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Red Blood & Black Ink: Journalism in the Old West [Hardcover]

David Dary (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

March 10, 1998
For the first time, the long, exciting, often surprising story of journalism in the Old West--from the freewheeling days of the early 1800s when all the news was an expression of the editor's opinion, to the more balanced reporting of the classic small-town weeklies and busy city newsrooms of the 1920s. Here are the printers who founded the first papers, arriving in town with a shirttail of type and a secondhand press, setting up shop under trees, in tents, in barns or storefronts, moving on when the town failed, or into larger quarters if it flourished. Using many excerpts from the early papers themselves, Dary shows us the amazing ways the early editors stretched the language, often inventing new words to describe unusual events or to lambaste their targets--and how they sometimes had to defend their right of free speech with fists or guns. We see women working in partnership with their husbands or out on their own, and tramp printers who moved from place to place as need for their services rose and fell.
Here, too, are Mark Twain, Bret Harte, Horace Greeley--and William Allen White writing on the death of his young daughter. Here is the Telegraph and Texas Register article that launched the legend of the Alamo, and dozens of tongue-in-cheek, brilliant, or moving reports of national events and local doings, including holdups, train robberies, wars, elections, shouting matches, hyperbolic vegetable-growing contests, weddings, funerals, births, and much, much more.
In Red Blood & Black Ink David Dary makes a strong case for the importance of the press in settling the West and helping to knit the nation together, making us into the country we are today. A fascinating look at a neglected part of our history.

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

After a reader shot the editor of a Kansas newspaper, the jury refused to convict the culprit. "That's just the way it is with some juries," reported another newspaper. "They think it no more harm to shoot an editor than a Jack-rabbit." Indeed, the men who reported the news on the frontier (including such luminaries as Mark Twain and Bret Harte) had to be a wild bunch. Red Blood and Black Ink provides an informative and very entertaining look at how the frontier press covered the news in the roughest towns around and helped set a cultural tone that resonates to the present day.

From Publishers Weekly

The great temptation in commenting on this highly entertaining history of journalism in the American West?from 1808, when the first newspaper west of the Mississippi went to press in St. Louis, to the early 20th century?is simply to repeat some of the excerpts from old newspapers that Dary has the good sense to quote so lavishly. They are salty, angry, foul-tempered, opinionated, unfair, misspelled and more fun to read than an entire year of contemporary op-ed pages. Most of the newspapers in the early West were more personal, more direct and snappier than what Easterners were reading. The coverage of politics was unabashedly partisan (pro- or anti-slavery before the Civil War; Republican or Democrat after). Western editors, like their descendants, knew that sensationalism sells and, accordingly, lavished attention on scandal and death (violent, if possible). Just about every paper "boomed" the local community and bad-mouthed the neighboring ones, and most elevated the art of viciously attacking rival publications to a blood sport. Despite these lurid habits, however, papers gave national and international news more coverage than one might expect. Informative appendixes discuss 19th-century printing presses (by brand name) and printing terms and provide a detailed listing of early Western papers and their editors. Dary (author of seven previous books on the West, including Cowboy Culture) delivers a nicely balanced mixture of scholarship and anecdote. Photos.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 345 pages
  • Publisher: Knopf; 1 edition (March 10, 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0679446559
  • ISBN-13: 978-0679446552
  • Product Dimensions: 9.6 x 6.8 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,657,436 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Bookschlepper Recommends, August 15, 2009
I am late getting to this book on my "to-read" pile (© 1998) but 2009 is auspicious and poignant. The Seattle and Denver papers, long widely respected windows into fly-over country, have gone out of the newspaper business. They came from dramatic roots; this is the story of the many editors who took on the Wild West and what a marvelous tale it is.

There are the rough-and-tough anecdotes of life during a gold rush--the drama of the West of Wild Bill Hickok. There are the stories of how towns like Denver and San Francisco came to be the metropolis they are, thanks to editors' civilizing influence. You get a unique view into How the West Was Won. I loved the anecdotes; they don't write stories like that anymore.

Editorial disputes and competitions were settled with guns "Anderson left but returned with a revolver and entered the office without knocking. He shot Bonfils in the neck and chest and Tammen in the shoulder and chest as both men ducked under Polly Pry's full skirt. Anderson was waiting to use the last bullet in his revolver when Bonfils raised Polly's skirt to see what was happening. When Anderson saw Bonfils shaking like a leaf and perspiring heavily, he started laughing and put the gun away. Bonfils and Tammen survived."

