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The Newspaper and the Historian.djvu
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Title
The Newspaper and the Historian
Author
Lucy Maynard Salmon
Year
1923
Location
New York
Source
djvu
Progress
To be proofread
Transclusion
Index not transcluded or unreviewed
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(key to
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Contents
Introduction
Page
The use of periodical literature as an historical source
xxxvii
Its legitimacy not yet unquestioned
xxxviii
Demand of historian for authoritative material
xxxviii
Standards of authoritativeness for other classes
xxxix
No standard of authoritativeness for the press
xxxix
Skepticism in regard to credibility of the press
xxxix
Reasons for skepticism
xxxix
Recent more favorable attitude of historians
xl
How far can the press be considered authoritative
xl
Analysis of press into component parts
xli
Tests to be applied to separate parts
xli
Importance of contemporary material
xli
How far is the historian justified in considering the press authoritative material
xlii
Chapter I
The Development of the Newspaper
Universal desire for news
1
Means of gratifying it in Greece
2
The Roman journal
2
The early Gauls
3
Les nouvellistes
3
Nouvelles à la main
4
The English coffee house
5
News letters in the provinces
5
The news letter in Scotland
6
Paper criers and caddies
6
Broadsides
7
Bulletin boards
8
The town crier
8
Plantation guests
8
News facilities in New England
8
Distribution of news on the Continent
8
Genesis of the newspaper in England
9
Renaudot and the
Gazette de France
9
Creed of Renaudot
10
Development of modern newspaper
10
Accretion of new interests
10
Decline of "the scoop"
11
Undertakings abroad
11
Collective activities of the press
12
Activities of a single newspaper
12
Early activities of the
Athenæum
13
Important expeditions financed by the press
13
A twentieth century daily
13
Activities of Renaudot
14
Early efforts to stimulate circulation
14
Prizes and medals
14
Effect of inventions on growth of the press
15
Manufacture of paper
15
Facilities for distribution
16
Increase in influence of the press
16
Growth of business management
16
Dangers feared from this
17
Increased circulation both cause and result
17
Newspaper no longer a personal organ
17
The press groups society and unifies groups
17
Specialized groups
18
Press exploits group hostility
18
Religious journalism
19
Lord Acton and the Roman Catholic press
19
F. D Maurice and the religious press
19
Orthodoxy and heterodoxy in America
20
Regroupings in the religious press
21
Problems of religious and of political press different
21
Similar tendencies in the political press
21
New interests demand new channels of expression
22
Society journals
23
Amateur journals
23
College journalism
24
Journalism of the trench
24
Early journals for troops
24
Early journalism of women
25
Labor journals
26
Foreign language press
26
Journalism of undeveloped groups
26
Prison journalism
26
Fluctuating interests reflected in the press
27
Widening interests recorded by press
27
Syndicated articles
28
Changes in character of the press
28
Undue emphasis on abnormal events
28
Mr. Dooley on the news
29
Personal journalism
30
The yellow press
30
Changes in relative importance of various parts of press
31
Connection of the newspaper with the past
32
Changes important for historian
32
The newspaper and expansion of interests
32
Party journalism
33
Appearance of the
Times
33
The independent press
34
Effect of education on the press
34
Function of newspaper changing
34
Newspaper repeats experience of museum of natural science
35
And of public library
35
And of method of writing history
35
Newspaper records its own times
36
Historian must examine sources of news
36
Press in part records these sources
36
Records imperfectly governmental control
36
Increasing complexity of the press
37
Historian must consider these transformations
37
Different tests for authoritativeness for different classes
38
Difference between the
press
and
journalism
38
Changing tendencies in the press do not lessen its value for the historian
39
Chapter II
The Newspaper as a Personality
Personality eludes definition
40
Elements contributing to personality
40
External features of the newspaper
40
Beliefs and opinions of the newspaper
41
Business habits of the newspaper
42
Ideals expressed in mottoes adopted
43
Appeals made to readers
44
Daily observations
45
Creeds
46
Names of newspapers
47
Names indicating functions
48
Changes in name
49
Favorite names in different countries
50
