Sensational

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Sensational Page 36

by Kim Todd


  Campaigns of Curiosity (Banks), 204, 296

  Campbell, Helen Stuart, 47

  Campbell, W. Joseph, 250n

  Capote, Truman, 267, 270

  Carbonell, Carlos, 213

  Carvalho, S. S., 171–72, 179, 211

  Cather, Willa, 257–58

  Chamberlain, S. S., 91

  Chapin, Charles, 55–56, 68, 99

  Chicago, Ill.

  abortion series and image of, 78–79

  Bly at the Auditorium Hotel, 169, 287

  Cronin murder and trail, 105, 105n

  impact of Marks’s labor exposés, 65

  need for an ambulance corps, 101

  Panic of 1893 and, 150, 163

  Pullman Company strike and, 164

  Women’s Club, 65, 90, 98, 100

  Chicago Conservator, 174

  Chicago Inter Ocean, 172, 282

  Chicago Times, 279

  abortion exposé, 1–4, 7, 68, 68–70, 69, 74, 78–82, 105n, 278, 280, 281–83

  advertising abortion drugs, 81, 82

  Chapin as city editor, 55–56, 68, 99

  circulation increase, 60–61, 78

  Girl Reporter’s identity, 83, 83–84, 278–83

  Nelson’s exposés for, 56–60, 65, 68

  reputation of paper and reporters at, 70

  scandal and crumbling of, 98–99

  West as publisher, 54–55, 60, 68

  Chicago Times-Herald, 169, 199

  Chicago Tribune, 55, 285

  “Confessions of an Actress” in, 90

  Marks as stunt reporter at, 61, 99, 99–101, 205, 284–85, 286

  Cisneros, Evangelina, 212–13, 244, 245

  “City Slave Girls” (Nelson), 56–58, 60, 68

  Cleveland, Grover, 141, 164, 165

  Cockerill, John, 24–25, 27, 61, 113, 115

  Comstock, Anthony, 75–76, 77

  Comstock Act, 76–77, 279

  Conover, Ted, 275, 277

  Cooper, Anna Julia, 132

  Cosmopolitan magazine, 95–98, 146–48

  Crane, Stephen, 243, 253, 270

  Croly, J. C., “Jennie June,” 25

  Crusade for Justice (Wells), 297, 297n

  Cuba, Cuban rebellion, 197–98, 249–49

  Journal reporters and, 244–45, 227

  Journal’s Cisneros rescue, 212–13, 244

  Czolgosz, Leon, 251

  D’Agata, John, 226n

  Dana, Charles A., 19, 24, 195

  Dare, Dorothy, 197, 198, 199

  Davis, Richard Harding, 244, 244n

  Debs, Eugene V., 163, 165

  Decker, Karl, 213

  Depew, Chauncey M., 63

  De Wolf, Oscar Coleman, 78, 79

  Dickens, Charles, 28, 29, 153, 268

  Didion, Joan, 268, 269

  Dik: A Dog of Belgium (Banks), 295

  Dillard, Annie, 269

  Dingley, Nelson, 232

  Dollenmayer, Albert, 222, 223

  Douglass, Frederick, 172, 214

  Ehrenreich, Barbara, 273–74, 275

  Eliot, George (Mary Ann Evans), 6

  Esquire magazine, 268

  Everybody’s Magazine, 256

  Fall River, Mass., 125–26, 221

  Faludi, Susan, 274

  Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail ’72 (Thompson), 271

  Fitzgerald, F. Scott, 253

  Foley, William, 234

  Fortune, Thomas, 136, 263

  Front-Page Girls (Lutes), 59n

  Fuller, Margaret, 175

  Gale, Zona, 190–91n

  Gallagher, Jane, 233

  Galveston hurricane of 1900, 265–66

  Gate City Press, 134

  “girl reporter,” 175, 274, 278, 299

  Girl Reporter (of the Chicago Times)

