, sociology, and philosophy who have yielded
-to the <i>Sun’s</i> columns from their treasure, sometimes
-anonymously, were Jeremiah Curtin, the translator of
-Sienkiewicz and Tolstoy and an authority on folk-lore;
-George Ticknor Curtis, jurist and writer on the Constitution;
-Goldwin Smith, whose views on the subject
-of the destiny of Canada coincided with Dana’s, and
-who contributed to the <i>Sun</i> hundreds of articles from
-his store of philosophical and political wisdom; Charles
-Francis Adams, Jr., who wrote on railway management;
-General Adam Badeau, one of Grant’s biographers;
-William Elliot Griffis, probably the most authoritative
-of all American writers upon Japanese affairs;
-and Francis Lynde Stetson, the distinguished authority
-on corporation and railway law.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_404" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 33em;">
- <img src="images/i_404a.jpg" width="1577" height="2157" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
- <p>PAUL DANA</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Of the more strictly journalistic writers who, although<span class="pagenum" id="Page_405">405</span>
-not attached permanently to the <i>Sun’s</i> staff,
-contributed to its news and editorial columns, the names
-rise of James S. Pike, of Joseph Pulitzer and his predecessor
-as editor of the <i>World</i>, William Henry Hurlbut;
-of James F. Shunk and his brother-in-law, Chauncey
-F. Black, both of Pennsylvania and both humorists;
-of Edward Spencer, a writer of fiction who displayed
-splendid imaginative qualities, and of Oliver Dyer,
-whose range of ability was so great that while one day
-he wrote for Bonner’s <i>Ledger</i> advice to distressed lovers,
-the next day would find him penning for the <i>Sun</i> an
-exhaustive article on the methods employed in building
-a railroad across the Andes!</p>
-
-<p>Dana encouraged the men who wrote exclusively, or
-almost entirely, for the <i>Sun</i>, to write fiction. Edward
-P. Mitchell, whom Mr. Dana attracted to the <i>Sun</i> from
-the Lewiston (Maine) <i>Journal</i> in 1875, when Mr.
-Mitchell was twenty-three years old, wrote for the <i>Sun</i>
-at least a score of short stories of between two thousand
-and six thousand words. Two of his tales—“The
-Ablest Man in the World” and “The Tachypomp,” both
-scientific fantasies of remarkably ingenious construction,
-were included in the Scribner collection of “Short
-Stories by American Authors,” Mr. Mitchell being the
-only writer doubly represented in those volumes. “The
-Ablest Man in the World” also has its place in Stedman
-and Hutchinson’s distinguished “Library of American
-Literature.”</p>
-
-<p>Other short stories of Mr. Mitchell’s, like “The Man
-Without a Body” and “The Balloon Tree,” are remembered
-by older <i>Sun</i> readers for their ingenious form
-and delightful narrative. Mr. Mitchell’s smaller
-sketches, numbering perhaps three hundred, included
-not only fancy but humour, and particularly little
-burlesques delicately picturing the weaknesses of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_406">406</span>
-great or quasi-great men of the day. As a change from
-his strictly editorial work he might write a description
-of Mark Twain in his observatory, armed with a boat-hook
-and preparing to fend off a comet; or, becoming
-Mr. Dana’s reporter, he would expose a spiritualistic
-séance of the Eddy Brothers somewhere up in Vermont,
-or go to Madison Square to record the progress of
-George Francis Train toward world dictatorship by
-self-evolution on a diet of peanuts; or he would write
-a dramatic criticism of the appearance of the <i>Sun’s</i>
-droll friend, George, the Count Joannes, as <i>Hamlet</i>.</p>
-
-<p>These few instances, a dozen out of twenty thousand
-articles that Mr. Mitchell wrote for the <i>Sun</i>, are not
-mentioned as a key to the general tenor of his work—which
-has covered everything from the definition of a
-mugwump to the interpretation of a President’s Constitutional
-powers—but rather as an indication of the
-<i>Sun’s</i> catholicity in subjects. If incidentally they serve
-to counteract the impression that the editorship of a
-great newspaper is gained through mere erudition, as
-opposed to a fine understanding of the very human
-reader, so much the better.</p>
-
-<p>From his first day with the <i>Sun</i> Mr. Mitchell absorbed
-his chief’s lifelong belief that the range of public
-interest was infinite. As he said in 1916, in an address
-to the students of the Pulitzer School of Journalism
-on “The Newspaper Value of Non-Essentials”:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Sometimes people are as much interested in queer
-names, like Poke Stogis, for example, or in the discussion
-of a question such as “What Is the Best Ghost
-in Fiction?” or “How Should Engaged Couples Act
-at the Circus?” or “What Is a Dodunk?” or “Do the
-Angels Play Football?” as some other people are interested
-in the conference of the great powers.</p>
-
-<p>It is well to remember always this psychological factor.
-Both the range of the newspaper and the attractive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_407">407</span>
-power of the writer for the newspaper in any department
-depend upon the breadth of sympathy with human
-affairs and the diversity of things in which he, the
-writer, takes a genuine personal interest.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In that speech the <i>Sun’s</i> judgment of what the people
-want, whether it be in news, editorial, or fiction, is restated
-exactly as it might have been stated at any time
-within the last fifty years. And Dana and Mitchell are
-found in agreement not only upon the subject of what
-the reader wishes, but upon the necessity for the
-preservation in newspapers, as well as in books, of the
-ideals of the language. Speaking at a conference held
-at Princeton University in 1917, Mr. Mitchell said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The most serious practical evil that will result from
-the elimination of the classics will fall upon the English
-language itself. The racial memory begins to decay,
-the racial imagination, the begetter of memory, begins
-to weaken, the sense of precise meanings begins to lose
-its edge, and the English language ceases to be a vital
-thing and becomes a mere code of arbitrary signals
-wigwagged from mouth to ear. Were I the emergency
-autocrat of this language, I should proclaim in drastic
-regulations and enforce by severe penalties the American
-duty of adherence to the old habits of speech, the
-old scrupulous respect for the finer shades of meaning,
-the old rigid observance of the morality of word relations;
-and this, I believe, can be done only by maintaining
-the classical culture at high potency.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr. Mitchell was born in Maine in 1852, and was
-graduated from Bowdoin in 1871. It is curious to note,
-scanning the names of the editors and proprietors, how
-the <i>Sun</i> has drawn upon New England.</p>
-
-<p>Benjamin H. Day was born in West Springfield,
-Massachusetts, April 10, 1810.</p>
-
-<p>Moses Yale Beach was born in Wallingford, Connecticut,
-January 7, 1800.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_408">408</span></p>
-
-<p>Moses Sperry Beach was born in Springfield, Massachusetts,
-October 5, 1822.</p>
-
-<p>Charles A. Dana was born in Hinsdale, New Hampshire,
-August 8, 1819.</p>
-
-<p>Edward P. Mitchell was born in Bath, Maine, March
-24, 1852.</p>
-
-<p>Frank A. Munsey was born in Mercer, Maine, August
-21, 1854.</p>
-
-<p>Any grouping of <i>Sun</i> men on the purely literary side
-brings the name of Hazeltine to stand with those of
-Dana and Mitchell. Mayo Williamson Hazeltine was
-a fine example of the scholar in newspaper work; an
-example of the way in which Dana, with his intellectual
-magnificence, found the best for his papers.</p>
-
-<p>Educated at Harvard and Oxford and in continental
-Europe, Hazeltine came to the <i>Sun</i> in 1878, and was its
-literary critic until his death in 1909. During the same
-period he was also one of its principal writers of articles
-on foreign politics and sociology. His book-reviews,
-published in the <i>Sun</i> on Sundays, which made the initials
-“M. W. H.” familiar to the whole English-reading
-world, were marvels of comprehension. Many a publisher
-of a three-volume historical work lamented when
-it attracted Hazeltine’s attention, for his review, whether
-two columns or seven, usually compressed into that
-space all that the average student cared to know about
-the book, reducing the high cost of reading from six
-or eight dollars to a nickel.</p>
-
-<p>Hazeltine enjoyed, under both Dana and Mitchell,
-practically his own choice of subjects, a free hand with
-them, and a generous income; and in return, for more
-than thirty years, he poured into the columns of the
-<i>Sun</i> a wealth of the erudition which was his by right
-of education, travel, an intense interest in all things
-intellectual, and a wonderful memory.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_409">409</span></p>
-
-<p>In the list of writers of editorial articles which includes
-Dana, Mitchell, William O. Bartlett, and Hazeltine,
-are found also the names of Frank P. Church,
-E. M. Kingsbury, Napoleon L. Thiéblin, James Henry
-Wilson, John Swinton, Henry B. Stanton, Fitz-Henry
-Warren, William T. Washburn, Harold M. Anderson,
-Frank H. Simonds, and Henry M. Armstrong. Of these
-Church stands alone as the writer in whose case the
-<i>Sun</i> broke its rule that the anonymity of editorial
-writers is absolute. After Mr. Church’s death on April
-11, 1906, it was announced in the <i>Sun</i> that he was the
-author of what for more than twenty years has been
-regarded as the most popular editorial article ever
-written. It appeared on September 21, 1897:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<div class="intact">
-<p class="center b1 wspace">IS THERE A SANTA CLAUS?</p>
-
-<p>We take pleasure in answering at once and thus
-prominently the communication below, expressing at
-the same time our great gratification that its faithful
-author is numbered among the friends of the <i>Sun</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="in0"><span class="smcap">Dear Editor</span>:</p>
-
-<p>I am eight years old. Some of my little friends
-say there is no Santa Claus. Papa says “If you
-see it in the <i>Sun</i> it’s so.” Please tell me the truth,
-is there a Santa Claus?</p>
-
-<p class="p0 sigright">
-<span class="smcap">Virginia O’Hanlon.</span>
-</p>
-
-<p class="in0">115 West Ninety-Fifth Street.</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Virginia, your little friends are wrong. They have
-been affected by the skepticism of a skeptical age. They
-do not believe except they see. They think that nothing
-can be which is not comprehensible by their little minds.
-All minds, Virginia, whether they be men’s or children’s,
-are little. In this great universe of ours man is a mere
-insect, an ant, in his intellect, as compared with the
-boundless world about him, as measured by the intelligence
-capable of grasping the whole of truth and
-knowledge.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_410">410</span></p>
-
-<p>Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus. He exists as
-certainly as love and generosity and devotion exist, and
-you know that they abound and give to your life its
-highest beauty and joy. Alas, how dreary would be the
-world if there were no Santa Claus! It would be as
-dreary as if there were no Virginias. There would be
-no childlike faith then, no poetry, no romance, to make
-tolerable this existence. We should have no enjoyment
-except in sense and sight. The eternal light with which
-childhood fills the world would be extinguished.</p>
-
-<p>Not believe in Santa Claus! You might as well not
-believe in fairies! You might get your papa to hire
-men to watch in all the chimneys on Christmas Eve to
-catch Santa Claus, but even if they did not see Santa
-Claus coming down, what would that prove? Nobody
-sees Santa Claus, but that is no sign that there is no
-Santa Claus. The most real things in the world are
-those that neither children nor men can see. Did you
-ever see fairies dancing on the lawn? Of course not,
-but that’s no proof that they are not there. Nobody
-can conceive or imagine all the wonders there are unseen
-and unseeable in the world.</p>
-
-<p>You tear apart the baby’s rattle and see what makes
-the noise inside, but there is a veil covering the unseen
-world which not the strongest man, nor even the united
-strength of all the strongest men that ever lived, could
-tear apart. Only faith, fancy, poetry, love, romance,
-can push aside that curtain and view and picture the
-supernal beauty and glory beyond. Is it all real? Ah,
-Virginia, in all this world there is nothing else real and
-abiding.</p>
-
-<p>No Santa Claus! Thank God, he lives, and he lives
-forever. A thousand years from now, Virginia, nay, ten
-times ten thousand years from now, he will continue to
-make glad the heart of childhood.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Church, as one intimate wrote upon his death, after
-more than thirty years with the <i>Sun</i>, had all the literary
-gifts, “the tender fancy, the sympathetic understanding
-of human nature, the humour, now wistful, now joyous,
-the unsurpassed delicacy of touch.”</p>
-
-<div id="ip_410" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 33em;">
- <img src="images/i_410a.jpg" width="1599" height="2038" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
- <p>WILLIAM M. LAFFAN</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_411">411</span></p>
-
-<p>In dramatic criticism, where the <i>Sun</i> has required
-from its writers somewhat more than the mere ability
-to praise or blame, its roster bears such names as Frank
-Bowman, Willard Bartlett, Elihu Root, William Stewart
-(“Walsingham”), who was the first of the dramatic
-critics to adopt an intimate style; Andrew Carpenter
-Wheeler, better known to the public under his
-pen-name of “Nym Crinkle,” whose reviews were a feature
-of the Sunday issue of the <i>Sun</i>; William M. Laffan,
-the always brilliant and sometimes caustic; Franklin
-Fyles, who wrote plays as well as reviews of plays;
-John Corbin, the scholarly analyst; Walter Prichard
-Eaton, author of “The American Stage of To-day,”
-and Lawrence Reamer, who has been with the <i>Sun</i>, as
-reporter or critic, for a quarter of a century.</p>
-
-<p>In criticism of opera and other musical events the
-<i>Sun</i>, through the writings of William J. Henderson,
-has pleased the general public as well as the musicians,
-and has added many sound and scholarly chapters to
-newspaper literature.</p>
-
-<p>In book-reviewing a hundred pens have served the
-<i>Sun</i>. Hazeltine, E. P. Mitchell, Willard Bartlett, Erasmus
-D. Beach, George Bendelari, Miss Dana Gatlin,
-H. M. Anderson, and Grant M. Overton are but a few
-of the men and women who have told <i>Sun</i> readers what’s
-worth while.</p>
-
-<p>For <i>Sun</i> reporters the Sunday paper has been a favourable
-field for an excursion into fiction-writing. In
-its columns a man with a tale to tell has every chance.
-There William Norr gave, in his “Pearl of Chinatown,”
-the real atmosphere of a little part of New York that
-once held romance. It was for the Sunday <i>Sun</i> that
-Edward W. Townsend created his celebrated characters,
-<i>Chimmie Fadden</i>, <i>Miss Fanny</i>, <i>Mr. Paul</i>, and the rest
-of that happy, if slangy, family. Clarence L. Cullen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_412">412</span>
-laid bare the soul of alcoholic adventurers in his “Tales
-of the Ex-Tanks.” Ed Mott made famous the bears of
-Pike County, Pennsylvania. David A. Curtis related
-the gambling ways of <i>Old Man Greenlaw</i> and his associates.