Nicknames given to newspapers
50
Nicknames given by newspapers
50
Emblems used by the press
51
Headlines
51
Price
52
Sense of proportion
53
Changing standards of conventionality
53
Cartoons
54
Early discourtesy of the newspaper
54
The
Covent-Garden Journal
54
Personal abuse common
55
Dickens on abuse in American papers
55
De Tocqueville on American journalists
55
Matthew Arnold on personality of American press
55
Walt Whitman on the press
56
Ill temper of newspapers
56
Provincial spirit
56
Independence of view
56
"Letters to the editor"
57
These characteristic of American and British press
58
"Answers to correspondents"
59
The Athenian Gazette
59
John Dunton and Defoe
59
Infallibility of the press
60
Omniscience of the press
60
"The Dogma of Journalistic Inerrancy"
60
"A saving sense of humor"
61
Charles Lamb and his "sixpenny jokes"
61
Professional humorists
61
"The colyum"
61
Personality seen in questions selected or omitted
62
Special editions
63
Differences in personality of metropolitan and of country press
63
Contrasts in personality of dailies, weeklies, and monthlies
63
Personality affected by personality of editor
64
But personality of paper independent of editor
64
Eccentric newspapers
65
Interest in such papers psychological rather than historical
65
Anonymity as an element in personality
65
Tendency towards signature
66
Signature favors pamphleteering
66
Explanation of change in tendency
66
Zola on signature
67
French law requiring signature
67
Effect of this in France
67
Effect of signature on personality of press
68
Advocates for and against signature
68
Schopenhauer on anonymity
69
Daily and weekly press accept signature in part
70
Monthlies and quarterlies accept signature wholly
70
John Morley on signature
70
Experiments of
The Unpopular Review
70
Effect of controversy on periodical press
71
Authoritativeness as affected by anonymity or signature
71
National preferences
71
The press an organ or a forum
72
The "wegotism" of the press
73
Comparative merits of both systems
73
"Have Papers Souls?"
73
Efforts to determine personality by comparing relative proportions of subjects
73
Matthew Arnold and the personality of the
Times
74
Historian must understand personality of periodicals used
74
Chapter III
Guarantees of Probability
General constitutional guarantees
75
Specific guarantees of federal government
75
Federal post office and the press
76
State laws affording guarantees
77
Federal government the authority for information
77
State governments responsible for information
77
Responsibility of local governments
77
Guarantees under normal conditions
77
Guarantees afforded by press itself
78
Regulations of press for protecting readers
78
Explicit guarantees given
79
Guarantees as a business enterprise
80
Guarantees given advertisers
81
Information guaranteed by the press
82
Guarantees afforded by business interests
83
The church responsible for religious notices
83
Responsibility of educational authorities
83
Health boards a source of information
84
Responsible organizations behind information
84
Permanent sources of information
84
Importance of guarantees in using the press
84
Chapter IV
The Press and Other Activities
PAGE
"No man liveth unto himself"
85
Expansion of classes of material used by the historian
85
Connection between press and government
85
Specific questions involved
86
Official patronage
86
Advertisements
87
Political office and the press in France
87
Political honors in England
88
Financial rewards for the press
89
Effect of government connection on authoritativeness
89
Party organs declining
90
General effect of connection between press and governmental parties
90
Relation between press and Church
91
Explanation of relation
91
Mutual dependence of press and Church
92
Compromise on disagreements between the two
92
Effect of mutual relation on authoritativeness of the press
93
Effect where Church is independent
93
Effect of an established Church
93
Effect of still different conditions in America and France
94
The newspaper and public health
95
Press supports certain conditions of health
95
Cautious on other sides of public health
96
Caution needed by historian
96
The press in the industrial world
97
May incur enmity of employers
97
Minimum wage for journalists
97
The press as a business enterprise
98
Its own difficulties
98
The press and social welfare
98
Its general social activities
98
Social activities among newsboys
99
Welfare work among its own employees
99
La Prensa
99
Object of welfare work unimportant to historian
100
Welfare work through correspondence columns
100
Social workers apparently indifferent to press
101