  abortion exposé, 1–4, 7, 68, 68–70, 69, 77–79, 83, 105n, 278, 283

  identity of, 83, 83–84, 278–87

  prose style of, 69–70, 279

  stylometry analysis of, 285–87, 286n

  Glass Castle, The (Walls), 269

  Gompers, Samuel, 223, 293

  Good Housekeeping, 13

  Great Gatsby, The (Fitzgerald), 253

  Greeley, Horace, 19, 254

  Greenwood, James, 38

  Grozier, Edwin, 167

  Gutkind, Lee, 270

  Hanna, Mark, 193

  Harper’s Bazaar, 247, 292–93

  Harrison, Benjamin, 115–16, 126, 141

  Hawthorne, Julian, 244

  Hawthorne, Nathaniel, 6, 7, 244, 253

  Hazel Green Herald, 36, 41

  Hearst, George, 90

  Hearst, William Randolph, 23, 91–92, 94, 95, 177, 178–79, 188

  Black and, 94, 177, 195–96, 265–66, 291

  contests run by, 211

  critics of, 250, 251, 251

  Cuban rebellion and, 212–13

  hiring girl reporters, 94–95, 205, 224

  hiring Harvard Lampoon friends, 91

  magazines of, 293

  New Journalism influenced by, 271

  newspaper empire, 252

  political ambitions, 252

  as Pulitzer competitor, 7–8, 182, 188, 194–95, 203, 211, 224

  Spanish-American War and, 240, 243–44, 249

  stealing World staff, 179, 211

  Valesh and, 226–27, 246

  yellow journalism and, 208

  See also New York Journal; San Francisco Examiner

  Heaton, Eliza Putnam, 61–62

  Hepworth, George, 25–26

  “Hills Like White Elephants” (Hemingway), 78n

  Home Monthly magazine, 258

  Hood, Thomas, 154

  “Horrors of a Slop Shop” (Nelson), 64

  How the Other Half Lives (Riis), 114, 287

  How to Suppress Women’s Writing (Russ), 259

  Hurston, Zora Neale, 271

  Hutchinson, Anne, 6

  Hvistendahl, Mara, 274–75

  Illinois Women’s Alliance, 66, 66n

  immigration, 4, 21, 27, 40, 174, 207, 216, 221, 226, 229, 250, 266

  Heaton’s voyage stunt, 61–62

  McGuirk’s Ellis Island stunt, 191–92

  In Cold Blood (Capote), 267–68, 270

  Indianapolis Journal, 207

  investigative journalism, 4, 38, 271

  Bly’s exposé of Blackwell Island’s Insane Asylum, 5, 27–37, 39, 40, 92

  Girl Reporter’s abortion series and, 1–4, 68, 68–70, 69, 77, 78

  girl stunt reporters and, 4, 7, 9, 42–53, 56–58, 64–66, 78, 153, 158–62, 214–16, 255, 274

  by men, 9, 256, 270, 276–77

  as muckraking, 7, 9, 256, 257, 270

  undercover reporting, 56–58, 60, 64, 64–66, 141, 273

  See also specific reporters and stories

  Iola Register, 36–37

  Jack the Ripper story, 67–68, 73, 179

  James, Henry, 253–54, 292

  Jordan, Elizabeth, 111–13, 115–21, 144, 150, 175n, 182n, 208–11, 247, 285, 292–93