-Charles Lynch conferred the title of the Duke
-of Essex Street upon an obscure lawyer, and made him
-the talk of the East Side. Joseph Goodwin brought to
-the notice of an ignorant world the ways of <i>Sarsaparilla
-Reilly</i> and other Park Row restaurant heroes. David
-Graham Phillips, Samuel Hopkins Adams, and other
-men destined to be known through their books, ground
-out, for glory and eight dollars a column, the yarns—sometimes
-fact turned into fiction, sometimes fiction
-masked as fact—that kept the readers of the Sunday
-<i>Sun</i> from getting out into the open air.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_413" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_413">413</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">“THE SUN” AND YELLOW JOURNALISM</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>The Coming and Going of a Newspaper Disease.—Dana’s
-Attitude Toward President Cleveland.—Dana’s Death.—Ownerships
-of Paul Dana, Laffan, Reich, and Munsey.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="smcap1">Of</span> such things as we have mentioned here, putting
-into the necessary news, attractively written, a
-proper seasoning of regional colour and atmosphere,
-humour and pathos, the <i>Sun</i> has been made since Dana
-came to it. He created a new journalism, but it was
-a decent and distinct kind, appealing to the intellect
-rather than to the passions. It gave room for the honest
-expression of everybody’s opinion, from Herbert
-Spencer to <i>Chimmie Fadden</i>. Because of this, because
-he had lifted American newspaper work out of the dust
-of tradition, Dana had a holy anger when a newer
-journalism tried to throw it into the mud.</p>
-
-<p>When Henry Watterson was called as an expert witness
-in proceedings to appraise the estate of Joseph
-Pulitzer, in 1914, the veteran editor of the Louisville
-<i>Courier-Journal</i> made an interesting statement on this
-subject:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>There is much confusion in the public mind about
-what is known as “yellow journalism.” There have been
-several periods of it in New York. James Gordon Bennett
-was the first yellow journalist, and Charles A. Dana
-was the second. Mr. Pulitzer was the third. Finally,
-when Mr. Hearst came along, he was the fourth, and
-I think he quite filled the field of yellow journalism.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_414">414</span></p>
-
-<p>As Mr. Bennett became more respectable and Mr.
-Dana more fixed in his efforts, they were raised in the
-public estimation. So was Mr. Pulitzer. I think the
-field of yellow journalism is so filled by the Hearst
-newspapers that they no more compete with the <i>World</i>
-than with the <i>Herald</i> or the <i>Sun</i>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr. Watterson did not define yellow journalism.
-Perhaps he considered it broadly as sensational journalism.
-The elder Bennett was sensational to the extent
-that he printed things which the sixpenny papers
-of his time did not print. He made the interview
-popular, and he was the first editor to see the value
-of paying attention to financial news.</p>
-
-<p>So far as printing human news is concerned, Benjamin
-H. Day worked that field before Bennett started the
-<i>Herald</i>. If Mr. Watterson considered Dana a yellow
-journalist, what else was Day, with his stories about
-the sodden things of the police-courts, or his description
-of Miss Susan Allen smoking a cigar and dancing in
-Broadway?</p>
-
-<p>Printing a diagram of the scene of a murder, with
-a big black X to mark the spot where the victim was
-found, did not make the <i>World</i> a yellow newspaper,
-for Amos Cummings began to print murder charts as
-soon as he became managing editor of the <i>Sun</i>. Putting
-black-faced type over a story on the front page
-did not make the <i>World</i> or the <i>Journal</i> yellow, for
-Cummings, when he was on the <i>Tribune</i>, was the first
-to use big type in head-lines, and the <i>Tribune</i> was never
-accused of yellowness.</p>
-
-<p>If pictures made a paper yellow, Dana was not yellow,
-for he used few illustrations in the news pages of the
-paper. Again, if head-lines indicate yellowness, Dana
-must be acquitted of being a yellow journalist; for the
-head-lines of the <i>Sun</i>, from the first year of Dana’s control<span class="pagenum" id="Page_415">415</span>
-until after his death, remained practically unchanged,
-and were conservative to the last degree.</p>
-
-<p>Head-lines and pictures, so far as their sensational
-attraction was concerned, meant nothing to Dana. He
-was not yellow, but white and alive. The distinction
-was clearly explained by Mr. Mitchell:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Remember the difference between white and yellow.
-The essential difference is not of method or quality of
-product, but of purpose and of moral responsibility or
-moral debasement. Yellow will tell you that it means
-force, originality, and independence in the presentation
-of ideas. This is consolatory to yellow, but not accurate.
-Yellow will print an interesting exaggeration
-or misstatement, knowing it to be such. If in doubt
-about the truth of alleged news, but in no doubt whatever
-as to its immediate value as a sensation, yellow will
-give the benefit of the doubt to the sensation every time,
-and print it with head-lines tall enough to reach to
-Saturn. White won’t; that is the only real color test.
-I hope you are all going to be white, and not only white,
-but red, white, and blue.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>No yellow journalist he, Dana! To paraphrase Webster,
-he smote the rock of humanity, and abundant
-streams of literature rushed forth. If he startled, he
-startled the intellect, not the eye. His appeals were
-to the intelligence, the soul, the risibilities of man, and
-not to his primitive passions. He believed that all the
-information, the philosophy, and the humour of the
-world could be conveyed through the type of a daily
-newspaper as surely as and much more broadly than they
-had been conveyed through the various mediums of the
-old newspapers, the encyclopedias, the novels, the pulpit,
-and the lecture platform.</p>
-
-<p>When Dana attacked yellow journalism—the expressive
-phrase was fastened in the language by Ervin
-Wardman, in the <i>Press</i>—it was in the firm belief that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_416">416</span>
-this new journalism, the “journalism that did things,”
-was doing the wrong thing; that it was breaking down
-the magnificent structure that had been reared by himself
-and Greeley and Raymond and Bennett and Hurlbut.
-This group had been possessed of all the newspaper
-faculties and facilities. If yellow journalism had
-been right, they would have raised it to its highest peak.
-Dana, who knew better than any editor of his time what
-the public wanted, could have produced a perfect yellow
-<i>Sun</i>; but he chose to print a golden one. He wrought
-more genuine journalistic advance than any other man
-in history. As Mr. Mitchell wrote of him in <i>McClure’s
-Magazine</i> in October, 1894, three years before Mr.
-Dana’s death:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The revolution which his genius and invention have
-wrought in the methods of practical journalism in
-America during the past twenty-five years can be estimated
-only by newspaper-makers. His mind, always
-original, and unblunted and unwearied at seventy-five,
-has been a prolific source of new ideas in the art of
-gathering, presenting, and discussing attractively the
-news of the world.</p>
-
-<p>He is a radical and unterrified innovator, caring not
-a copper for tradition or precedent when a change of
-method promises a real improvement. Restlessness like
-his, without his genius, discrimination, and honesty of
-purpose, scatters and loses itself in mere whimsicalities
-or pettinesses; or else it deliberately degrades the newspaper
-upon which it is exercised.</p>
-
-<p>To Mr. Dana’s personal invention are due many, if
-not most, of the broad changes which within a quarter
-of a century have transformed journalism in this country.
-From his individual perception of the true philosophy
-of human interest, more than from any other
-single source, have come the now general repudiation
-of the old conventional standards of news importance;
-the modern newspaper’s appreciation of the news value
-of the sentiment and humor of the daily life around us;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_417">417</span>
-the recognition of the principle that a small incident,
-interesting in itself and well told, may be worth a
-column’s space, when a large, dull fact is hardly worth
-a stickful’s; the surprising extension of the daily newspaper’s
-province so as to cover every department of
-general literature, and to take in the world’s fancies
-and imaginings as well as its actual events.</p>
-
-<p>The word “news” has an entirely different significance
-from what it possessed twenty-five or thirty years
-ago under the ancient common law of journalism as
-derived from England; and in the production of this
-immense change, greatly in the interest of mankind
-and of the cheerfulness of daily life, it would be difficult
-to exaggerate the direct and indirect influence of
-Mr. Dana’s alert, scholarly, and widely sympathetic
-perceptions.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div id="ip_416" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 34em;">
- <img src="images/i_416a.jpg" width="1624" height="2331" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
- <p>WILLIAM C. REICK</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The assaults which Dana made upon yellow journalism
-were not actuated by the jealous envy of one
-who has himself overlooked an opportunity. Everything
-that the <i>Sun</i> attacked in yellow newspapers was
-something to which the <i>Sun</i> itself never would have
-stooped—the faked or distorted interview, the product
-of the thief or the eavesdropper, the collection of back-stairs
-gossip, the pilfered photograph, the revelation of
-personal affairs beyond the public’s business, the arrogation
-of official authority, the maudlin plea for sympathy
-in a factitious cause, the gross exaggeration for
-sensation’s sake of a trifling occurrence, the appeal
-to sensualism, and the demagogic attack upon the
-rich.</p>
-
-<p>Right endures, and where is yellow journalism?
-Gone where the woodbine twineth. Its prototype, the
-wild ass, stamps o’er its head and cannot break its sleep.
-The “journalism that does things” doesn’t do anything
-any more except to try and teach its men to write
-articles the way the <i>Sun</i> has been printing them since
-1868. In a chart of new journalism the largest, blackest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_418">418</span>
-X-mark would show where the body of new journalism,
-slain by public taste, lies buried forever.</p>
-
-<p>The New York <i>World</i>, once the most ingenious exponent
-of yellow journalism, has become as conservative
-as the <i>Sun</i> was in the days when Joseph Pulitzer worked
-for Dana. Mr. Hearst’s papers, once the deepest of all
-yellows, now hold up their hands in horror when they
-see, beside them on the news-stands, the bold, black
-head-lines of the <i>Evening Post</i>!</p>
-
-<p>Yellow journalism said to its readers:</p>
-
-<p>“This way to the big show! We have a mutilated
-corpse, a scandal in high life, divorce details that
-weren’t brought out in court, a personal attack on the
-mayor, lifelike pictures of dead rats, the memoirs of a
-demented dressmaker, some neatly invented prison horrors,
-and a general denunciation of everybody who owns
-more than five hundred dollars. Don’t miss it!”</p>
-
-<p>Dana said to his readers:</p>
-
-<p>“Come, let me show you the clean stream of life;
-the newsboy with the trained dog, the new painting at
-the Metropolitan Museum, an Arabian restaurant on the
-East Side, the new Governor at Albany, the latest theory
-of planetary control, one book by Old Sleuth and another
-by Henry James, a ghost in a Berkshire tavern
-and an authentic recipe for strawberry shortcake, a
-clown who reads Molière and a king who plays pinochle,
-a digest of ten volumes of history and the shortest complete
-poem (“This bliz knocks biz”) ever written, a
-dark tragedy in the Jersey pines and a plan for a new
-subway, a talk with the Grand Lama and a home-run by
-Roger Connor, a panic in Wall Street and a poor little
-girl who finds a quarter.”</p>
-
-<p>In the long run—and it did not have to be very long—the
-more attractive offering was permanently chosen
-by newspaper-readers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_419">419</span></p>
-
-<p>The curious effect on American journalism of the
-conflict between <i>Sun</i> methods and the so-called new
-journalism was referred to, in an address delivered at
-Yale University on January 12, 1903, by Frank A.
-Munsey, then owner of the New York <i>Daily News</i> and
-now proprietor of the <i>Sun</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The newspaperman of to-day is a composite type, the
-product of the <i>Sun</i> and the New York <i>World</i> of fifteen
-or eighteen years ago. These two newspapers represented
-two distinct and widely different styles of journalism.
-The <i>World</i> was alert, daring, aggressive, and
-sensational. It was about the liveliest thing that ever
-swung into New York from the West.... No man has
-ever stamped himself more thoroughly upon his generation
-than has Joseph Pulitzer on the journalism of
-America. He was the originator and the founder of
-our present type of overgrown newspaper, with its illustrations
-and its merits and its defects.</p>
-
-<p>The part the <i>Sun</i> played in this recreating and rejuvenating
-of the American press was purely literary.
-It was the first newspaper to make fiction out of facts—that
-is, to handle facts with the skill and manner of
-the novelist, so that they read like fiction and possessed
-all its charm and fascination. The <i>Sun</i> at that time
-consisted of but four pages, and I am convinced that
-it was the best example of newspaper-making ever produced
-anywhere. With the exception of one or two of
-these fiction-fact stories so charmingly told, it was the
-perfection of condensation, accuracy, brilliancy.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr. Munsey did not say, because it was not germane
-to his subject, that for fourteen years before the advent
-of Pulitzer, Dana had been demonstrating the news
-value of the human-interest story, and that it was
-almost entirely upon the human-interest story, twisted
-and exaggerated, that yellow journalism was founded.
-Mr. Munsey did not say, for he could not know, that
-fifteen years after his address at Yale the new journalism<span class="pagenum" id="Page_420">420</span>
-would be extinct and the <i>Sun</i> would be still
-the <i>Sun</i>. The editors of to-day do not ask a reporter
-whether he can climb a porch or photograph an unwilling
-person, but whether he can see news and write it.</p>
-
-<p>An adequate history of the <i>Sun’s</i> political activities
-during Dana’s time would fill volumes. Rather than
-the editor of an organ of the opposition, Dana was
-usually an opposition party in himself; not merely for
-the sake of opposition, but because the parties in power
-from 1869 to 1897 usually happened to have practices
-or principles with which he, as the editor of the <i>Sun</i>,
-was in disagreement. His attacks on the Grant administration
-for the thievery that spotted it, and on the
-Hayes administration because of the circumstances
-under which Mr. Hayes came to the Presidential chair,
-were bitter and without relent. His opposition to
-Grover Cleveland, an intellectual rather than a personal
-war, began before Mr. Cleveland was a national figure.
-In September, 1882, when the hitherto obscure Buffalonian
-was nominated for Governor of New York, the
-<i>Sun</i> said:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>It is usually not a wise thing in politics, any more
-than in war, to take a private from the ranks and at
-one bound to promote him to be commander-in-chief;
-yet that is what has been done in the case of Grover
-Cleveland.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the Presidential campaign of 1884 the <i>Sun</i> would
-not support Cleveland and could not support Blaine,
-whose conduct in Congress the <i>Sun</i> had frequently condemned;
-so it advocated the hopeless cause of General
-Benjamin F. Butler, who had been elected Governor of
-Massachusetts in 1882, the year when Cleveland was
-chosen Governor of New York. Dana was not an
-admirer of Butler’s spectacular army career, or of his
-general political leanings, but he admired him for his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_421">421</span>
-attitude in the Hayes-Tilden scandal, and he believed
-that Butler, if elected President, would shake things up
-in Washington. The <i>Sun</i> supported him “as a man to
-be immensely preferred to either of the others and as
-a protest against such nominations.” Dana personally
-announced that sooner than support Blaine he would
-quit work and burn his pen.</p>
-
-<p>In 1885, opposing Cleveland’s free-trade policy, the
-<i>Sun</i> vigorously supported Samuel J. Randall, of Pennsylvania,
-a protectionist Democrat, for speaker of the
-House, as against John G. Carlisle, of Kentucky, a free-trader;
-but Randall was beaten.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> ridiculed Cleveland’s theories of civil-service
-reform, although it believed that real reforms were
-needed. On this point Dana wrote, in a letter:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>I do not believe in the establishment in this country
-of the German bureaucratic system, with its permanent
-staff of office-holders who are not responsible to the
-people, and whose tenure of place knows no variation
-and no end except the end of life. In my judgment a
-genuine reform of the evils complained of is reached by
-the vigorous simplification of the machinery of government,
-by the repeal of all superfluous laws, the abolition
-of every needless office, and the dismissal of every needless
-officer. The true American doctrine on this subject
-consists in the diminution of government, not in its
-increase.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>For all of its opposition to Cleveland, whom it dubbed
-the “stuffed prophet,” the <i>Sun</i> preferred him to General
-Harrison in the campaign of 1888. It feared a return
-to power of the influences which it had combated during
-the administrations of Grant and Hayes. Four years
-afterward, however, the <i>Sun</i> was strongly against the
-third nomination of Cleveland.</p>
-
-<p>In Mr. Cleveland’s second term the <i>Sun</i> supported his
-course when Dana believed it to be American. While<span class="pagenum" id="Page_422">422</span>
-at first it considered the President too mild and conciliatory
-in matters of foreign policy, it praised him and
-his Secretary of State, Richard Olney, for their stand
-against Great Britain in the Venezuela boundary dispute;
-praised them just as heartily as it had condemned
-Mr. Cleveland’s earlier action in the Hawaiian matter,
-when the President withdrew the treaty of annexation
-which his predecessor had sent to the Senate.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun’s</i> most deadly weapon, ridicule, was constantly
-in play in the years of the Hawaiian complications.