There are the ads: for those planning ahead, one merchant advertised asbestos coffins: "No fear of the hereafter, as I guarantee to see a corpse through without singeing a hair."

"The average length of a farmer's life is sixty-five years, while that of a printer is thirty-three, hence the necessity of paying for your paper promptly"--Vermillion Dakota Republican, 1886

Dary includes the first dispatches from the Alamo and the Battle of Little Big Horn; you must read them for yourself.

I loved the development of the papers; blogs don't have this glamour and background. Horace Greeley (of Go West, Young Man) was the first editor to separate opinion from news and was soon imitated. He was also the first to do an interview and publish it in Q-and-A format; his subject was Brigham Young. One editor was so disliked that, lacking tar and feathers, he was covered with molasses and sandburs, ridden around town on a rail and sent on his way. Joseph Charless, founder of the Missouri Gazette in 1808, was one of the first editors west of the Mississippi and frequently packed a pistol, Susan B. Anthony's brother, Colonel Dan Anthony was a anti-slavery newspaper editor in the Kansas Territory and packed two pistols.

"When Anne H. Martin became editor of the Carson News, a Democratic afternoon paper in Nevada, she was untrained in journalism and struggled merely to edit the news. She did not write editorials. But a man named Daily, a tall, courtly gentlemen who was editor of the rival Nevada Tribune, a Republican paper, frequently walked down the street from his office to the Carson News, entered the office, bowed to Anne Martin, walked quietly to her desk, and wrote a vituperative editorial in answer to the abusive attack he had written for his own paper that morning."

Amazing news that historians missed: Ansel Nash Kellogg edited the paper in Baraboo Wisconsin. When his assistant joined the Civil War effort, he discovered he couldn't set four pages of type himself. He arranged to get half-sheet supplements from The Wisconsin State Journal and added them to his own work. This developed into the purchase of full sheets, printed on one side, to which he added local news. At one point, 50 Wisconsin weeklies were doing this. Sensing an opportunity, he founded A.N. Kellogg Newspaper Company, the first syndicate, a pre-wire wire service, and sold these one-sided sheets across the West. He standardized column size, issued guidelines for writing a good story and let editors trade in their old fonts for ones that matched his. "Kellogg soon exercised enormous influence on what Americans read, especially those in the West, where the cost of books was out of most people's reach, and most homes had only a Bible and perhaps an English novel and a medical self-help book." Kellogg later stopped shipping the paper itself and sent stereotypes, ready for casting and printing. Lord, I remember using those in the 1960s and 1970s; it was standard in the ad biz. The impact of this homogenized news (in 3,000 out of 8,500 weeklies) cannot be overstated. I see several PhD theses in this fact alone.

Dary, retired director of the School of Journalism at Oklahoma and author of several prize-winning books tells a wonderful story well, integrating the research with tales of his grandfathers, both frontier editors.

"Generally, academic historians studying the American West have failed to use newspapers as historical sources perhaps because they viewed them as inaccurate, partisan and dishonest. Yet historians readily use personal letters and other documents that display similar defects. ... The people who produced them reported daily events without knowledge of the end. Even when the content is colored by honest or dishonest partisanship, historians could place such material in perspective by checking it against other historical evidence."
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4.0 out of 5 stars Old West Newspapers, a Must Have, July 11, 2007
This review is from: Red Blood & Black Ink: Journalism in the Old West (Hardcover)
Fantastic! Dary combines readable prose with great research without propogating a lot of the myth of the Trans-Mississippi West. Even the typography is spot on! Three helpful appendices in the hardcover edition, I don't have a paperback to compare it to. The appendices include presses used (some illustrated), glossary of printers' terms (slang), and Early Newspapers in States and Territories West of the Mississippi.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
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Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
tramp printer, preprinted pages, western editors, town promoters
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
San Francisco, United States, Civil War, New Mexico, Kansas City, Virginia City, Kansas Territory, Salt Lake City, James King of William, California Star, Territorial Enterprise, New York, Carson City, Missouri Gazette, Dodge City, Horace Greeley, Courtesy Western History Collections, Mark Twain, University of Oklahoma, Jesse James, Indian Territory, Missouri River, Evening Bulletin, Mississippi River, Dakota Territory
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