  Borden trial and, 142–46, 148n, 256

  on Brisbane, 181–82

  composite novels and, 292

  at Harper’s Bazaar, 247, 292–93

  at Harper’s Publishers, 293

  fiction by, 118, 146–48, 181, 293

  Harrison bribe scandal and, 115–16

  in Milwaukee and Chicago, 113, 285

  Nelson and, 115, 172

  trek into the mountains stunt, 116–17

  at the World, 111, 115–21, 141–49, 179–80, 195, 285, 292

  Journalist, 84, 133, 137

  Kelly, Allen, 93, 206n, 285, 286

  Kelly, Florence Finch, 206, 206n

  Kim, Suki, 275–77

  Kingston, Maxine Hong, 269

  Kipling, Rudyard, 155

  labor unions, organized labor, 46–47, 49

  child labor and, 66, 66n

  city and state labor laws and, 66, 66n

  coal miner strikes, killings and, 222

  garme
nt industry workers, 47

  Haymarket Square riots, 47

  New Bedford strike, 221, 222, 226–32, 246n

  Valesh in a union, 230, 294

  Land of Little Rain (Austin), 6

  Leslie-Wilde, Mrs. Frank, 166

  Lewis, Sinclair, 293

  “Life in the Iron Mills” (Davis), 244n

  Lifespan of a Fact (book, Broadway play), 226n

  Lifting as They Climb (Davis), 215n

  Little Rock Sun, 133

  Little Women (Alcott), 109

  Living Age, The, 141

  Lockhart, Caroline, xiii, 166–69, 168, 289, 293

  Logansport Reporter (Indiana), 127

  London Pall Mall Gazette, 38

  London Times, 155

  Long-Island Star, 72

  Lowell, Robert, 157n

  Lutes, Jean Marie, 59n

  “Maiden Tribute of Modern Babylon, The” (Stead), 38, 39

  Mail and Express, 25, 137

  Marks, Nora (Eleanor Stackhouse), xiii, 61, 99–101, 285, 294

  ambulance corps stunt, 101, 104

  at the Chicago Tribune, 61, 99, 99–101, 205, 284–85, 286, 294

  children in jail exposé, 99–100

  Girl Reporter identity and, 286–87

  Marx, Eleanor, 45

  Marx, Karl, 45

  Masterson, Kate, 198

  Matthews, Victoria Earle, 7, 137–40, 138, 213–16, 215n, 250, 260, 262, 289

  column in the National Leader, 138–39

  investigation of Black poverty, 214–15

  investigation of fraudulent employment agencies, 215–16

  on journalism, 267

  lectures by, 214, 261

  newspapers written for, 137–38

  protecting Black women, 259–61

  White Rose Mission, 261, 289

  World’s Columbian Exposition, 149–50

  McClure’s, 256, 257, 258

  McDonald, Eva. See Valesh, Eva

  McDougall, Walt, 171

  McEwen, Arthur, 122, 122n

  McGuirk, Kate Swan, “Mrs. McGuirk” and “Kate Swan,” 125–30, 189–93, 197–98, 200, 203, 274, 290

  electric chair stunt, 189–90, 190

  Ellis Island article, 191–92

  fairy bareback rider stunt, 197, 200

  influence on journalism, 271

  Lizzie Borden and, 125–30, 142, 146, 148, 189, 285

  New Bedford strike and, 229, 235–36, 290

  opium sales investigation, 192

  presidential election coverage, 193

  sidelined by war, 247

  as stunt reporter, 148–49, 189–93, 194, 197, 203

  at the World, 189–94, 197, 290, 290n

  as symbol of the World, 200

  as Washington DC reporter, 126, 128

  World’s Columbian Exposition, 149

  McKinley, William, 193, 204, 232, 242, 247, 251

  Memphis Free Speech and Headlight, 134–35, 139

  Metcalfe, James, 111, 171, 186

  Millard, Frank Bailey, 163

  Milwaukee Peck’s Sun, 113

  Minneapolis Tribune, 50–51

  Moore, William Withers, 125

  Mules and Men (Hurston), 271

  National American Woman Suffrage Association, 185, 187, 264, 297

  National Association of Colored Women, 213

  National Leader, 138–39

  Nebraska State Journal, 257

  Nelson, Nell (Helen Cusack Carvalho), xiii, 55–67, 56, 90, 98, 114–15, 172, 172n, 174, 247, 268, 285, 294–95