-It found vulnerable spots in Mr. Cleveland’s
-re-establishment of the deposed Queen Liliuokalani and
-in the President’s sending of a commissioner—“Paramount”
-Blount, as the <i>Sun</i> called him—without the
-advice and consent of the Senate. As jealous then as
-it is to-day of any raid by the Executive upon the Constitution
-or the powers of Congress, the <i>Sun</i> had the
-satisfaction of a complete victory in the Hawaiian
-matter.</p>
-
-<p>On the other hand, the <i>Sun</i> applauded Mr. Cleveland’s
-attitude on the money question and his brave
-stand against the mob in the Chicago railway strikes of
-1894, when the President used troops to prevent the
-obstruction of the mails by Eugene V. Debs and his
-followers.</p>
-
-<p>Dana was seventy-seven years old when William J.
-Bryan—whom the <i>Sun</i> had already immortalized as the
-Boy Orator of the Platte—was nominated for the Presidency
-in 1896, but the veteran editor went at the task
-of exposing the free-silver fallacy with the same blithe
-vigour that he had shown twenty years before. His
-opinion, printed in the <i>Sun</i> of August 6, 1896, is a good
-example of Dana’s clear style:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The Chicago platform invites us to establish a currency
-which will enable a man to pay his debts with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_423">423</span>
-half as much property as he would have to use in order
-to pay them now. This proposition is dishonest. I do
-not say that all the advocates of the free coinage of
-silver are dishonest. Thousands of them—millions, if
-there be so many—are doubtless honest in intention.
-But I am unable to reconcile with any ideal of integrity
-a change in the law which will permit a man who has
-borrowed a hundred dollars to pay his debt with a
-hundred dollars each one of which is worth only half
-as much as each dollar he received from the lender.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div id="ip_422" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 34em;">
- <img src="images/i_422a.jpg" width="1606" height="2210" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
- <p>FRANK A. MUNSEY</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>Dana’s opinions on political questions were more
-eagerly sought than those of any other editor after
-Greeley’s death, and the <i>Sun’s</i> political news was complete;
-yet with Dana, and with the <i>Sun</i>, politics was,
-after all, only one small part of life. The whole world,
-with its facts and fancies, not the political problems of
-one continent, was the real field to be covered.</p>
-
-<p>Dana’s curiosity was all-embracing. After the <i>Sun’s</i>
-financial success was assured he went abroad frequently,
-and saw not only western Europe, but Russia and the
-Levant. Of these he wrote in his “Eastern Journeys.”
-He knew a dozen languages. He conversed with the
-Pope about Dante and with Russian peasants about
-Tolstoy. His knowledge of Spanish, acquired early in
-life, made easy his travels in Mexico and Cuba. Everywhere
-he went he talked of freedom with its friends, and
-encouraged them. He knew Kossuth, Mazzini, Garibaldi,
-Clémenceau, Marti, and Parnell.</p>
-
-<p>At home, Dana’s amusements were chiefly literary
-and artistic—the study of languages, history, and
-<i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">belles-lettres</i>, the collection of pottery and pictures.
-His Chinese porcelains were perhaps the best, in point
-of quality, in the Occident.</p>
-
-<p>“I am persuaded,” one critic said of them, “that Mr.
-Dana must have had a most profound instinct in relation
-to the whole subject.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_424">424</span></p>
-
-<p>After Mr. Dana’s death these porcelains, about four
-hundred in number, were sold at auction for nearly
-two hundred thousand dollars.</p>
-
-<p>In winter Dana lived in a large house which he built
-in 1880 at the corner of Madison Avenue and Sixtieth
-Street, and which held the art treasures that he began
-to gather in the first days of his prosperity. Here he
-kept his pictures, notably some fine specimens of the
-Barbizon school, and his books, which included some
-rare volumes, but which in the main were chosen for
-their usefulness.</p>
-
-<p>Dana’s happiest days were spent at his country place,
-Dosoris, an island near Glen Cove, on the north shore
-of Long Island. There, around a large, old-fashioned,
-square frame house, he made roads and flower-beds and
-planted trees from many parts of the world. He grew
-an oak from an acorn that was brought from the tomb
-of Confucius. He knew Gray’s “Botany” almost by
-heart, and could give an intimate description of every
-flower in the Dosoris gardens. His interest in plants
-was so deep that once, while travelling in Cuba with an
-eminent painter, he led his companion for hours through
-the hot hills of Vuelta Abajo in order to satisfy himself
-that a certain variety of pine did <em>not</em> grow in that
-region.</p>
-
-<p>Dana’s was a normal, healthy life. He was a good
-horseman and swimmer and a great walker. When he
-was seventy-five years old he climbed to the top of
-Croyden Mountain, in New Hampshire, with a party
-of younger men puffing behind him. He found pleasure
-in all of life, whether it was at the office, where he
-worked steadily but not feverishly, or with his family
-among the rural delights of Dosoris, or surrounded by
-congenial literary spirits at the dinner-table.</p>
-
-<p>He knew no illness until his last summer. Up to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_425">425</span>
-June, 1897, the sturdy figure and the kindly face framed
-in a white beard were as familiar to the <i>Sun</i> office as
-they were in the seventies. With Dana there was no
-slow decay of body or mind. He died at Dosoris on
-October 17, 1897, in the thirtieth year of his reign over
-the <i>Sun</i>.</p>
-
-<p>A few years before, on observing an obituary paragraph
-which Mr. Dana had written about some noted
-man, John Swinton asked his chief how much space he
-(Swinton) would get when his time came.</p>
-
-<p>“For you, John, two sticks,” said Mr. Dana. Turning
-to Mr. Mitchell, then his chief editorial writer, he
-added: “For me, two lines.”</p>
-
-<p>On the morning after Mr. Dana’s death every newspaper
-but one in New York printed columns about the
-career of the dean of American journalism. The <i>Sun</i>
-printed only ten words, and these were carried at the
-head of the first editorial column, without a heading:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Charles Anderson Dana</span>, editor of the <i>Sun</i>, died
-yesterday afternoon.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr. Swinton perhaps believed that Mr. Dana was
-joking when he said “two lines,” but Mr. Mitchell knew
-that his chief was in earnest. The order was characteristic
-of Dana. It was not false modesty. Perhaps it
-was a certain fine vanity that told him what was true—that
-he and his work were known throughout the
-land; that the <i>Sun</i>, in its perfection the product of his
-genius and vigour, would continue to rise as regularly
-as its celestial namesake; that all he had done would
-live on. He had made the paper so great that the withdrawal
-from it of one man’s hand was negligible.</p>
-
-<p>Dana was gone, but his son remained as principal
-owner, and his chief writer and most intimate intellectual
-associate for twenty years was left to form the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_426">426</span>
-<i>Sun’s</i> policies as he had moulded them in Dana’s absences
-and as he shapes them to-day. His publisher,
-the astute Laffan, was still in charge of the <i>Sun’s</i> financial
-affairs. Other men whom he had found and trained,
-like Frank P. Church, Mayo W. Hazeltine, and Edward
-M. Kingsbury in the editorial department, and Chester
-S. Lord and Daniel F. Kellogg in the news department,
-continued their work as if Dana still lived.</p>
-
-<p>With their grief doubt was not mingled. The <i>Sun’s</i>
-success resulted from no secret formula that died with
-the discoverer. Half of Dana’s victory came by his
-attraction to himself of men who saw life and literature
-as he saw them; and so, in a magnificent way, he had
-made his work dispensable.</p>
-
-<p>And Dana’s was always the magnificent way. To
-him journalism was not a means of making money, but
-of interesting, elevating, and making happy every one
-who read the <i>Sun</i> or wrote for it. He raised his profession
-to new heights. As Hazeltine wrote in the <i>North
-American Review</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>One of Mr. Dana’s special titles to the remembrance
-of his fellow workers in the newspaper calling is the fact
-that, more than any other man on either side of the
-Atlantic, he raised their vocation to a level with the
-legal and medical professions as regards the scale of
-remuneration. He honored his fellow craftsmen of the
-pen, and he compelled the world to honor them.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Shortly after the death of his father, Paul Dana, who
-was then forty-five years old, and who had been on the
-<i>Sun</i> editorial staff for seventeen years, was made editor
-by vote of the trustees of the Sun Printing and Publishing
-Association. In the following year (1898) the
-younger Dana bought from Thomas Hitchcock, who was
-one of Charles A. Dana’s associates both in a financial<span class="pagenum" id="Page_427">427</span>
-and in a literary way, enough shares to give him the
-control of the paper.</p>
-
-<p>Paul Dana continued in control of the property for
-several years and held with credit his father’s title of
-editor until 1903. William Mackay Laffan, who had
-been associated with the elder Dana since 1877, next
-obtained the business control. His proprietorship was
-announced on February 22, 1902, and it continued until
-his death in 1909.<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">A</a></p>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="in0"><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="fnanchor">A</a> The following editorial article appeared in the <i>Sun</i> on July 26, 1918:</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Paul Dana calls the <i>Sun’s</i> attention to what he claims was an
-error in ‘The Story of the <i>Sun</i>’ as it originally appeared in the <i>Munsey
-Magazine</i>: the statement that ‘he [Mr. Dana] continued in control
-of the property until 1900.’ Mr. Dana states that he did not dispose
-of his controlling interest until 1902. The statement in the <i>Munsey
-Magazine</i> publication of ‘The Story of the <i>Sun</i>’ was founded upon the
-International Encyclopædia’s biography of William M. Laffan and also
-upon a statement published in the <i>Sun</i> at the time of Mr. Laffan’s
-death in 1909, that Mr. Laffan obtained the control of the <i>Sun</i> in 1900.
-When the <i>Munsey Magazine</i> articles were reprinted in the Sunday <i>Sun</i>
-the paragraph referred to by Mr. Dana was changed to read as follows:</p>
-
-<p>“‘Paul Dana continued in control of the property for several years
-and held with credit his father’s title of editor until 1903. William
-Mackay Laffan, who had been associated with the elder Dana since
-1877, obtained the business control. His proprietorship was announced
-on February 22, 1902, and it continued until his death in 1909.’</p>
-
-<p>“We will let Mr. Dana’s version of this matter stand in ‘The Story
-of the <i>Sun</i>’ unless some further evidence appears on the disputed
-point.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>Among the makers of the <i>Sun</i> who best knew the
-paper and the intellectual demands of its readers,
-Laffan must be included with Dana and Mitchell. At
-the time when he came to be master of the paper, his
-career had covered the entire journalistic field, and he
-was, moreover, a thorough <i>Sun</i> man, sympathetic with
-all the ideals of his old friend Dana.</p>
-
-<p>Laffan, who was born in Dublin, Ireland, and had a
-light and delightful brogue, was educated at Trinity
-College and at St. Cecilia’s School of Medicine. When
-he was twenty he went to San Francisco, where, beginning
-as a reporter, he became city editor of the <i>Chronicle</i>
-and managing editor of the <i>Bulletin</i>. In 1870 he went<span class="pagenum" id="Page_428">428</span>
-to Baltimore, to be a reporter on the <i>Daily Bulletin</i>,
-and of this newspaper he became editor and part owner.
-Eventually he became the full owner of both the <i>Daily
-Bulletin</i> and the <i>Sunday Bulletin</i>, and in this capacity
-he endeared himself to the citizens of Baltimore by his
-fight against political rings.</p>
-
-<p>He left newspaper work for a short time to become
-general passenger-agent of the Long Island Railroad;
-but in 1877, on Mr. Dana’s invitation, he went on the
-<i>Sun</i> as a general writer. Himself an artist who modelled
-in clay, painted in oils and water-colours, and
-etched, his judgment made him valuable to the paper
-as an art critic.</p>
-
-<p>Like Mr. Dana, he was interested in Chinese porcelains,
-and he made a deeper study of them than did
-his employer. When a catalogue was needed for the
-Chinese porcelains in the Morgan collection in the
-Metropolitan Museum of Art, Mr. Laffan, who was an
-active trustee of the museum, was called upon to edit
-the work. He also edited a book on “Oriental Porcelain.”
-He was the author of “American Wood Engravers,”
-published in 1883. For these things he is
-remembered in the world of art. The men of the stage
-remember him as one of the most distinguished dramatic
-critics that New York has seen. Even to-day, in the
-comparison of the styles of critics old and new, Laffan’s
-incisive reviews are recalled as standards.</p>
-
-<p>In the business world of journalism Laffan is thought
-of chiefly as the publisher of the <i>Sun</i> from 1884 on, and
-as the live spirit of the <i>Evening Sun</i> for many of its
-years. As the actual director of the <i>Sun</i>—although his
-editorial powers were almost entirely delegated to Mr.
-Mitchell—Mr. Laffan was a picturesque and powerful
-figure. Beneath an inscrutable exterior he was distinctly
-a likable person.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_429">429</span></p>
-
-<p>One day Laffan wrote a ten-line item, a bit about an
-exhibition of a friend’s painting, and asked the city
-editor to print it. He never commanded, even when he
-controlled the paper; he asked. The item was lost in
-the shuffle that night. The next day he rewrote it and
-again asked a place for it. It was printed in the first
-edition and left out of the city edition. For the third
-time he carried the article to the city editor, and without
-a sign of anger.</p>
-
-<p>“It seems to me,” he said, “that anybody can get anything
-printed in this paper—except the owner.”</p>
-
-<p>A millionaire advertiser asked Laffan to print an
-article about his pet charity.</p>
-
-<p>“Take it to Clarke,” said Laffan. “If he’ll print it
-for you, he’ll do more for you than he’ll do for me.”</p>
-
-<p>A New York newspaper once remarked of Laffan that
-“he never drove any man to drink, but he drove many
-a man to the dictionary.” That was a commentary on
-the unusual words which Laffan, whose vocabulary was
-wide, would occasionally use in an editorial article. His
-articles were never involved, however. They were not
-frequent, they were generally short, never without important
-purpose, and they drove home.</p>
-
-<p>Patient as Laffan was with lost items of his own, he
-was a man of fine human temper. One morning, on
-arriving at the office, he found that a Wall Street group
-of rich scoundrels had sued the <i>Sun</i> for several hundred
-thousand dollars for its exposure of their methods. He
-called the city editor.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Mallon,” he said, “tell your young man who
-wrote the articles to go ahead and give these men better
-cause for libel suits!”</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> was making a vigorous war on a great railroad
-magnate. One day an attaché of the office informed
-Laffan that a man was waiting to see him who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_430">430</span>
-bore a contract which would bring to the <i>Sun</i> four hundred
-thousand dollars’ worth of advertising from the
-magnate’s railroads.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell him to see the advertising manager,” said
-Laffan.</p>
-
-<p>“He insists on seeing you,” said the clerk.</p>
-
-<p>“Tell him to go to hell,” said Laffan.</p>
-
-<p>There was a keen humour in the big Irish head.