Mutual relations of press and education
101
Interest of press in education
101
Interest of education in the press
101
Embarrassment of the press in dealing with education
102
The press and literature
103
Early dependence of press on authors
103
Change in press interests
104
Change in literary style of the press
104
Crude form does not necessarily vitiate material
104
Opposite literary tendencies seen
105
Important literary works in the newspaper
106
Disadvantages of collecting newspaper articles into book form
106
Differences between journalism and literature
107
Effect of headline on English language
108
The headline and spelling
109
Catling on the headline
109
Headlines and the historian
109
Services of the press to language
110
The newspaper and the library
110
Press records library development
110
Library interested in the material newspaper
111
W. C. Ford on preservation of newspaper files
111
Early indifference of library to newspaper files
112
Concern of historian with these questions
113
Interdependence of press and all human activities
113
Chapter V
News-Collecting and News-Distributing Organizations
Ben Jonson's "staple of newes"
115
Bureaux et pelotons
116
Edward Cave and his exchange
116
Alaric Watts and Blackwood
116
The "partly-printed newspapers" of Watts
116
Organization of the Central Press
117
The Press Association
118
Reuters
118
Importance of news collecting agencies
118
Beginnings of news collecting in America
119
The Journal of Commerce
119
Development of the Associated Press
119
Its plan of organization
120
News collecting agencies and the historian
121
Criticisms made of the Associated Press
121
Examination of these criticisms
121
Charge of "suppressing the facts" dismissed by Court
124
Infallibility not claimed by or for the Associated Press
124
Associated Press not responsible for changes made by others
125
Precautions and preparation of Associated Press
126
Errors redressed
126
Other co-operative associations
126
Different forms of news collecting agencies
128
Proprietary associations
128
Organizations controlled by a single paper
129
Agencies controlled by government
129
Co-operative associations
130
Difficulties encountered by news agencies
130
Court decisions on property in news
131
Complications due to war
131
International misunderstanding due to war
132
Responsibilities entailed by war
133
News-distributing agencies
133
"Boiler-plate" and "ready-print" service
134
Character of material used
134
Dangers possible
135
"Ready-made" book notices
135
Newspaper distributing agencies
136
The Times
and the Napoleonic wars
136
Central distributing agencies
136
Relation of historian to newspaper distribution
136
Importance of news collecting agencies to historian
137
Chapter VI
The General Reporter
Parts of the newspaper affording guarantees
138
Tests for authoritativeness applied to local reporter
139
Sources of information available for reporters
139
Regular recognized sources
139
Occasional sources
140
Special sources
140
The "story" as written out
140
Dickens as a reporter
140
General criticism of the reporter
141
Analysis of his errors possible
142
Ignorance explains many errors
142
Sensational ignorance
143
Wilful ignorance
143
Errors due to jesting
144
Errors due to carelessness
145
Love of sensation
145
Errors of advertisers
146
Proof-reader shares in errors
146
Blunders of the reporter
146
Exigencies of publication explain errors
147
Variations between headlines and reports
147
Errors by telephone
148
"Tricks of the trade"
148
"Temperament" of distinguished men
148
Deliberate errors of reporters
148
Incorrect impressions
149
Imaginative reports
149
Absence of proportion in reports
149
"Only the rich man is interesting"
149
Forehanded reports
150
Dangers of
150
Reports of Coronation of Edward VII
150
Variations due to weather
150
Mistranslation a source of error
151
Trials of reporters
151
Interest in reports varies with conditions
152
Reporter between two conflicting types
152
Other handicaps of the reporter
152
Emphasis on his work given by schools of journalism
152
"The man higher up"
153
Influence on his work of general press conditions
153
Specialization improving his work
154
Changing social status of reporter
154
The reporter as he is and as he is believed to be
155
The local report a fertile source of error
155
Legislative effort to reduce errors
155
The cheerful reporter
156
His errors many but their importance unduly magnified
156
Number of errors of reporter explains distrust of press
157
Errors of local reporter need not disquiet historian
157
Chapter VII
The Official Reporter
Development of the official reporter