  as advocate for women, 114–15

  book of her collected columns, 62

  Boston Post’s all-women issue, 167

  at the Chicago Times, 56–60, 65, 284

  Girl Reporter identity and, 286

  influence on journalism, 271

  marriage to Carvalho, 171–72, 175, 211

  undercover investigations, 56–58, 60, 64, 64–66, 141, 273

  at the World, 62, 64, 64–66, 114, 115

  New Bedford, Mass., 221, 226–40

  Lizzie Borden trial in, 231

  in Moby Dick, 221

  textile strike, 221, 222, 226–32, 246n

  women covering the strike, 229–35, 236, 238, 240

  yellow journalism and, 231–32

  New Bedford Evening Journal, 146

  New Bedford Evening Standard, 231

  Newjack (Conover), 277

  New Journalism, 243, 267–71

  New Journalism (Wolfe), 268

  New New Journalism (Boynton), 270

  New Orleans Times-Democrat, 200

  New York Age, 133, 136, 137, 263

  New York City

  allure for reporters, 22

  Bellevue Hospital, 31–32

  Black migration to, 216, 259–61

  Blackwell’s Island Insane Asylum for Women, 28, 33–35

  Bly’s anti-corruption investigations, 47–48

  Bly comes to, 19, 23–27

  Bowery, 118

  Florence Crittenton Mission, 225

  Nelson’s exposés in, 64–65

  Newspaper Row, 22, 24, 113, 118, 205

  Parkhurst’s anti-prostitution campaign, 151–52

  poverty and Riis documenting, 113–14

  Pulitzer Building, 114, 119–21, 120

  Roosevelt as police commissioner, 186

  rural women coming to, 259–61

  Society for the Prevention of Crime, 142, 151

  substandard housing in, 65, 113

  White Rose Mission, 261, 289

  women’s safety in, 118, 216

  women seeking newspaper work in, 62

  New York Evening Telegram, 56

  New York Evening World, 171

  New York Family Story Paper, 114

  New York Herald, 25, 72–74, 75 127, 137

  New York Journal, 21, 177, 216

  activist journalism, 211–13

  Black writing for, 177, 195–96, 299

  Bly writing for, 299

  chaotic management of, 178–79

  child’s alcoholism death and, 268–69

  circulation battle, 188, 194–95, 198, 199, 203, 219, 224, 242–43

  contests offered by, 211

  critics of, 250

  Cuba and, 197–98, 212–13, 244–45

  “Extra” editions, 242

  Hearst buys, 177

  the Journal Woman, 198, 203

  Masterson as reporter at, 198

  McKinley assassination and, 251–52

  New Bedford strike and, 229, 231, 233

  news offices of, 177

  New Year’s Eve, 1897, celebration, 219

  philosophy and motto, 219, 226

  profile of Matthews, 213–14

  as pro-labor, 222

  Remington as illustrator for, 245

  reporters as “Murder Squad,” 211–12

  sensationalism and yellow journalism, 182, 189, 203, 207, 208, 226, 254–55

  sinking of the Maine and, 241–42

  Valesh writing for, 224–33, 293

  World staff hired by, 179, 211

  New York Press, 207

  New York Recorder, 126, 128–30, 285

  New York Society for the Suppression of Vice, 76, 77

  New York Sun, 19, 22, 24, 29, 36, 72, 195, 261, 289

  New York Times, 22, 28, 67, 74–75, 137, 208, 294

  New-York Tribune, 19, 21, 22, 177, 254

  “Prisoners of Poverty” series, 47

  stunt reporters and readership, 279

  undercover story on slavery, 38

  New York World, 4, 22, 23, 216

  Banks at, 208–11, 216–17, 246–47

  Bly returns to, 152, 183, 185

  Bly’s exposé of a “magnetic healer,” 66

  Bly’s exposé of Blackwell Island’s Insane Asylum, 5, 27–37, 39, 40, 92

  Bly’s “Hangman Joe at Home,” 62–63

  Bly’s prose and point of view, 39–41

  Bly’s race around the world, 95–98,
95n, 96, 104–5, 109–10, 111

  Brisbane at, 179, 180, 188–89, 298–99

  Carvalho at, 171, 179

  circulation battle, 182–83, 188, 194–95, 199, 203, 219, 224, 242–43

  Cockerill at, 24, 27, 113, 115

  critics of, 250

  Cuban rebellion and, 197–98

  “Daring Deeds by the Sunday World’s Intrepid Woman Reporters,” 197–98

  debate hosted by, 92

  decade of accomplishments, 141

  Hearst poaching staff of, 179, 211

  immigration issue and, 92

  innovations instituted by, 141–42

  Jordan at, 111, 113, 115–21, 141–49, 179–80, 247, 292

  Lizzie Borden trial coverage, 142–49

  McGuirk at, 189–93, 190, 194, 200

  midnight edition, 188

  Nelson at, 62, 64, 64–66, 114, 171, 284

  New Bedford strike and, 229, 233–36

  newsroom harassment at, 118

  Peary’s North Pole attempt series, 116

  press offices, 22–23, 26

  Pulitzer Building, 114, 119–21, 120, 177

  quality of, 182, 183

  sensationalism and yellow journalism, 188–90, 190–91n, 208, 249, 254–55

  sinking of the Maine and, 241–42

  Spanish-American War and, 241–49

  Statue of Liberty pedestal and, 22, 92

  stunt reporter “Dorothy Dare,” 198, 199

  stunt reporters and readership, 279

  style promoted by, 116

  Sunday Magazine, 182

  woman “jury” and poisoning case, 195

  women working at, 7, 180–81

  See also Pulitzer, Joseph

  Nickel and Dimed (Ehrenreich), 273–75

  Nineteenth Century, 176, 204, 252

  Banks’s last stunt, 262–63

  Oberlin College, 263

  Occupations for Women (Willard), 199–200

  O’Hagen, Anne, 229, 230, 233, 292

  Ohio Democrat, 36

  Olmsted, Frederick Law, 149

  Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions (Steinem), 273

  Oxford English Dictionary, 42

  Panic of 1893, 150, 163, 175

  Parker, Alton, 252

  Parkhurst, Rev. Charles, 142, 151–52, 284, 285

  Parkman, Francis, 130–31

  Peary, Robert, 116

  Peattie, Elia, 285

  Pickering, Harriet, 227, 231, 237–40, 246n

  Pinkerton National Detective Agency, 42

  Pittsburg Dispatch, 13–19

  Bly writing for, 17–19, 26, 230

  Pittsburgh, Pa., 13, 13n, 15

  Plimpton, George, 268

  Portrait of a Lady (James), 253–54

  “Prisoners of Poverty” (Campbell), 47

  private detectives, 42, 48

  Prose, Francine, 269

  Pulitzer, Albert, 20–21, 177, 179

  Pulitzer, Joseph, 19–20, 20, 37, 171, 208

  audience courted by, 40

  Columbia Journalism School and, 255

  competition in his newsroom, 62

  sensationalism and, 189–90, 190–91n, 208, 254–55

 

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