-Laffan was opposed to the amendment to the New York
-State constitution which provided for an expenditure
-of more than a hundred millions in improving the Erie
-Canal. Under his direction a <i>Sun</i> reporter, John H.
-O’Brien, wrote a series of articles intended to shatter
-public faith in the huge investment. The amendment,
-however, was approved by a great majority.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. O’Brien,” said Mr. Laffan to the reporter, a
-few days after the election, “I think it would be a very
-graceful thing on your part to give a little dinner to
-all those gentlemen who voted against the canal project.”</p>
-
-<p>Upon Mr. Laffan’s death, in November, 1909, the trustees
-of the Sun Printing and Publishing Association
-asked Mr. Mitchell, who had been made editor of the <i>Sun</i>
-on July 20, 1903, to take up the administrative burden
-as well as the editorial. This Mr. Mitchell did for a
-little more than two years, although his personal inclinations
-were toward the literary construction and
-supervision of the paper rather than toward the business
-detail incident to the presidency of so large a corporation.
-The double load was lightened in December,
-1911, when control of the <i>Sun</i> was gained through stock
-purchase by William C. Reick, who became the president
-of the company, Mr. Mitchell being permitted to
-return to the editorial functions which have now engrossed
-him, either as Mr. Dana’s aid or as editor-in-chief,
-for more than forty years.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_430" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 30em;">
- <img src="images/i_430a.jpg" width="1610" height="2549" alt="" />
- <div class="captionl">
- <p>EDWARD PAGE MITCHELL</p>
- <p class="subhead">Editor of “The Sun”</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_431">431</span></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Reick, who was born in Philadelphia in 1864,
-entered newspaper work in that city when he was nineteen
-years old. A few years later he removed to
-Newark, New Jersey, where he became the correspondent
-of the New York <i>Herald</i>. He attracted the attention
-of Mr. Bennett, the owner of the <i>Herald</i>, and
-in 1888 he was made editor of the <i>Herald’s</i> London and
-Paris editions. A year later he returned to America to
-become city editor of the <i>Herald</i>, the highest title then
-given on a newspaper which refuses to have a titular
-managing editor. In 1903 he was elected president of
-the New York Herald Company, and he remained in
-that position until 1906, when he left the <i>Herald</i> to
-become associated with Adolph Ochs in the publication
-of the New York <i>Times</i> and with George W. Ochs in the
-publication of the Philadelphia <i>Public Ledger</i>.</p>
-
-<p>When Mr. Reick assumed the control of the <i>Sun</i>
-properties, he devoted much care to the improvement of
-the <i>Evening Sun</i>, putting it under the managing editorship
-of George M. Smith, who had served for many years
-as news editor of the <i>Sun</i> under Chester S. Lord. As
-Mr. Munsey said when he acquired the <i>Sun</i> and the
-<i>Evening Sun</i> from Mr. Reick:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Very great credit is due Mr. Reick for the fine development
-of the <i>Evening Sun</i> since it came under his control.
-I know of no man who has done a better and sounder
-piece of newspaper work at any time, in New York or
-elsewhere, than Mr. Reick has done on the <i>Evening Sun</i>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Among the events of the Reick régime were the retirement
-of Chester S. Lord from the managing editorship
-and of George B. Mallon from the city editorship, and
-the removal of the newspaper from its old home at
-Nassau and Frankfort Streets to the American Tract<span class="pagenum" id="Page_432">432</span>
-Society Building, one block farther south, at Nassau
-and Spruce Streets.</p>
-
-<p>It was during Mr. Reick’s control of the <i>Sun</i> that Mr.
-Munsey, in the autumn of 1912, bought the New York
-<i>Press</i>, a one-cent Republican morning daily holding an
-Associated Press membership. The <i>Sun</i> had lacked the
-Associated Press service since the fateful night when
-Mr. Dana bolted from that organization and started the
-Laffan News Bureau.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Munsey bought the <i>Sun</i> from Mr. Reick on June
-30, 1916, and four days later, on July 3, the <i>Press</i>, with
-its Associated Press service, its best men, and some of
-its popular features, was absorbed by the <i>Sun</i>. As the
-<i>Press</i> had been a penny paper, the price of the <i>Sun</i> was
-reduced to one cent, after having stood at two cents
-since the Civil War. It remained a penny paper until
-January 26, 1918, when the pressure of production-costs
-forced the price of all the big New York dailies to two
-cents.</p>
-
-<p>The amalgamation of the <i>Sun</i> and the <i>Press</i> wrought
-no change in the editorial department of the <i>Sun</i>, Mr.
-Mitchell remaining as its chief. Ervin Wardman, long
-the editor of the <i>Press</i>, became the publisher of the Sun
-and vice-president of the Sun Printing and Publishing
-Association. Mr. Reick remained with the organization
-in an advisory capacity. Keats Speed, the managing
-editor of the <i>Press</i>, became managing editor of the
-<i>Sun</i>, Kenneth Lord remaining as city editor.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Sun</i> has had five homes—at 222 William Street,
-where Benjamin H. Day struck off the first tiny number;
-at 156 Nassau Street, rented by Day in August, 1835,
-when the paper began to pay well; at the southwest
-corner of Nassau and Fulton Streets, to which Moses Y.
-Beach moved the <i>Sun</i> in 1842; at Nassau and Frankfort
-Streets, the old Tammany Hall, which Dana and his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_433">433</span>
-associates bought; and at 150 Nassau Street, whither
-the <i>Sun</i> moved in July, 1915. It is expected that the
-<i>Sun</i> will presently move to another and a fine home, for
-in September, 1917, Mr. Munsey bought the Stewart
-Building, at the northeast corner of Broadway and
-Chambers Street, just north of City Hall Park. The
-site is generally admitted to be the most desirable building
-site downtown, so large is the ground space, so fine
-is the outlook over the spacious park, and so close is it
-to three subways, three or four elevated-railroad lines,
-and the Brooklyn Bridge.</p>
-
-<p>Should the criticism be made that this book is not all-inclusive,
-let it be remembered that there can be no
-really complete history of the <i>Sun</i> except itself—the
-tons of files in which for eighty-five years <i>Sun</i> men have
-drawn their pictures of life’s procession. In a narrative
-like this only the outlines of the <i>Sun’s</i> course, margined
-with incidents of the men who made it great by making
-it as human as themselves, can find room.</p>
-
-<p>It is easy to begin a story of the <i>Sun</i>, because Ben
-Day and that uncertain morning in 1833, the very dawn
-of popular journalism, make a very real picture. Try
-to end it, and the roar of the presses in the basement is
-remindful of the fact that there is no end, except the
-arbitrary closing. This <i>Sun</i>, like <span class="locked"><i>Richmond’s</i>—</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">By the bright track of his fiery car</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Gives token of a goodly day to-morrow.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_435" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_435">435</span></p>
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="BIBLIOGRAPHY">BIBLIOGRAPHY</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>The files of the <i>Sun</i>, 1833–1918.</p>
-
-<p>“The Life of Charles A. Dana,” by James Harrison Wilson,
-LL.D., late Major General, U. S. V. Harper &amp; Bros.,
-1907.</p>
-
-<p>“Journalism in the United States from 1690 to 1872,” by
-Frederic Hudson. Harper &amp; Bros., 1873.</p>
-
-<p>“The Art of Newspaper Making,” by Charles A. Dana.
-D. Appleton &amp; Co., 1895.</p>
-
-<p>“Henry J. Raymond and the New York Press for Thirty
-Years,” by Augustus Maverick. A. S. Hale &amp; Co., Hartford,
-Conn., 1870.</p>
-
-<p>“First Blows of the Civil War,” by James S. Pike. American
-News Co., 1879.</p>
-
-<p>“Ordered to China; Letters of Wilbur J. Chamberlin.”
-Frederick A. Stokes Co., 1903.</p>
-
-<p>“The Making of a Journalist,” by Julian Ralph. Harper
-&amp; Bros., 1903.</p>
-
-<p>“Mr. Dana of the <i>Sun</i>,” by Edward P. Mitchell.
-<cite>McClure’s Magazine</cite>, October, 1894.</p>
-
-<p>“The New York <i>Sun</i>,” by Will Irwin. <cite>American Magazine</cite>,
-January, 1909.</p>
-
-<p>“The Men Who Make the New York <i>Sun</i>,” by E. J. Edwards.
-<cite>Munsey’s Magazine</cite>, October, 1893.</p>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_437" class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_437">437</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHRONOLOGY">CHRONOLOGY</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="hang">
-
-<p>1833.—The <i>Sun</i> is founded by Benjamin H. Day, September 3.</p>
-
-<p>1835.—Its home is changed from 222 William street to 156
-Nassau street, August 3.</p>
-
-<p>1835.—The Moon Hoax appears, August 25.</p>
-
-<p>1838.—Moses Yale Beach becomes proprietor, June 28.</p>
-
-<p>1842.—The <i>Sun</i> moves to the southwest corner of Fulton and
-Nassau streets, July.</p>
-
-<p>1844.—Poe’s Balloon Hoax appears, April 3.</p>
-
-<p>1845.—M. Y. Beach takes his sons, Moses S. and Alfred E.,
-as partners, October 22.</p>
-
-<p>1848.—Moses Yale Beach retires, December 4.</p>
-
-<p>1852.—Alfred Ely Beach retires, April 6.</p>
-
-<p>1860.—Moses S. Beach lets the <i>Sun</i> to a religious group,
-August 6.</p>
-
-<p>1861.—The <i>Sun</i> returns to the management of M. S. Beach,
-January 1.</p>
-
-<p>1864.—The price is raised to two cents, August 1.</p>
-
-<p>1868.—Charles A. Dana becomes the editor and manager of
-the <i>Sun</i>, January 25.</p>
-
-<p>1868.—The <i>Sun</i> moves to 170 Nassau street, January 25.</p>
-
-<p>1875.—Edward P. Mitchell joins the editorial staff, October 1.</p>
-
-<p>1897.—Death of Charles A. Dana, October 17.</p>
-
-<p>1902.—William M. Laffan’s proprietorship is announced,
-February 22.</p>
-
-<p>1903.—Edward P. Mitchell becomes the editor of the <i>Sun</i>,
-July 20.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_438">438</span></p>
-
-<p>1909.—Death of William M. Laffan, November 19.</p>
-
-<p>1911.—William C. Reick becomes proprietor, December 17.</p>
-
-<p>1915.—The <i>Sun</i> moves to 150 Nassau street, July 11.</p>
-
-<p>1916.—Frank A. Munsey becomes proprietor, June 30.</p>
-
-<p>1916.—With the <i>Sun</i> is amalgamated the New York <i>Press</i>,
-July 3.</p>
-
-<p>1916.—The price is reduced to one cent, July 3.</p>
-
-<p>1918.—The price again becomes two cents, January 26.</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr />
-
-<div id="toclink_439" class="chapter"><div class="index">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_439">439</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="INDEX">INDEX</h2>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst">Abell, Arunah S., associate of Day, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">establishes Baltimore <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">buys Guilford estate, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">helps S. F. B. Morse, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">death of, in 1888, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Abolition of slavery, article on, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Wisner’s editorial on, <a href="#Page_42">42</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Actors of the early 30’s, <a href="#Page_121">121</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adams, Cyrus C., cable editor, <a href="#Page_394">394</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adamson, Robert, <i>Evening Sun</i> reporter, <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adams, Samuel Hopkins, Dana finds it hard to discharge, <a href="#Page_378">378</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">writes Sunday <i>Sun</i> fiction, <a href="#Page_412">412</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Adams, Samuel, murdered by John C. Colt, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Addition, Division, and Silence,” <a href="#Page_305">305</a>, <a href="#Page_306">306</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Advertising, fashions of, in 1833, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">specimens of early “liners,” <a href="#Page_125">125</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Sun</i> takes off the first page in 1862, <a href="#Page_189">189</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Sun</i>, under Morrison, refuses advertisements on Sunday, <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alamo massacre, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alexander, Columbus, escape of, in the Safe Burglary Conspiracy, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>, <a href="#Page_309">309</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alger, Horatio, Jr., writes fiction for the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Allen, Miss Susan, smokes a cigar on Broadway, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alumni, of the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_328">328</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anderson, Harold M., Spanish war correspondent, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>, <a href="#Page_356">356</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Arago, D. F., alleged deception of, by the Moon Hoax, <a href="#Page_97">97–99</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Armstrong, Henry M., Spanish war correspondent, <a href="#Page_356">356</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Associated Press, Dana’s break with, <a href="#Page_374">374</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">formed in <i>Sun</i> office, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Astor House, <a href="#Page_49">49</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Astor, William B., New York’s richest man, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Attree, William H., <a href="#Page_61">61–62</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">reporter on the <i>Transcript</i>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aviation, prophetic editorial comment on, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Azamet Batuk.” See <a href="#Thieblin">Thiéblin, N. L.</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Badeau, General Adam, a <i>Sun</i> contributor, <a href="#Page_404">404</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ballard, Anna, reporter, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Balloon_Hoax"></a>Balloon Hoax, Poe’s, referred to by De Morgan, <a href="#Page_98">98</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bartlett, Willard, dramatic critic, counsel for Dana, editorial contributor, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">invents the <i>Sun</i> Cat, <a href="#Page_287">287</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bartlett, William O., writes “No king, no clown, to rule this town!”, <a href="#Page_255">255</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">style of, compared with Dana’s and Mitchell’s, <a href="#Page_256">256</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">reference of, to General Hancock’s weight, <a href="#Page_256">256</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">counsel for Tweed, <a href="#Page_275">275</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Battey, Emily Verdery, first real woman reporter, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">appears in the <i>Sun</i> on April 13, 1844, <a href="#Page_149">149–153</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beach, Alfred Ely, becomes partner in the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">invents first typewriter for the blind, <a href="#Page_162">162</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">builds first New York subway, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">withdraws from the <i>Sun</i> April 6, 1852, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">dies in 1896, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beach Brothers, name of ownership, <a href="#Page_170">170</a>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">issue <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beach, Erasmus D., book reviewer, <a href="#Page_349">349</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">writes classic football story, <a href="#Page_350">350</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_440">440</span>Beach, Frederick Converse, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beach, Joseph, son of Moses Y. Beach, <a href="#Page_173">173</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beach, Moses Sperry, becomes a partner in the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">part owner Boston <i>Daily Times</i>, <a href="#Page_162">162</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">invents printing devices, <a href="#Page_162">162</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes sole owner of the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">brings wood from the Mount of Olives for Beecher’s pulpit, <a href="#Page_177">177</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">absence of, from the <i>Sun</i> in the early months of the Civil War, <a href="#Page_189">189</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">takes the <i>Sun</i> back, <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">sells the <i>Sun</i> to Dana, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">bids readers farewell, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beach, Moses Yale, enters <i>Sun</i> office as bookkeeper, <a href="#Page_111">111</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">buys the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">youth and marriage of, <a href="#Page_139">139</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">inventions of, <a href="#Page_140">140</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">joins Benjamin H. Day, <a href="#Page_140">140</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">owns two buildings where the <i>Sun</i> had its home, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">takes sons as partners, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">enterprise of, in Mexican War, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">starts for Mexico as President Polk’s special agent, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">retires from the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">dinner in his honour, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">issues various editions of the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">publishes “The Wealth of New York,” <a href="#Page_169">169</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">father of the newspaper syndicate, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Dana’s estimate of, <a href="#Page_169">169</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">amasses a fortune and retires, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">writes European articles for the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_173">173</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beach, Stanley Yale, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Becker, Charles, conviction of, reported by E. C. Hill, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beckwith, Arthur, telegraph editor, <a href="#Page_280">280</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Beecher, Henry Ward, John Brown speech of, in the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">tribute to H. B. Stanton, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">trial of, <a href="#Page_278">278</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“I don’t read the <i>Sun</i>,” <a href="#Page_310">310</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">denounced by the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_311">311</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Belknap, William W., accused by the <i>Sun</i> in Post-trader scandal and impeached, <a href="#Page_306">306</a>, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bell, Jared D., part owner, <i>New Era</i>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bendelari, George, book-reviewer, <a href="#Page_411">411</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bennett, James Gordon, thrashed by Col. Webb, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">work of, for the <i>Courier and Enquirer</i>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">editor Philadelphia <i>Courier</i>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Sun</i> replies to charge of, that Day is an infidel, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">early career of, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">treats Helen Jewett’s murder sensationally, <a href="#Page_114">114</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">second assault on, by Webb described, <a href="#Page_114">114</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">early failures of, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">debt of, to Day’s example, <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">announcement of coming marriage of, <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">establishes the no-credit system, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">works harder than other proprietors, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">dies in 1872, <a href="#Page_293">293</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“the first yellow journalist,” <a href="#Page_413">413</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bennett, J. G., Jr., takes his father’s place, <a href="#Page_298">298</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">death of, <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bigelow, John, associate of Bryant, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bishop, Joseph W., night city editor, <a href="#Page_372">372</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">night editor, <a href="#Page_372">372</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Black, Chauncey F., a <i>Sun</i> contributor, <a href="#Page_405">405</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blackwood, Algernon, <i>Evening Sun</i> reporter, <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blatchford, Judge Samuel, historic decision of, in the Shepherd case, <a href="#Page_307">307</a>, <a href="#Page_308">308</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blizzard of March, 1888, <a href="#Page_362">362</a>, <a href="#Page_363">363</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Blythe, Samuel G., describes E. G. Riggs, <a href="#Page_346">346</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bogart, John B., “If a man bites a dog, that is news,” <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“a whole school of journalism,” <a href="#Page_281">281</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">possesses “sixth sense,” <a href="#Page_335">335</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_441">441</span>persistence of, <a href="#Page_336">336</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bonner, Robert, pays $30,000 for “Norwood,” <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">sagacity of, commented on by Dana, <a href="#Page_300">300</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Book-reviewers, <i>Sun’s</i>, list of, <a href="#Page_411">411</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Borden, Lizzie, acquittal of, reported by Julian Ralph, <a href="#Page_318">318</a>, <a href="#Page_319">319</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bowery Theatre Fire, ruins Hamblin, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">first American playhouse lighted with gas, <a href="#Page_121">121</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bowles, Samuel, employs B. H. Day, <a href="#Page_22">22–23</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bowman, Frank, dramatic critic, <a href="#Page_411">411</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bread riots, the <i>Sun’s</i> part in, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>, <a href="#Page_119">119</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brewster, Sir David, appears in Moon Hoax, <a href="#Page_71">71</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brisbane, Albert, association of, with Greeley, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brisbane, Arthur, son of Albert Brisbane, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">style of, like W. O. Bartlett’s, <a href="#Page_256">256</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes reporter at 18, <a href="#Page_346">346</a>, <a href="#Page_347">347</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes London correspondent, <a href="#Page_347">347</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">reports Sullivan-Mitchell fight, <a href="#Page_347">347</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">is managing editor <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes editor Sunday <i>World</i> magazine, <a href="#Page_348">348</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes editor <i>Evening Journal</i>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes proprietor Washington <i>Times</i>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">takes Richard Harding Davis on <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_398">398</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brook Farm, Dana enters, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brooklyn Theatre fire, <a href="#Page_362">362</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brooks brothers, James and Erastus, establish New York <i>Express</i>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Brown, John, the <i>Sun’s</i> attitude toward, <a href="#Page_177">177</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bryant, William Cullen, editor and poet in 1833, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">conflict of, with W. L. Stone, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buchanan, James, supported by the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burdell, Dr. Harvey, murder of, <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burnett, Wm., <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burr, Aaron, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Butler, Stephen B., <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Cady, Elizabeth, marries Henry B. Stanton, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Caroline case, the <i>Sun’s</i> enterprise in reporting, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Carroll, Dana H., Spanish war correspondent, <a href="#Page_355">355</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cat, the <i>Sun’s</i>, his invention and reputation, <a href="#Page_287">287–289</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chadwick, George W., in business with Dana, <a href="#Page_216">216</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chamberlains and Chamberlins, <a href="#Page_341">341–343</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chamberlain, Henry Richardson, covers Europe for the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_342">342</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">visions by, of a great war, <a href="#Page_342">342</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chamberlin, Wilbur J., takes charge of the <i>Sun</i> staff in Cuba, <a href="#Page_356">356</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">eleven-column report by, <a href="#Page_361">361</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">known as “Jersey,” <a href="#Page_338">338</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub2">cable hoodoo of, <a href="#Page_339">339</a>, <a href="#Page_340">340</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">describes German soldiers’ brutality in China, <a href="#Page_340">340</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">describes the Deacon’s broken suspenders, <a href="#Page_341">341</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chamberlin, E. O., reporter, <a href="#Page_342">342</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chamberlin, Henry B., reporter, <a href="#Page_343">343</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Childs, George W., tells of W. M. Swain’s industry, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">buys <i>Public Ledger</i>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cholera, in New York, 1832, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Church, Francis P., a <i>Sun</i> editorial writer for forty years, <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“Is There a Santa Claus?,” <a href="#Page_409">409</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Church, William C., publisher of the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">war correspondent, <a href="#Page_190">190</a>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">owns <i>Army and Navy Journal</i>, <a href="#Page_191">191</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Circulation in November, 1833, 2,000, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">in December, 1833, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">April, 1834, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">in November, 1834, <a href="#Page_57">57</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Day offers to bet on it, <a href="#Page_62">62–63</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">in August, 1835, it becomes the largest in the world, <a href="#Page_78">78</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">in August, 1836, 27,000, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">in September, 1843, 38,000, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_442">442</span>in December, 1848, 50,000, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">in September, 1860, 59,000, <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Dana’s estimate of 50,000 to 60,000 in 1868, <a href="#Page_228">228</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">in 1871, 100,000, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">in March, 1875, 120,000, <a href="#Page_300">300</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">day after Tilden-Hayes election, <a href="#Page_220">220</a>, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">after other interesting events, <a href="#Page_323">323–325</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">high-tide marks, <a href="#Page_325">325</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Civil War, the <i>Sun</i> in the, <a href="#Page_172">172</a> <i>et seq.</i></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Sun</i> declares “the Union cannot be dissolved,” <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Sun</i> charges the <i>Herald</i>, the <i>Daily News</i>, and the <i>Staats-Zeitung</i> with disloyalty, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Sun</i>, the <i>Tribune</i>, and the <i>Times</i> entirely loyal, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Sun’s</i> news from Bull Run, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub2">from Gettysburg, <a href="#Page_188">188</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Sun</i> protests against Sunday battles, <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">attitude of Greeley and Dana, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clarke, Selah Merrill, night city editor, 1881–1912, <a href="#Page_383">383</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">story of the Northampton disaster by, <a href="#Page_383">383</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">remarkable memory of, <a href="#Page_384">384</a>, <a href="#Page_385">385</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">head-lines written by, <a href="#Page_387">387</a>, <a href="#Page_388">388</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">gifts of, as copy reader, <a href="#Page_389">389</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cleveland, Grover, Dana’s opposition to, <a href="#Page_421">421</a>, <a href="#Page_422">422</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clubs: Bread and Cheese, Hone, Union, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cobb, Irvin S., reports Portsmouth peace conference for <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coffey, Titian J., recipient of the “addition, division, and silence” letter, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Collins, E. K., an advertiser in the first <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Colt, John C., murders Samuel Adams, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Conkling, Roscoe, in business with Dana, <a href="#Page_216">216</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Connolly, James, reporter, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Conventions, national, <i>Sun</i> men reporting, <a href="#Page_344">344</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">history of, written by E. G. Riggs, <a href="#Page_346">346</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cook, Tom, reporter, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cooper, Charles P., city editor, <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cooper, James Fenimore, <a href="#Page_50">50</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Corbin, John, dramatic critic, <a href="#Page_411">411</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coward, Edward Fales, <i>Evening Sun</i> dramatic critic, <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crédit Mobilier scandal, <a href="#Page_304">304</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crockett, David, memoirs of, in the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cronyn, Thoreau, Dewey’s funeral, report by, <a href="#Page_333">333</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cuba, Dana’s interest in struggle of, <a href="#Page_353">353–355</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cullen, Clarence L., writes “Tales of the Ex-Tanks,” <a href="#Page_411">411</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cummings, Alexander, writes for the <i>World</i>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cummings, Amos Jay, secretly learns typesetting, <a href="#Page_264">264</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">goes with Filibuster Walker, <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">wins Medal of Honor at Fredericksburg, <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">holds <i>Tribune</i> office against rioters, <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">conflicts with John Russell Young, <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“They say I swear too much,” <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“To hell with my own copy,” <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">best news man of his day, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">is first human interest reporter, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">reports prize fights, <a href="#Page_285">285</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Nicara-goo Song of, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“Ziska” letters of, <a href="#Page_290">290</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">is managing editor of the <i>Express</i>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">returns to the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">is elected to House of Representatives, <a href="#Page_290">290</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes editor <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_290">290</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">returns to Congress, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">death and funeral of, <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">prints murder charts, <a href="#Page_414">414</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Curtin, Jeremiah, a <i>Sun</i> contributor, <a href="#Page_404">404</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Curtis, David A., Sunday <i>Sun</i> writer, <a href="#Page_412">412</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Curtis, George Ticknor, a <i>Sun</i> contributor, <a href="#Page_404">404</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_443">443</span>Curtis, George William, writes for the <i>Tribune</i>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Daly, Augustin, tries to have Dana dismiss Laffan, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Damrosch, Leopold, music critic, <a href="#Page_314">314</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dana, Charles A., a boy in Buffalo when Day founded the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">reading “Oliver Twist” weakens eyes of, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">draws $50 a week on <i>Tribune</i>, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">named by the <i>Sun</i> as a possible postmaster, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">buys the <i>Sun</i> and announces its policy, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>, <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">absolute master of the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">birth and ancestry, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">brothers and sisters of, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">boyhood and life of, in Buffalo, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">goes to Harvard, <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">teaches school at Scituate, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">religious indecision of, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">sight of, impaired, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">joins Brook Farm, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">milks cows and waits on table, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">meets Horace Greeley, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">writes for the <i>Harbinger</i> and the <i>Dial</i>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">writes poetry, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">marries, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">goes to Boston <i>Daily Chronotype</i>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">comes out “strong against hell,” <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes city editor of the New York <i>Tribune</i>, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">goes to Europe, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">returns to be managing editor of the <i>Tribune</i>, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">his pay and income, <a href="#Page_210">210</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">literary works of, before Civil War, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">leaves the <i>Tribune</i>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a>, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">induces Grant to stop the cotton speculation, <a href="#Page_216">216</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">convinces Lincoln of needed reforms, <a href="#Page_216">216</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">is chosen to report on complaints against Grant, <a href="#Page_216">216</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">writes of his “new insight into slavery,” <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">is with Grant at Vicksburg, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">brings Grant full authority, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">sees much of war, <a href="#Page_219">219</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">estimate of Grant by, <a href="#Page_219">219</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">estimate of Rawlins by, <a href="#Page_219">219</a>, <a href="#Page_220">220</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">reports on Rosecrans, <a href="#Page_220">220</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">poetry contest of, with General Lawler, <a href="#Page_221">221</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">describes the storming of Missionary Ridge, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">reports Grant’s Virginia campaign, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">goes to Richmond to gather Confederate archives, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">talks with Lincoln about Jacob Thompson, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">authorizes Miles to manacle Jefferson Davis, <a href="#Page_224">224</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">quoted on Davis’s imprisonment, <a href="#Page_225">225</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes editor of Chicago <i>Republican</i>, <a href="#Page_225">225</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">assails President Johnson, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">quits Chicago <i>Republican</i>, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">determines to have a New York newspaper, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">his backers, <a href="#Page_226">226</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">decides to buy the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">changes its appearance, <a href="#Page_230">230</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">moves “It Shines for All,” <a href="#Page_230">230</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“Dana was the <i>Sun</i> and the <i>Sun</i> Dana,” <a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">makes no rules for the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_238">238</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">editorial principles of, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">lectures at Cornell, <a href="#Page_239">239</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">defines news, <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">on college education, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">on reporting, <a href="#Page_242">242</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“The invariable law is to be interesting,” <a href="#Page_243">243</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“Do not take any model,” <a href="#Page_243">243</a>, <a href="#Page_244">244</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">not impressed by names of writers, <a href="#Page_246">246</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“This is too damned wicked,” <a href="#Page_246">246</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">refuses to expose a silly literary thief, <a href="#Page_246">246</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">methods and surroundings of, <a href="#Page_246">246–251</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">interest of, in everything and everybody, <a href="#Page_251">251</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“Take the partition down,” <a href="#Page_251">251</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">love of, for variety of topics, <a href="#Page_253">253</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">delight of, in other men’s work, <a href="#Page_254">254</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">tact of, in handling men, <a href="#Page_263">263</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_444">444</span>death of great rivals of, <a href="#Page_293">293</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">quoted on “personal journalism,” <a href="#Page_296">296</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">quoted on Greeley, Raymond, and Bennett, <a href="#Page_297">297</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“We pass the <i>Tribune</i> by”, <a href="#Page_298">298</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">advises <i>World</i> reporters to read the Bible, <a href="#Page_299">299</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">kindly feeling of, toward the younger Bennett, <a href="#Page_299">299</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">belief of, in a newspaper without advertising, <a href="#Page_299">299–301</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">objects to “heavy chunks of news,” <a href="#Page_302">302</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“our contemporaries exhaust their young men,” <a href="#Page_302">302</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">is a witness against Secretary Robeson, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">defeats Shepherd’s attempt to railroad him, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">denies wishing to be collector of the port, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>, <a href="#Page_310">310</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">loses friends because of attacks on Grantism, <a href="#Page_310">310</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">refuses to be turned, <a href="#Page_310">310</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">retains opinion of Grant’s military ability, <a href="#Page_310">310</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“First find the man,” plans of, <a href="#Page_326">326</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">frames gold plank for New York convention of 1896, <a href="#Page_345">345</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">asks Platt not to oppose Roosevelt, <a href="#Page_345">345</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">affection of, for Cuba, <a href="#Page_353">353–354</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">memorial to, in Camaguey, <a href="#Page_354">354</a>, <a href="#Page_355">355</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">breaks with Associated Press, <a href="#Page_374">374</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">encouraged <i>Sun</i> men to write fiction, <a href="#Page_405">405</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“The second yellow journalist,” <a href="#Page_413">413</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">not a yellow journalist, <a href="#Page_415">415</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">attacks yellow journalism, <a href="#Page_413">413</a>, <a href="#Page_415">415</a>, <a href="#Page_416">416</a>, <a href="#Page_417">417</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">revolutionizes journalism, <a href="#Page_416">416</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“An opposition party in himself,” <a href="#Page_420">420</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">attacks Hayes, <a href="#Page_420">420</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">opposition of, to Cleveland, <a href="#Page_420">420</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">supports B. F. Butler, <a href="#Page_420">420</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">would burn his pen rather than support Blaine, <a href="#Page_421">421</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">opinion of, on civil service reform, <a href="#Page_421">421</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">opposes Bryan, <a href="#Page_422">422</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">continental travels, <a href="#Page_423">423</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">knowledge of languages, <a href="#Page_423">423</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">porcelain collection of, <a href="#Page_423">423</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">country home of, <a href="#Page_424">424</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">death of, <a href="#Page_425">425</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Sun’s</i> announcement of death of, <a href="#Page_425">425</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">elevation of journalism by, <a href="#Page_426">426</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dana, Paul, succeeds his father as editor, <a href="#Page_426">426</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">chief owner, <a href="#Page_427">427</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Davids, David, reporter, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Davies, Acton, Spanish war correspondent, <a href="#Page_356">356</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>Evening Sun</i> dramatic critic, <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Davis, Oscar King, goes with Schley’s squadron, <a