newspapers
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Last call for the Morning Call
A patent medicine mogul who wanted to keep a seat in Congress decided the best way to fight the press was to start his own daily newspaper. It was an expensive mistake. James Henry McLean, a native of Scotland who arrived in St. Louis in 1849 at the age of 20, amassed a fortune by Continue reading
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Dead man talking
As a young reporter, Lincoln Steffens learned that successful police officers had a somewhat ambiguous relationship to the law. Here’s how it worked in some New York City precincts in the late 19th century: Criminal syndicates did a thriving business in age-old vices (gambling, prostitution, thievery) and the police protected them, as long as they Continue reading
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‘Bulldog tenacity’
St. Louis reporters used to fight to get the news — each other, that is. One of the most spectacular examples of fisticuffery came in 1883, when scribes for the city’s two English-language morning papers came to blows at the old Four Courts building. John Fay, 22, of the Missouri Republican and John C. Klein, Continue reading