158
Sir Symonds D'Ewes and his
Journals
158
The
Commons Debates for 1629
159
"Separates" and news-letters
160
News-letters in great demand
160
Edward Cave and the
Gentleman's Magazine
161
Beginnings of parliamentary reporting
161
Opposition of Parliament
161
Circumventing Parliament
162
Dr. Johnson as reporter
163
His debates
164
Their limitations for the historian
164
John Wilkes and parliamentary reporting
166
Present theory of parliamentary reporting
167
Difficulties of reporting
167
Position of provincial reporters
167
Development of organization of reporting
168
Social status of reporters
169
General limitations of reporting
170
Difficulties with speakers
170
Variations between Hansard and collected speeches
170
"Reporting speeches which never were made"
171
Verbatim reports
172
Comparative merits of different forms of reports
172
Decline of interest in verbatim reports
173
Explanation of opposition of Parliament to reporters
174
Parliament accepts reporters
174
Reporters in Congress
174
Right of the public to know the business of the public
174
Three general systems of reporting
175
Reporting in the hands of the press
175
Official reporting
175
Contract system
175
Parliamentary reports on reporting
175
Press reports and parliamentary records
176
Comparative advantages
176
"Man always to be blest"
176
Objections to reporting at first general
177
Kossuth and reporting
177
Reporters and court trials
178
J. G. Bennett and court reporting
178
Reporters not alone responsible for unreliable reports
179
Real service may be rendered justice by reporters
179
Chapter VIII
The Special Correspondent
Many forms of special correspondence
180
The
Letters of Junius
180
Cramped opportunities of early papers
180
Material often contributed by prominent men
181
Development of reporter into special correspondent
181
Function of special correspondence
181
The correspondent in time of peace
181
At foreign capitals
181
J. G. Bennett on qualifications of correspondents
182
The special correspondent on himself
182
Lord Salisbury on the special correspondent
183
Correspondents of the London
Times
183
Question of authoritativeness of correspondence
183
Sources of news
184
Multiplicity of sources a possible handicap
184
Disadvantages under which the correspondent works
184
Expansion of skeleton messages
185
False impressions created by correspondents
185
Labouchere and foreign correspondents
186
International controversies from foreign correspondence
186
The expelled correspondent
186
Responsibilities and opportunities of foreign correspondents
186
Prone to magnify their office
187
Difficulties of the special correspondent
187
Bismarck and the
Pall Mall Gazette
187
Royalty as special correspondent
188
Attitude of governments towards the foreign correspondent
188
The special correspondent in South Africa
188
A. H. Layard and the Constantinople correspondents
189
"Letters from Europe"
190
"Letters from the trenches"
190
"Truth tours"
191
Limitations of special correspondence
191
Restrictions through official relations
191
Censorship and special correspondence
192
Special correspondence "for home consumption"
192
The free lance correspondent
193
"Inspired" special correspondence
193
Insidious temptations of work
194
George Borrow on foreign correspondents
194
General high type of special correspondents
194
Chapter IX
The War Correspondent
Early war correspondence
195
Development during the Thirty Years' War
195
Functions of early war correspondents
196
Predictions of his disappearance
196
Difficulties of war correspondent
197
Opposition of Military Officials
198
The Duke of Wellington and war correspondents
198
W. H. Russell and the Crimean War
200
Opposition of War Office
201
Opposition of governments
201
Lord Wolseley and the correspondents
202
W. H. Sherman and war correspondents
202
W. H. Russell in the Civil War
203
Reasons for opposition of authority to war correspondents
204
Climax of opposition in 1914
204
Vacillating regulations applied to correspondents
205
Reasons for dislike of correspondents by War Office
205
Reasons for dislike felt by army
206
Drain on resources of the press
207
Strictures on war correspondent
208
His speedy disappearance again foretold
211
Side of the war correspondent
211
Difficulties he meets
211
Lack of appreciation of his work
212
His own pride in his achievements
214
Rebels at needless entanglements
217
But appreciates opportunities
217
Correspondent often victim of conditions
217
External difficulties
218
Responsibility of the public
218
War correspondent faces an
impasse
219
Changing direction of correspondence
220
