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Home Town News: William Allen White and the Emporia Gazette
 
 
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Home Town News: William Allen White and the Emporia Gazette [Hardcover]

Sally Foreman Griffith (Author)

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Book Description

January 5, 1989
In 1895, a 27-year-old journalist named William Allen White returned to his home town of Emporia, Kansas, to edit a little down-at-the-heels newspaper he had just purchased for $3,000. "The new editor," he wrote in his first editorial, "hopes to live here until he is the old editor, until some of the visions which rise before him as he dreams shall have come true." White did become "the old editor," remaining with the Emporia Gazette until his death 50 years later. During his long tenure he gained nation-wide fame as an author, political leader, and social commentator. But more than anything else, he became the national embodiment of the small-town newspaperman and all the treasured virtues that small towns represented in the minds of Americans.
Home Town News is both a fascinating biography and a compelling social history. As Sally Foreman Griffith shows, White's popular image--kindly yet crusading, fiercely independent yet deeply rooted in his community--doesn't do justice to the man's complexity. Shrewdly carving out a position of leadership in a faction-torn town, White carefully shaped his paper's vision of its community to promote local economic growth, Republican political control, and social harmony. With his emergence as a leader among Midwestern progressives, he carefully adapted the ideas and rhetoric of small-town boosterism to changing economic realities. The book uses White's career to help us understand the role of journalism--and the journalist--in turn-of-the-century American culture. Far from being a simple chronicler of daily events, the small-town newspaperman carried considerable weight in his community. He was a leading force in local business, a galvanizing influence in civic life, and a key political activist. As giant corporations came to dominate the national economy, the newspaperman played a pivotal yet ambivalent role in the resulting social transformation: he sought to preserve local autonomy even as his paper introduced his readers to mass-produced consumer goods.
Home Town News also tells the story of Emporia, Kansas, during this period of social change. Its richly textured descriptions of small-town life take us beyond abstractions like "modernization," "progressivism," and "boosterism." As we observe the Emporia Street Fair of 1899, the heated controversy over the morality of a local doctor in 1902, and the elaborate campaign to build a Y.M.C.A. in 1914, we gain new insights into the processes that have shaped modern America.

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Editorial Reviews

Review


"A readable, impressive, enjoyable and valued addition to the history of journalism, the story of a small-town editor and publisher catapulted to national fame after publication of an editorial dashed off in anger, 'What's the matter with Kansas.'"--New York Times Book Review


"[An] intriguing study of the role a small-town newspaper played in the social, civic, political, and economic life of the surrounding community in the nineteenth-century U.S....Griffith traces White's career in exhaustive detail, the growth of his fascinating personality, and the historical and cultural transformations that occurred in the practice and influence of community journalism."--Booklist


About the Author


Sally Foreman Griffith is Assistant Professor of History at Villanova University. She won the Allan Nevins Prize for the dissertation that forms the basis of this book.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
current club, certain rich man, booster progressivism, booster ethos, booster rhetoric, community journalism, practical printer
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Kansas City, William Allen White, Lyon County, New York, Commercial Street, What's the Matter, Emporia Gazette, Theodore Roosevelt, Associated Press, Mary White, Calvin Hood, Mit Wilhite, The Country Newspaper, Gilded Age, Delta Meffert, Central Press, Red Cross, Laura French, Second Avenue, The Real Issue, College of Emporia, High School, Emporia National Bank, John Phillips, Saturday Evening Post
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Front Cover | Table of Contents | First Pages | Index | Surprise Me!
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