href="#Page_355">355</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">describes capture of Guam, <a href="#Page_356">356</a>, <a href="#Page_357">357</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Davis, Richard Harding, experiences and work of, on <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_398">398</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">writes <i>Van Bibber</i> stories for <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_398">398</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Day, Benjamin H., decides to publish the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">birth and ancestry of, <a href="#Page_22">22</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">issues the first <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">issues a <i>True Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">is indicted for attacking Attree, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">welcomes an attack by Col. Webb, <a href="#Page_111">111</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">quarrels with Bennett, <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">attacks the service at the Astor House, <a href="#Page_117">117</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">name of, taken from the <i>Sun’s</i> masthead, <a href="#Page_125">125</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">sells the <i>Sun</i> to Moses Y. Beach, <a href="#Page_127">127</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">period of ownership by, of the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">profits from the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">influence of, upon journalism, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">influence of, on Bennett’s success, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">success of, responsible for the founding of many one-cent papers, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">says the <i>Sun’s</i> success was “more by accident than design,” <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">establishes <i>True Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_445">445</span>starts the <i>Tatler</i>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">founds <i>Brother Jonathan</i>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">retirement and death of, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">remarks on Dana’s purchase of the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">son of Benjamin H. Day, <a href="#Page_138">138</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">contrasted with Dana, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">was he a yellow journalist?, <a href="#Page_414">414</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Delane, John T., pictured by Kinglake, <a href="#Page_247">247</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">De Morgan, Augustus, notes of, on the Moon Hoax, <a href="#Page_96">96–99</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Denison, Lindsay, covers Slocum disaster, <a href="#Page_361">361</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dick, Dr. Thomas, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dickens, Charles, “Nicholas Nickleby” criticized, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">The <i>Sun’s</i> comments on American visit of, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dieuaide, Thomas M., writes story of the Santiago sea fight, <a href="#Page_355">355</a>, <a href="#Page_356">356</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">describes the destruction of St. Pierre, <a href="#Page_357">357</a>, <a href="#Page_358">358</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dillingham, Charles B., <i>Evening Sun</i> dramatic critic, <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dix, John A., an advertiser in the first <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_28">28</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dix, John A., Governor, seizes three New York newspapers in 1864, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Douglas, Stephen A., the <i>Sun’s</i> attitude toward, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>, <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Draper, Dr. John W., <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Dyer, Oliver, versatility of, <a href="#Page_405">405</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Eaton, Walter P., dramatic critic, <a href="#Page_411">411</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Edison, Thomas A., thanks the <i>Sun</i> for chewing tobacco, <a href="#Page_322">322</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Editorial writers, list of, <a href="#Page_326">326</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">England, Isaac W., first managing editor of the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Dana’s tribute to, <a href="#Page_264">264</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Evans, George O., “He understands addition, division, and silence,” <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Evening Sun</i>, first issued by Beach Brothers, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">issued by Dana, March 17, 1887, <a href="#Page_397">397</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“Laffan’s baby,” <a href="#Page_397">397</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Cummings first managing editor of, <a href="#Page_397">397</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">later managing editors of, <a href="#Page_398">398</a>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">list of editorial writers, managing editors, and city editors of, <a href="#Page_399">399</a>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Express service, usefulness to the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_140">140</a>, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Fairbanks, Charles M., reporter and night editor, <a href="#Page_351">351</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fernandez, the murderer, <a href="#Page_103">103–104</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Field, Eugene, obtains Dana’s shears, <a href="#Page_249">249</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fire, New York conflagration of 1835, <a href="#Page_105">105–106</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fisk, James, Jr., pays $800,000 for a theatre, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">tells of <i>Sun</i> enterprise, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fitzgerald, Christopher J., finds the lost Umbria, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>, <a href="#Page_393">393</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Flaherty, Bernard. See <a href="#Williams_Barney">Williams, Barney</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Flint, Dr. Austin, youthful friend of Dana, <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Florence, William J., subscriber to the Tweed statue fund, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Foord, John, editor of the <i>Times</i>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Football, Ralph’s story without a score, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>, <a href="#Page_335">335</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Beach’s Homeric introduction, <a href="#Page_350">350</a>, <a href="#Page_351">351</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Forks, the <i>Sun’s</i> conservative attitude toward, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Forrest, Edwin, <a href="#Page_55">55–56</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fowler, Elting A., predicts Bryan’s appointment as Secretary of State, <a href="#Page_377">377</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fuller, Andrew S., agricultural editor, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_200">200</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fyles, Franklin, reports Beecher trial, <a href="#Page_278">278</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">reporter, dramatic critic, and playwright, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Garr, Andrew S., sues Day for libel, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gibson, A. M., Washington correspondent, <a href="#Page_312">312</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Godwin, Parke, edits <i>Daily News</i>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Goodwin, Joseph, creates <i>Sarsaparilla Reilly</i>, <a href="#Page_412">412</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_446">446</span>Gould, Jay, is blackballed in the Blossom Club, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grant, Ulysses S., the <i>Sun’s</i> support of, in 1868, announced, <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">imposed upon, <a href="#Page_304">304</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">opposed by the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_304">304</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grant scandals, <a href="#Page_304">304–310</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Greeley, Horace, founds <i>Morning Post</i>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">fails with <i>Morning Post</i>, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Albany correspondent <i>Daily Whig</i>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">starts the <i>Tribune</i>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">is scorned by the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">hires Henry J. Raymond, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">attacks the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">tells British legislators the <i>Sun</i> was cheap at $250,000, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">mentioned for the collectorship, <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">hires Dana, <a href="#Page_209">209</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">timidity of, toward slavery, <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">writes pleas to Dana, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">denies writing “Forward to Richmond!”, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">hires Cummings on the state of his breeches, <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gregg, Frederic J., editorial writer, <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Griffis, William Elliot, a <i>Sun</i> contributor, <a href="#Page_404">404</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gurowski, Count, writes for the <i>Tribune</i>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Hackett, James H., <a href="#Page_39">39</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hallock, Gerard, sympathy of, with slavery forces him to retire from the <i>Journal of Commerce</i>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hamblin, Thomas S., ruined by fire of 1836, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">beats Bennett, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hamilton, Captain, aspersions of, relative to tooth brushes, <a href="#Page_45">45</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harbour Association, formed by six newspapers, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harnden, William F., starts express service, New York to Boston, <a href="#Page_141">141</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Harte, Bret, stories by, syndicated by the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_403">403</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hawkins, Ervin, city editor, <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hayward, Billings, part owner of the <i>Transcript</i>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Hazeltine"></a>Hazeltine, Mayo W., writes on Dana’s elevation of journalism, <a href="#Page_426">426</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“M. W. H.,” <a href="#Page_408">408</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">literary critic for thirty-one years, <a href="#Page_408">408</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Head-lines, the <i>Sun’s</i> second, <a href="#Page_44">44</a></li>
-<li class="isub2">examples of (1833), <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
-<li class="isub2">example of, in Dana’s time, <a href="#Page_314">314</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hearst, William R., “the fourth yellow journalist,” <a href="#Page_413">413</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Henderson, William J., musical critic and yachting writer, <a href="#Page_391">391</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hendrix, Joseph C., “Cut out the damn,” <a href="#Page_279">279</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Hermit,” writes Washington letters for the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Herschel, Sir John F. W., <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hill, Edwin C., reports Becker trial, <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li>
-<li class="isub2">style of, in disaster stories, <a href="#Page_361">361</a>, <a href="#Page_362">362</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Hitchcock"></a>Hitchcock, Thomas, author of “Matthew Marshall” financial articles, <a href="#Page_228">228</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hoaxes. See <a href="#Moon_Hoax">Moon Hoax</a>, <a href="#Balloon_Hoax">Balloon Hoax</a>, <a href="#Park_Mungo">Mungo Park</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hoe, Robert, Day’s remark at dinner to, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holmes, Mary J., writes novels for the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hone, Philip, as a writer, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Horse expresses: the six-cent papers combine to use, <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hotels, huge noon dinners in the thirties, <a href="#Page_122">122</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Howard, Joseph, Jr., issues a false Presidential proclamation, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hudson, Frederic, opposes managing editorships, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Human interest,” <a href="#Page_244">244</a>, <a href="#Page_245">245</a>, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>, <a href="#Page_363">363</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Humour, <a href="#Page_366">366</a>, <a href="#Page_367">367</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hurlbut, William Henry, a <i>Sun</i> contributor, <a href="#Page_405">405</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Illustrations, the <i>Sun’s</i> first, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Interviews, invented by Bennett, <a href="#Page_316">316</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Introductions, the <i>Sun’s</i> objection to, <a href="#Page_363">363</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irving, Washington, <a href="#Page_34">34–35</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Irwin, Will, “The City That Was,” <a href="#Page_358">358</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_447">447</span>“It Shines for All,” <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Jackson, Andrew, message of, printed in full, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">James, Henry, flashy head-lines on a novel by, <a href="#Page_404">404</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jennings, Louis J., chief editorial writer of the <i>Times</i>, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes editor of the <i>Times</i>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">returns to England, <a href="#Page_298">298</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jewett, Helen, murder of, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_114">114</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">trial of Robinson for murder of, <a href="#Page_115">115</a>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jones, Alexander, becomes first agent of Associated Press, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">invents telegraph cipher, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jones, George, partner of H. J. Raymond, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Journalism, the earliest dailies, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">advance of, between 1830 and 1840, <a href="#Page_136">136</a>, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">great editors of 1868, <a href="#Page_233">233</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">managing editors, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">first women reporters, <a href="#Page_285">285</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Watterson’s review in 1873, <a href="#Page_293">293–295</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“Personal journalism,” <a href="#Page_295">295</a>, <a href="#Page_296">296</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Dana’s dream of a paper without advertisements, <a href="#Page_299">299–301</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">interviewing, <a href="#Page_316">316</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">What do people read?, <a href="#Page_323">323</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“Sixth sense,” <a href="#Page_335">335</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Journal of Commerce</i>, the <i>Sun’s</i> only surviving morning contemporary of 1833, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Josephs, Joseph, reporter, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Kane, Lawrence S., city editor, <a href="#Page_279">279</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">reporter, <a href="#Page_280">280</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kellogg, Daniel F., city editor 1890–1902, <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kelly, John, marriage of, reported, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kemble, Fanny, <a href="#Page_44">44</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kemble, W. H., author of the “addition, division, and silence” letter, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">causes Dana’s arrest, <a href="#Page_306">306</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">is sent to prison, <a href="#Page_306">306</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kendall, George W., despatches of, to the New Orleans <i>Picayune</i> used by the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">King, Charles, editor of the <i>American</i>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Know-Nothing Party, uses Maria Monk’s “Disclosures” as political capital, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kobbé, Gustav, dramatic and musical critic, <a href="#Page_350">350</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Laffan Bureau, established, <a href="#Page_375">375</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">growth, <a href="#Page_376">376</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Laffan, William M., becomes proprietor of the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_427">427</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">thorough newspaper training of, <a href="#Page_427">427</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">art expert, <a href="#Page_427">427</a>, <a href="#Page_428">428</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">dramatic critic, <a href="#Page_428">428</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“Anybody can get anything printed, except the owner,” <a href="#Page_428">428</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">death of, in 1909, <a href="#Page_430">430</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Landon, M. D. See <a href="#Perkins">Eli Perkins</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Leggett, William, fights duel with Blake, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Levermore, Charles H., describes victory of the <i>Sun</i> and the <i>Herald</i> over old-fashioned journalism, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lincoln, Abraham, “No match for the Little Giant,” <a href="#Page_177">177</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“A man of the people,” <a href="#Page_178">178</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">is elected, “and yet the country is safe,” <a href="#Page_179">179</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>Sun</i> comments on re-election of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub2">on death of, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">New York newspapers’ comment on emancipation proclamation, <a href="#Page_184">184</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">assigns Dana to Virginia campaign, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Literature, in the fifties, <a href="#Page_173">173</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">serial novels contracted for by M. S. Beach, <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“The finest side of the <i>Sun</i>,” <a href="#Page_402">402</a>, <i>et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Literary men, list of, in 1833, <a href="#Page_34">34–35</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lloyd, Nelson, Spanish war correspondent, <a href="#Page_355">355</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">city editor, <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Locke, Richard Adams, goes on <i>Sun</i> as a reporter, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Poe’s sketch of, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">early life of, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">confesses the Moon Hoax, <a href="#Page_86">86–87</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">life of the murderer, Fernandez, by, <a href="#Page_103">103–104</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_448">448</span>starts the <i>New Era</i>, <a href="#Page_116">116–117</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">writes “The Lost Manuscript of Mungo Park,” <a href="#Page_117">117</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes editor of the Brooklyn <i>Eagle</i>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">death of, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">attends dinner to Moses Y. Beach, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lord, Chester S., Whisky Ring story by, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>, <a href="#Page_285">285</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">long service of, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>, <a href="#Page_327">327</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">first staff of, <a href="#Page_327">327</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“Ten thousand battles of,” <a href="#Page_327">327</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">managing editor, 1880–1913, <a href="#Page_372">372</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">studies at Hamilton College, <a href="#Page_373">373</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">goes on the <i>Sun</i> as a reporter, <a href="#Page_373">373</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">buys Syracuse <i>Standard</i>, <a href="#Page_373">373</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">returns to the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_373">373</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">assistant managing editor, <a href="#Page_373">373</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">managing editor, <a href="#Page_373">373</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">described by E. G. Riggs, <a href="#Page_373">373</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">perfects collection of election returns, <a href="#Page_374">374</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">sends Blaine first news of his defeat, <a href="#Page_374">374</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">establishes a news service in a night, <a href="#Page_375">375</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">selection of correspondents by, <a href="#Page_376">376</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“Use your own judgment,” <a href="#Page_377">377</a>, <a href="#Page_378">378</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“You’ve been fired, but come back,” <a href="#Page_378">378</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lord, Kenneth, city