Charges brought against war correspondence
221
Charge that enemy profits by news sent
221
Examination of charges
221
Denial of them by war correspondents
221
Personal equation of correspondent
222
Golden age of war correspondence
223
Advantage of social neglect of war correspondent
224
Disadvantage of his social importance
225
Efforts to improve correspondence
226
War correspondence of recent war
227
Development of war correspondence
227
Generalizations concerning it impossible
228
Difference in war correspondents
228
Different types of wars
228
Different types of war correspondents
228
Relation of these questions to the historian
229
New directions of war correspondence
229
New interests of the historian
229
Adaptation of correspondent to new conditions
230
Archibald Forbes and his conception of the ideal war correspondent
231
Chapter X
The Interview
The interview apparently recent
233
Dr. Johnson and George III
234
Attitude of historian towards interview
234
Discredit attached to it as historical material
234
Interviews sought with persons momentarily prominent
234
Prepared interviews
235
Inspired interviews
235
Repudiated interviews
236
De Blowitz and Count Münster
236
The Emperor William interview and the
Century
236
Emperor William and the
Daily Telegraph
236
Edited interviews
237
Difficulties on the side of the press
237
Faked interviews
238
Impatience with faked interviews
238
Interviewing by intuition
239
Reversible interviews
239
The wooden interview
239
The stolen interview
239
The interviewer at the Second Hague Conference
239
Interview sought for definite ends
240
Von Bülow and the interview
240
Von Bissing and the interview
240
Interviews sought by officials
240
The politician and the interview
240
The interview for "domestic consumption"
241
The social interview
241
General lack of authoritativeness of interview
242
Distrust of form given it
242
National prejudices against the interview
243
Interview distrusted because of object
243
Interviewers often not specially qualified
243
Troubles of interviewers
244
Henry James on the interview
244
Opposition of medical profession
245
Difficulties put in way of interviewers
245
Prejudice against them
246
Interviews still part of newspaper
246
Improvement in interview
246
Advantages of interview
247
Interview of group activities
247
Collective interviews
247
Interview prolific source of error
248
Genera] reasons for questioning its authoritativeness
248
Chapter XI
The Editor and the Editorial
Development of the editorial
249
Defoe and the editorial
249
The early editorial in America
250
The Alien and Sedition Acts and the editorial
250
Is the editorial declining
251
Personal journalism
251
Decline of personal journalism
252
Uncertainty as to its reflection of public opinion
252
Identification of editor with community
252
Harvey W. Scott and the Pacific Northwest
253
Responsibility of such identification
253
Carlyle on the editor
253
Lord Acton as editor
254
"A soldier of conscience"
254
Social evolution of the editor
254
A. A. Watts on the editor
254
Sir Wemyss Reid on the press
255
Catling and the press
255
Changes in opinion of the editor
255
Bohemia and the editor
256
Titled editors
256
De Tocqueville on the American editor
256
Editorial omniscience
257
Delane and the Civil War
257
Lowell to Leslie Stephen
257
John Stuart Mill to Motley
258
Cobden and Delane
258
Division of labor in the sanctum
258
Corporate ownership supersedes personal ownership
259
Effect of change on editorial
259
Possible explanation of decline of editorial
259
Explanation seen in government relation to press
259
This debatable
260
Canning and Jerdan
260
The editor in Germany
260
Influences undermining power of editorial
261
Development of news-collecting agencies
261
The headline
262
Special articles by experts
262
The advertisement
262
Changes in business administration
263
Mutual relations of editor and owner
263
Early difficulties between them
263
Defoe's difficulties with owners
263
Jerdan and West End landlords
263
Murray and Blackwood and their editors
264
Macdonell and his chief
264
Opinion of J. A. Spender
264
Henry Watterson on the business manager
264
W. S. Robinson and conservative owners
264
Walt Whitman and owners
265
Incompatibility of temperament
265
Repudiation by owners of charge of interference
265
The London
Echo
265
Defense of Thomas Frost
265
Brodrick and the
Times
266
The New Republic
266
The Evening Post
266
Should an editor write
266
How far is his pen at service of owner
266
Different opinions
267
Editors and the
Pall Mall Gazette
267
Owners and illustrators
267
Ultimate control of policy
268
Differences in different countries
268
The
article de fond
268
"Sitting editors" in Germany
268
Change in editorial in England
268
Off-hand decision impossible
270
Many factors involved
270
Editors may change
270
Samuel Bowles and the Springfield
Republican
270
The editorial and public opinion
270
Editorial influenced by opposing tendencies
271
Editors of the old school
271
Editors of the new school
271
Changes in the country editor
272
Changes in the editorial
272
Early types
272
William Leggett and his editorials
272
Collections of editorials
272
Circulation of editorials through other means
272
Improvement in editorials
273
Wider range of subjects
273
Improvement in facilities
274
Extension of newspaper plant
275
Freedom from errors of fact in editorials
275
Independence in treatment
276
The editorial impersonal
276
The editorial "we"
276
The deadly parallel
277
John Bright and
The Times
277
Editorial dilemmas
278
Editorials
in absentia
278
Editorial changes of manuscript
278
The Edinburgh Review
278
Carlyle, Napier, and Jeffrey
279
Dickens and Mrs. Gaskell
279
Hazlitt on editors
280
Delane and Henry Reeve
280
"Editorial tinkering" in Paris
280
Howells and the
Atlantic
280
Blanchard Jerrold and Catling
281
Other difficulties between editors and contributors
281
Napier and Brougham
281
Napier and Dickens
282
Napier, Brougham, Macaulay, and the Whigs
283
Troubles of the editors of the
Edinburgh
typical
283
The editorial as historical material
284
"The Twelve Labors of an Editor"
285
To readers, the editorial is "the paper"
286
Chapter XII
Criticism and the Critic
Difficulty in using criticism as historical material
287
No agreement concerning functions of criticism
287
Absence of recognized standards
288
Theory of Matthew Arnold
288
The New Laokoon
289
Theory of Bliss Perry
289
The ideal critic
289
Courses at the University of Lille
458
Plan of de Blowitz
459
Sentiment against it in England
459
And in Canada
459
The Pulitzer School
460
Spread of schools of journalism
460
Present limitations
461
Suggested explanations
462
Future possibilities
462
The endowed press
462
General arguments in favor
463
Confusion as to nature
463
Technical journals
463
Goldwin Smith's plan
463
Lack of enthusiasm for endowed press
464
The
Congressional Record
465
State and municipal journals
466
General tendency towards increasing authoritativeness of the press
467
Chapter XVII
How Far Can the Past Be Reconstructed from the Press?
The press enjoined to "tell the facts"
468
Inaccuracy of the press inevitable
469
Difference between accuracy and authoritativeness
469
Edward Dicey on the English press
469
Interpretation by the press necessary
470
Interpretation of the press
470
Parts of press most used in reconstructing past
470
Value of the editorial
470
Series of editorials
470
J. F. Rhodes on value of press
471
Value of illustration in reconstruction
471
Comparative freedom from authority
471
Punch, Harper's Weekly,
and
Life
472
Press called "anti-social"
472
Illustration enlarges horizon
472
Glimpses of luxury
473
Obverse of the shield
473
"The middle class"
473
Development of new interests shown
474
Permanent elements in society illustrated
474
Relative position of children
474
The woman's era
475
Accessories of life
475
Tendency toward specialization
475
Changes in character of illustration
475
Fashions in humor
476
Interest in health shown
476
Industrial conditions
476
Illustrations an aid to justice
476
Changes in celebrating holidays shown
477
Easter in the illustration
477
Reconstruction through foreign language press
477
The illustrated advertisement
478
Changes in character
478
Advertisement shows new demands
478
Reconstruction through advertisements of department store
479
Wide range of interests disclosed
479
But reconstruct only favorable conditions
480
Other advertisements record adverse conditions
480
Effect of a serious fire on advertisements
480
Strikes in advertising
480
"Out of work"
480
"Help wanted"
481
Effect of war on advertising
482
The seamy side shown
482
Miseries of war disclosed by advertisements
482
War and industrial society
483
Prohibition and liquor in advertisements
484
Parts of the press less helpful in reconstruction
484
The press in reconstructing social life
484
The country press
485
The press in high life
485
England in the
Spectator
487
Frontier conditions in the press
487
Test of place of press in reconstruction
488
Limitations of authority
490
Importance of press in reconstructing normal life
491
Appendix I:
Biographical Notes
493
Appendix II:
Bibliographical Notes
517
Index
523
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