editor, <a href="#Page_371">371</a>, <a href="#Page_432">432</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lotteries, list of numbers drawn, in the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lottery advertising, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Luby, James, chief editorial writer, <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lyman, Ambrose W., night city editor, <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lynch, Charles, Sunday <i>Sun</i> writer, <a href="#Page_412">412</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lynde, Willoughby, part owner of the <i>Transcript</i>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Magazines, New York periodicals in 1833, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maguire, Mark, newsboy and sports writer, <a href="#Page_285">285</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">invents boxing chart, <a href="#Page_285">285</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mallon, George Barry, city editor, 1902–1914, <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mandigo, John, sporting editor, <a href="#Page_395">395</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mann, Henry, reporter, exchange editor and author, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">reports Stokes trial, <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mansfield, Josephine, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_270">270</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Marble, Manton, joins the <i>World</i>, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">controls it, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">protests to Lincoln when the <i>World</i> is suppressed, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maria Monk, the <i>Sun</i> prints “Disclosures” of, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">exposed by W. L. Stone in the <i>Commercial Advertiser</i>, <a href="#Page_112">112</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Martineau, Harriet, comments of, on the Moon Hoax, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Matthew Marshall.” See <a href="#Hitchcock">Hitchcock, Thomas</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Matthias the Prophet, trial of, for murder, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">McAlpin, Robert, reporter, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">McAlpin, Tod, reporter, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">McClellan, George B., supported by the <i>Sun</i> in 1864, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">McCloy, W. C., city editor and managing editor, <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_398">398</a>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">McDonnell, P. G., predicts Aguinaldo’s revolt, <a href="#Page_376">376</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">McEntee, Joseph, Albany correspondent, <a href="#Page_394">394</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mexican War, <i>Sun’s</i> news of, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>, <a href="#Page_165">165</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">costly to newspapers, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mitchell, Edward P., owns a copy of the first <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">is quoted on Dana’s freedom from ancient journalistic rules, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">describes Dana’s methods and surroundings, <a href="#Page_247">247–251</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">describes Dana’s encouragement of Cuba Libre, <a href="#Page_354">354</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">finds “Plaza Charles A. Dana” in Camaguey, <a href="#Page_355">355</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">writes short stories of distinction, <a href="#Page_405">405</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">breadth of his fancy and humour, <a href="#Page_405">405</a>, <a href="#Page_406">406</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">address on “The Newspaper Value of Non-essentials,” <a href="#Page_406">406</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">champions the classics, <a href="#Page_407">407</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_449">449</span>defines yellow journalism and white, <a href="#Page_415">415</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">describes Dana’s revolution of journalism, <a href="#Page_416">416</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">receives Dana’s instructions as to length of death notice, <a href="#Page_425">425</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes editor-in-chief, <a href="#Page_430">430</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">president of the Sun Printing and Publishing Association, 1909–1911, <a href="#Page_430">430</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">remains as editor, <a href="#Page_432">432</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Monsieur X.” See <a href="#Thieblin">Thiéblin, Napoleon L.</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Moon_Hoax"></a>Moon Hoax, <a href="#Page_64">64–101</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">reacts on the <i>Sun’s</i> big fire story, <a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Morris, George P., <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Morrissey, John, pugilist, is supported for the Senate by the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Morrison, Archibald M., gains control of the <i>Sun</i> to use it for evangelical purposes, <a href="#Page_189">189</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Morse, Samuel F. B., assisted by W. M. Swain and A. S. Abell to finance the telegraph, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Motto, “It Shines for All” appears, origin of, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mullin, Edward H., editorial writer, <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Munn, Orson D., buys <i>Scientific American</i> with Alfred E. Beach, <a href="#Page_162">162</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Munsey, Frank A., sells Washington <i>Times</i> to Brisbane, <a href="#Page_348">348</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">remarks of, at Yale on the influence of the <i>Sun</i> and the <i>World</i>, <a href="#Page_419">419</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">buys New York <i>Press</i>, <a href="#Page_431">431</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">buys the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_431">431</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">consolidates the <i>Sun</i> and the <i>Press</i>, <a href="#Page_431">431</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">buys Stewart Building, <a href="#Page_432">432</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“M. W. H.” See <a href="#Hazeltine">Hazeltine, M. W.</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Mystery of Marie Roget.” See <a href="#Rogers">Rogers, Mary</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Navy Department scandals, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Nemo,” a <i>Sun</i> correspondent in the Civil War, <a href="#Page_188">188</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">News boats, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Newsboys, Day originates street sales by, <a href="#Page_39">39–40</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Sam Messenger, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Newspapers, <i>Courrant</i>, the first English daily, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">London <i>Times</i> the first English paper to use a steam press, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>Pennsylvania Packet</i>, the first American daily, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Globe</i>, oldest New York paper, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Evening Post</i>, second oldest New York paper, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Courier</i> and the <i>Enquirer</i> amalgamated, <a href="#Page_35">35</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">New York <i>Tribune</i>, founding of, <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">New York <i>Times</i> is started, <a href="#Page_57">57</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Transcript</i> is started, <a href="#Page_57">57</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>True Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_59">59–60</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>Courier and Enquirer</i>, its huge size, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">attitude of the <i>Sun’s</i> contemporaries toward the Moon Hoax, <a href="#Page_75">75</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_87">87</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Sun’s</i> penny imitators, editorial reference to, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">New York <i>Herald</i> prints the first report of Stock Exchange sales, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>Herald’s</i> circulation in 1836, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Journal of Commerce</i> denounces the <i>Sun</i> as an inciter of riots, <a href="#Page_119">119</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">paper rolls, a new invention, described, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>Courier and Enquirer’s</i> writers under Webb, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>Journal of Commerce</i>, enterprise under Gerard Hallock’s editorship, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Transcript’s</i> early success, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">list of penny papers started in New York, 1833–1838, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">New York <i>Express</i> established, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">New York <i>Daily News</i> established, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Daily Transcript</i>, the first Philadelphia penny paper, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Philadelphia <i>Public Ledger</i>, office mobbed, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">list of great dailies founded, 1833–1843, <a href="#Page_136">136</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Herald</i> called “a very bad paper,” by Greeley, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_450">450</span>New York <i>World</i>, appearance of, as a highly moral sheet, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the New York <i>Times</i> and the Tweed exposure, <a href="#Page_274">274</a>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Orange <i>Postman</i>, the first penny paper, <a href="#Page_29">29</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Newspaper feuds, Day and Webb, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>Sun</i> and <i>Journal of Commerce</i>, <a href="#Page_54">54</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">New York, size and life of, in 1833, <a href="#Page_32">32–34</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">life in the thirties, <a href="#Page_121">121–123</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">rich and powerful figures of Dana’s first <i>Sun</i> year, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">clubs, hotels, and theatres of the sixties, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>, <a href="#Page_237">237</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">New York <i>Press</i>, sports staff of, transferred to the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_393">393</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nicollet, Jean Nicolas, supposed connection of, with the Moon Hoax, <a href="#Page_94">94–101</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Noah, Mordecai M., <a href="#Page_61">61</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">establishes <i>Morning Star</i>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“No king, no clown, to rule this town,” <a href="#Page_255">255</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Norr, William, writes “The Pearl of Chinatown,” <a href="#Page_411">411</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">North, S. N. D., describes the influence of the penny press, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">North, Walter Savage, writes fiction for the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">circulation of New York dailies in 1833, <a href="#Page_31">31</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Nym Crinkle.” See <a href="#Wheeler">Andrew C. Wheeler</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">O’Brien, John H., Laffan’s jest with, <a href="#Page_429">429</a>, <a href="#Page_430">430</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Odion, Henry W., night city editor, <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">O’Hanlon, Virginia, asks the <i>Sun</i> if there is a Santa Claus, <a href="#Page_409">409</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">O’Malley, Frank W., story by, on Policeman Sheehan’s death, <a href="#Page_364">364</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">describes Passover parade, <a href="#Page_367">367</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Overton, Grant M., book-reviewer, <a href="#Page_411">411</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Palmer, Frederick, <i>Evening Sun</i> reporter, <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Paragraphs, quotations from, in 1834, <a href="#Page_52">52–53</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Park_Mungo"></a>Park, Mungo, Locke writes the “Lost Manuscript” of, <a href="#Page_117">117</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Patton, Francis T., rules for exaggeration by, <a href="#Page_390">390</a>, <a href="#Page_391">391</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Penny newspapers, failure of, before the <i>Sun</i> was established, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Perkins"></a>Perkins, Eli (Melville De Lancey Landon), <i>Sun</i> correspondent, <a href="#Page_314">314</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Philip Hone, the <i>Sun</i> suggests that he incited a riot, <a href="#Page_119">119</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Phillips, David Graham, last assignments of, <a href="#Page_360">360</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">finds material for novels, <a href="#Page_360">360</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pigs in City Hall Park, the <i>Sun</i> objects to, <a href="#Page_55">55</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pigeons, the <i>Sun</i> uses, to carry ship news, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">editorial explaining presence of, on the <i>Sun’s</i> roof, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pike, James S., Dana advises, to get “Black Dan drunk,” <a href="#Page_211">211</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">career of, as journalist and diplomat, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Poe, Edgar Allan, describes R. A. Locke, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_66">66</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">his “Hans Pfaall” spoiled by the Moon Hoax, <a href="#Page_90">90–93</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">belief of, that the Moon Hoax firmly established penny newspapers, <a href="#Page_102">102</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">returns to New York, <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">writes the Balloon Hoax for the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">inspiration of, for “The Mystery of Marie Roget,” <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Post-Trader scandal, <a href="#Page_306">306</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prall, William M., <a href="#Page_104">104</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Press, the <i>Sun’s</i> first, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Sun’s</i> second, <a href="#Page_52">52</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Sun’s</i> third, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Presses, Day buys two Napiers, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Price, Joseph, partner of R. A. Locke in <i>New Era</i>, <a href="#Page_116">116</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">part owner <i>New Era</i>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Price of the <i>Sun</i> changed from “one penny” to “one cent,” <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Printers, union, in 1833, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prize-fighting denounced, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pulitzer, Joseph, is assigned by Dana to report the electoral controversy, <a href="#Page_240">240</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_451">451</span>correspondent of the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_312">312</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“The third yellow journalist,” <a href="#Page_413">413</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">influence of, on journalism, <a href="#Page_419">419</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Railroads, extent of, in 1833, <a href="#Page_30">30</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ralph, Julian, reports Borden trial, <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">long service of, on <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_331">331</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Grant’s funeral, report by, <a href="#Page_332">332</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">books written by, <a href="#Page_334">334</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">a football classic by, with the score left out, <a href="#Page_334">334</a>, <a href="#Page_335">335</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Molly Maguires, reported by, <a href="#Page_335">335</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">is gifted with “sixth sense,” <a href="#Page_335">335</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">describes reporting an inauguration, <a href="#Page_337">337</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ramsey, Dave, originates the idea of a penny <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_21">21</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rawlins, General John A., part of, in Dana’s assignment to report on Grant, <a href="#Page_218">218</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Raymond, Henry J., goes to the <i>Tribune</i>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">performs a great reporting feat, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">leaves Greeley, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes the first editor of the New York <i>Times</i>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">calls Webb’s paper “the Austrian organ in Wall Street,” <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reamer, Lawrence, dramatic critic, <a href="#Page_411">411</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reick, William C., becomes proprietor, <a href="#Page_430">430</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">early career of, <a href="#Page_430">430</a>, <a href="#Page_431">431</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">improves <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_431">431</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">sells the <i>Sun</i> to Frank A. Munsey, <a href="#Page_431">431</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reid, Whitelaw, succeeds Greeley, <a href="#Page_298">298</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Reporters, comparison of styles, <a href="#Page_315">315–322</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>Sun</i> staff in 1893, <a href="#Page_330">330</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>Sun</i>, anonymity of, almost complete, <a href="#Page_330">330</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“The <i>Sun</i> has no ‘stars,’” <a href="#Page_359">359</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">a typical assignment list in 1893, <a href="#Page_359">359</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rewey, Elijah M., night city editor, <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">exchange editor, <a href="#Page_372">372</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Riggs, Edward G., reports seven national conventions, <a href="#Page_343">343</a>, <a href="#Page_344">344</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">wide acquaintance of, <a href="#Page_344">344</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Dana’s reliance on, <a href="#Page_344">344</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“Riggs is my Phil Sheridan,” <a href="#Page_345">345</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">defines political correspondents, <a href="#Page_345">345</a>, <a href="#Page_346">346</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">described by Samuel G. Blythe, <a href="#Page_346">346</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">writes history of national conventions, <a href="#Page_346">346</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">describes Lord’s discernment, <a href="#Page_373">373</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">tells how Lord built up the Laffan bureau, <a href="#Page_375">375</a>, <a href="#Page_376">376</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“One story you [Chamberlin] can’t write,” <a href="#Page_341">341</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Rigolo.” See <a href="#Thieblin">Thiéblin, N. L.</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Riis, Jacob A., chief police reporter, <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_398">398</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">writings of, attract Roosevelt, <a href="#Page_398">398</a>, <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Riots, the Bowery Theatre, <a href="#Page_55">55–56</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ripley, George, lectures, <a href="#Page_205">205</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">helps Dana to enter Brook Farm, <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">is chief of the cow-milking group, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">editor of the <i>Harbinger</i>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">prepares, with Dana, the “New American Encyclopedia,” <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Robeson, George M., accused by the <i>Sun</i> in the Navy scandal, <a href="#Page_304">304</a>, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Robinson, Lucius, <i>Sun</i> reporter and governor, <a href="#Page_104">104–105</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Rogers"></a>Rogers, Mary, disappearance of, announced in the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_153">153</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">editorial comment on murder of, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Poe’s uses case of, in fiction, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>, <a href="#Page_155">155</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Root, Walstein, Spanish war correspondent, <a href="#Page_355">355</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rosebault, Walter M., city editor and reporter, <a href="#Page_280">280</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rosenfeld, Sidney, <i>Sun</i> reporter in 1870, <a href="#Page_280">280</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ruhl, Arthur, <i>Evening Sun</i> reporter, <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rum, the <i>Sun’s</i> aversion to, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Safe Burglary Conspiracy, <a href="#Page_308">308</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Salary Grab, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_452">452</span>Sam Patch, the <i>Sun’s</i> pigeon, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Santa Claus editorial article, <a href="#Page_409">409</a>, <a href="#Page_410">410</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Scientific American</i>, interest in, bought by Alfred E. Beach, <a href="#Page_162">162</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Secession, the <i>Sun’s</i> plan to emasculate, <a href="#Page_179">179</a>, <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Serviss, Garret P., night editor, <a href="#Page_372">372</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shaw, Henry Grenville, telegraph editor, <a href="#Page_280">280</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shepherd, Alexander, accused by the <i>Sun</i> in the Washington paving scandal, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">tries to hale Dana to Washington, <a href="#Page_307">307</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Short, Wm. F., <a href="#Page_60">60</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shunk, James F., a <i>Sun</i> contributor, <a href="#Page_405">405</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Siamese Twins, arrest of, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Simonds, Frank H., editorial writer, the <i>Sun</i> and the <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Simonton, James W., associate of Raymond, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Six-penny respectables,” <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Sixth sense,” examples of, <a href="#Page_335">335</a>, <a href="#Page_336">336</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Slavery, Missouri Compromise and Dred Scott decision rejected by the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_175">175</a>, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Smith, George M., night editor, 1904–1912, <a href="#Page_372">372</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">managing editor <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Smith, Goldwin, a <i>Sun</i> contributor, <a href="#Page_404">404</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Space rates, <a href="#Page_380">380</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spalding, James R., a <i>World</i> writer, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spanish War, <i>Sun’s</i> news service in, <a href="#Page_353">353–356</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sports, the <i>Sun’s</i> first prize-fight story, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sports department, <a href="#Page_391">391–393</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spears, John R., cruises around the world, <a href="#Page_349">349</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">reports America’s Cup races, <a href="#Page_349">349</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">covers Hatfield-McCoy feuds, <a href="#Page_349">349</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">books written by, <a href="#Page_349">349</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spears, Raymond S., reporter, <a href="#Page_349">349</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Speed, Keats, becomes managing editor, <a href="#Page_432">432</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Spencer, Edward, a writer of fiction for the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_405">405</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stanley, William J., part owner of the <i>Transcript</i>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stanton, Henry Brewster, a <i>Sun</i> writer from 1868 to 1887, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Beecher’s tribute to, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stanton, Edwin M., asks Dana to enter War Department, <a href="#Page_215">215</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">withdraws appointment, <a href="#Page_216">216</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Steamships, Great Western arrives at New York, <a href="#Page_119">119</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Sirius arrives at New York, <a href="#Page_119">119</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Sun’s</i> extras on arrival of, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">loss of the President, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stephens, Ann S., writes fiction for the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stereotyping, adopted by the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stetson, Francis Lynde, a <i>Sun</i> contributor, <a href="#Page_404">404</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stevenson, Robert Louis, early successes of, first appear in the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_403">403</a>, <a href="#Page_404">404</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">South Seas articles of, complete only in the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_403">403</a>, <a href="#Page_404">404</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stewart, Alexander T., grave robbery of, <a href="#Page_322">322</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Stewart_William"></a>Stewart, William (“Walsingham”), first dramatic critic to adopt intimate style, <a href="#Page_411">411</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stillman, Amos B., telegraph editor for forty-five years, <a href="#Page_280">280</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“Quite a fire in Chicago,” <a href="#Page_281">281</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stokes, Edward S., conviction of, reported by Henry Mann, <a href="#Page_317">317</a>, <a href="#Page_318">318</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stone, William L., conflict of, with Bryant, <a href="#Page_34">34</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Sun’s</i> quarrel with, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">sketch of, <a href="#Page_112">112</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">exposes Maria Monk, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sullivan-Mitchell fight, Arthur Brisbane’s report of, <a href="#Page_347">347</a>, <a href="#Page_348">348</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><i>Sun</i>, the, reprints of the first issue, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">size of the first issue, <a href="#Page_25">25</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">extant copies of first issue, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">second issue, contents of, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">attacks shinplasters and phrenology, <a href="#Page_123">123</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">sold by Day to Beach, <a href="#Page_127">127</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_453">453</span>plant, expenses, and circulation of, June, 1838, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Day’s period of ownership of, <a href="#Page_127">127</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">editorial comment in 1837 on popularity of, <a href="#Page_129">129</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">issues extras on the arrival of the Great Western, the British Queen, and other steamships, <a href="#Page_142">142</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">uses horse expresses to bring Governor Seward’s message from Albany, <a href="#Page_143">143</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">uses train, trotting horses, and boat to get the news of the steamer Caroline case, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">uses carrier pigeons to get ship news, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">moves to Nassau and Fulton streets, 1842, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>, <a href="#Page_147">147</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">second home of, burned after it had moved, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">buys a new dress of type every three months, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">is seven columns wide in 1840, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">title of, reads “<i>The New York Sun</i>” for a few months, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">is eight columns wide in 1843, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>Weekly Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>American Sun</i>, for Europeans, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>Illustrated Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">syndicates President Tyler’s Message in 1841, <a href="#Page_169">169</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">value of, $250,000 in 1852, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes a two-cent paper August 1, 1864;</li>
-<li class="isub2">a one-cent paper, July 1, 1916;</li>
-<li class="isub2">a two-cent paper January 26, 1918, <a href="#Page_194">194</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">size of, reduced to five columns in 1863, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>Weekly Sun</i>, continued by Dana, <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>Semi-Weekly Sun</i> announced, <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Dana and his associates pay $175,000 for, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">apologizes for issuing more than four pages, <a href="#Page_278">278</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">city editors under Cummings, <a href="#Page_279">279</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">telegraph editors, <a href="#Page_280">280</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Office Cat of, <a href="#Page_287">287–289</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">only four pages for twenty years, <a href="#Page_301">301</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">extraordinary sales, <a href="#Page_323">323–325</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">success of, explained by E. P. Mitchell, <a href="#Page_325">325</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Sun</i> spirit, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>, <a href="#Page_379">379</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">home of, for forty-seven years, <a href="#Page_369">369</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">editors-in-chief, only three in fifty years, <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">managing editors, list of, <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">city editors, list of, <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">night city editors, list of, <a href="#Page_371">371</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">night editors, list of, <a href="#Page_372">372</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">news system, <a href="#Page_372">372</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">ethics, <a href="#Page_380">380–383</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">list of editorial writers, <a href="#Page_409">409</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">price of, <a href="#Page_431">431</a>, <a href="#Page_432">432</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">homes of, <a href="#Page_432">432</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Sunbeams” column, <a href="#Page_315">315</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sun cholera cure, <a href="#Page_173">173</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Swain, Wm. M., predicts Day’s ruin, <a href="#Page_24">24</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">founds Philadelphia <i>Public Ledger</i>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">industry of, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">makes $3,000,000, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Swift, John T., sends the <i>Sun</i> a beat on Port Arthur’s fall, <a href="#Page_376">376</a>, <a href="#Page_377">377</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Swinton, John, double intellectual life of, <a href="#Page_259">259</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">makes speeches attacking Dana, <a href="#Page_260">260</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">is managing editor of the <i>Times</i>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">starts <i>John Swinton’s Paper</i>, <a href="#Page_261">261</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Tammany Hall, old home of, bought by Dana for the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Taylor, Bayard, European correspondent of the <i>Tribune</i>, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Telegraph, comments on Morse’s new invention, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">a report that the <i>Sun</i> tried to control, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">extended to New York in 1846, <a href="#Page_146">146</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">is opened from New York to Philadelphia, Boston, and Albany, <a href="#Page_164">164</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">lines completed in 1846, <a href="#Page_165">165</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">drives reprint from first page, <a href="#Page_171">171</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_454">454</span>first cable messages, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Theatres, the Bowery riot, <a href="#Page_55">55–56</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">attractions of the thirties, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“Footlight Flashes,” <a href="#Page_315">315</a>, <a href="#Page_316">316</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">list of <i>Sun</i> critics, <a href="#Page_411">411</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Thieblin"></a>Thiéblin, Napoleon L., critic and essayist, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">uses pen names of “Monsieur X,” “Azamet Batuk,” and “Rigolo,” <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_315">315</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tilden, Samuel J., editor of <i>Daily News</i>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Townsend, Edward W., writes <i>Chimmie Fadden</i> stories, <a href="#Page_330">330</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">fiction characters created by, <a href="#Page_411">411</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Trains, special news, used by <i>Sun</i> and <i>Herald</i>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Trowbridge, H. Warren, writes fiction for the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_195">195</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tweed, William M., is boss of the city, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">as a source of news, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">statue of, a <i>Sun</i> joke, <a href="#Page_271">271–274</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">declination by, <a href="#Page_273">273</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">retains W. O. Bartlett as counsel, <a href="#Page_275">275</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">denounced by the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_275">275</a>, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">absolute power of, <a href="#Page_276">276</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">stable of, described by the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">escapes from keepers, <a href="#Page_277">277</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Van Anda, Carr V., night editor, 1893–1904, <a href="#Page_372">372</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Van Buren, Martha, <a href="#Page_51">51</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vance, John, writes editorials, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">leaves the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_192">192</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vanderbilt, Cornelius, an advertiser in the first <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_27">27</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">opposes Jay Gould, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">a <i>Sun</i> interview with, in 1875, <a href="#Page_316">316</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Van Dyke, Dr. Henry, deception of, by Tweed statue joke, <a href="#Page_274">274</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vila, Joseph, sports editor, <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">Damon Runyon’s tribute to, <a href="#Page_393">393</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">exposes huge betting, <a href="#Page_393">393</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Wall Street news, Bennett appreciates value of, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">“Walsingham.” See <a href="#Stewart_William">William Stewart</a>.</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wardman, Ervin, first used phrase “Yellow Journalism,” <a href="#Page_415">415</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes publisher of the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_432">432</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Warren, General Fitz-Henry, writes the phrase, “Forward to Richmond!”, <a href="#Page_213">213</a>, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">career of, <a href="#Page_214">214</a></li>
-<li class="isub1"><i>Sun</i> writer, soldier, and politician, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_258">258</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">article of, on Sumner’s death, <a href="#Page_258">258</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Watkins, James T., editorial writer, <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Watterson, Henry, “You [Dana] don’t make the <i>Sun</i>,” <a href="#Page_291">291</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“Mr. Dana is left alone,” <a href="#Page_293">293–295</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">predicts no end to the “personality of journalism,” <a href="#Page_295">295</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">first woman reporter of <i>Evening Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_400">400</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Webb, James Watson, journalist and a duellist, <a href="#Page_35">35–36</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">editorial articles on, <a href="#Page_61">61</a>, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">the <i>Sun’s</i> story of attack by, on Bennett, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">charges the <i>Sun</i> with stealing a President’s message, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">second assault on Bennett described, <a href="#Page_114">114</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">refuses Joseph Wood’s challenge, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">retires from newspaper work, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Webster, Daniel, Bunker Hill speech of, reported by the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_158">158</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Weeks, Caleb, carries the Moon Hoax to Herschel in Africa, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Weston, Edward Payson, the best “leg man” in journalism, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">feats of, in pedestrianism, <a href="#Page_283">283</a>, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Weyman, Charles S., editor of the “Sunbeams” column, <a href="#Page_228">228</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Wheeler"></a>Wheeler, Andrew Carpenter, (“Nym Crinkle”), dramatic critic, <a href="#Page_411">411</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Whisky Ring scandal, <a href="#Page_305">305</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">White, Frank Marshall, brings the <i>Sun</i> a beat on the missing steamer Umbria, <a href="#Page_392">392</a>, <a href="#Page_393">393</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_455">455</span>Whitman, Stephen French, <i>Evening Sun</i> reporter, <a href="#Page_399">399</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wild pigeons, <a href="#Page_43">43</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><a id="Williams_Barney"></a>Williams, Barney (Bernard Flaherty), the <i>Sun’s</i> first newsboy, <a href="#Page_40">40</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">makes first stage appearance, <a href="#Page_121">121</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Williams, John, city editor, <a href="#Page_279">279</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Willis, Nathaniel P., <a href="#Page_37">37</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wilson, Alexander C., associate of Raymond, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wilson, General James Harrison, quoted on Dana’s assignment to report on Grant, <a href="#Page_217">217</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">says Grant declared Dana would be appointed collector, <a href="#Page_309">309</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wisner, George W., the <i>Sun’s</i> first reporter, <a href="#Page_38">38</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes half owner of the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">indicted for attack on Attree, <a href="#Page_61">61</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">challenged to a duel, <a href="#Page_62">62</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">retires from the <i>Sun</i>, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wood, Benjamin, buys <i>Daily News</i>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">owns <i>Daily News</i>, <a href="#Page_181">181</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wood, Fernando, proposes New York’s secession, <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wood, Dr. John B., “The Great American Condenser,” <a href="#Page_278">278</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">condenses through a reader, <a href="#Page_279">279</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wood, Joseph, feud over, and wife, challenge of, to Col. Webb, <a href="#Page_115">115</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wood, Samuel A., originates rhymed news stories, <a href="#Page_351">351</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">spring poem by, <a href="#Page_352">352</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">“Snygless the Seas Are,” <a href="#Page_352">352</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Yale University, students of, investigate the Moon story, <a href="#Page_84">84–85</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Yellow Journalism, Col. Watterson’s statement on, <a href="#Page_413">413</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">defined by E. P. Mitchell, <a href="#Page_415">415</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">phrase, first used by Ervin Wardman, <a href="#Page_415">415</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Young, John Russell, orders of, enrage Cummings, <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Young, Mr., charged by the <i>Transcript</i> with biting two of its carriers, <a href="#Page_119">119</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Young, William, city editor, <a href="#Page_279">279</a></li>
-<li class="isub1">managing editor, <a href="#Page_282">282</a></li>
-</ul>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="wide" />
-
-<div id="ip_455" class="newpage figcenter" style="max-width: 50em;">
- <img src="images/i_450l.jpg" width="3059" height="737" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE THIRD HEAD-LINE OF THE NEW YORK SUN</div></div>
-
-<hr class="wide" />
-<div id="ip_455b" class="newpage figcenter" style="max-width: 50em;">
- <img src="images/i_450r.jpg" width="3123" height="390" alt="" />
- <div class="caption">THE FOURTH HEAD-LINE OF THE NEW YORK SUN</div></div>
-<hr class="wide" />
-
-<div class="chapter"><div class="transnote">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="Transcribers_Notes">Transcriber’s Notes</h2>
-
-<p>Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made
-consistent when a predominant preference was found
-in the original book; otherwise they were not changed.</p>
-
-<p>Simple typographical errors were corrected; unbalanced
-quotation marks were remedied when the change was
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-corresponding illustrations.</p>
-
-<p>The index was not checked for proper alphabetization
-or correct page references.</p>
-
-<p><a href="#Page_139">Page 139</a>: Words appear to be missing from the
-paragraph beginning “When Beach was twenty.”</p>
-</div>
-</div>
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