American Correspondents Cover the Spanish-American War
American Correspondents Cover the Spanish-American War
Sources
Myth and Legend. Two stories, neither of them true, color popular conceptions about reporters in the Spanish-American war of 1898. The first story concerns a telegram William randolph Hearst allegedly sent to Frederic Remington, who was waiting in Havana to illustrate a war that was not happening. Hearst’s cable—“You furnish the pictures, and I’ll furnish the war”—suggests that the excess of Yellow journalism caused the war. Hearst’s New York Journal agitated for American intervention in the Cuban uprising against the Spanish colonical government there and helped to fan the flames of belligerent sentiment. Desire to help the Cuban underdog, the search for overseas markets, and patriotism helped bring on the war. A second story maintains that Sylvester Scovel, the daring correspondent for Joseph Pulitzer’s New York Worlsd, punched the American commander in Cuba, Maj. Gen. William Rufus shafter, during the ceremony marking Spain’s surrender. This story supports a countermyth to the one about Hearst, that the press worked against the government in the war. In fact Scovel hit Shafter only after the general struck him first. Moreover, Scovell spent much of the war working for the U.S. navy as a spy and courier.
THE THENUZ HOAX
During the Spanish-American War the rivalry between the New York World and the New York Journal spawned one of the best-known practical jokes in the annals of journalism. The World had six correspondents covering Cuba while its rival the Journal had more than two dozen. As was standard practice, each paper copied stories from the other. Arthur Brisbane, editor of the Journal became so angry at the World that he devised a plan to embarrass the competition. He planted a story in his paper detailing the death of an Austrian artillery officer, Col. Reflipe W. Thenuz, serving under the Spanish officer Colonel Ordonez (odor-nose). A few days later — after the same report appeared in the World — the Journal reported that Reflipe W. Thenuz was an anagram of sorts for “We pilfer the news.” To add insult to injury, the Journal sarcastically announced that it would solicit artists designs for a Thenuz monument, and for days after ward the Journal prititcd letters from “readers” denouncing Pulitzer’s staff as plagiarists.
Source: Joyce Milton, The Yeltew Kids: Forngn Cerrespendtnts in theHeyday fo Yellow Joumafùm (New York: Harper 6t Row, 1989).
With the Insurgents. In 1895, after deciding that selling insurance was boring, Sylvester Scovel of Pittsburgh went to New York City and asked if the New York Hearld would be interested in dispatches from Cuba. (An insurgency under Gen. Maximo Gomez was massing against the Spanish imperial government,.) He was hired on the spot. While in Cuba Scovel attached himself to Gomez’s forces, and for three months he sent dispatches to New York, unsure if any of them arrived. He was arrested while trying to bluff his way into Havana, and ther regular Herald correspondent there denied any knowledge of him. But the correspondent for the rival World, Dr. William Shaw Bowen, went to see Scovel while he was incarcerated in Morro Castle. He was so impressed by the articulate young man that he obtained his release and proposed to hire Scovel for the World. When the World published an interview Scovel had with Gomez, the Spanish military governor, Valeriano Weyler, offered a $5,000 reward for the reporter, deal or arive. At the time Scovel
was secretly in New York getting treatment for an infected gunshot wound to his leg, and Pulitzer warned him not to conduct himself as a partisan in the conflict.
All-Star Lineup. In 1896 a variety of correspondents covered the insurgency, many of them from the terrace of the Inglaterra Hotel. Joseph Pulitzer, concerned at the backlash against nonsensical reports coming from Havana, hired the famous, egotistical war correspondent James Creelman. During his long professional career Creelman conducted interviews with the Sioux leader Sitting Bull, Pope Leo XIII, and King George of Greece. Meanwhile, as the circulation war between Pulitzer and Hearst escalated, Hearst hired the world’s most famous war correspondent, Richard Harding Davis, who had previously covered the coronation of Czar Nicholas II of Russia for the Journal. In addition, the sickly and young Stephen Crane, author of The Red Badge of Courage (1895), covered the conflict for the World. However, he did not reach Cuba until 1898 and then quickly became ill with malaria. When he filed a story with the Journal for a fellow correspondent who had been wounded, the World fired Crane.
The Cuban Joan of Arc. Early in 1897 George Eugene Bryson of the Journal learned that Evangelina Cosio y Cisneros, a seventeen-year-old great-niece of the president of the provisional republic, was being held prisoner in a notorious jail, the Casa de Recojidas. When Hearst learned of her situation he printed frontpage pleas for aid to the “Cuban Joan of Arc” and “girl martyr.” James Creelman, now with the Journal, enlisted two hundred stringers, or occasional contributors to the paper, to collect signatures and letters of appeal from American citizens, including President William McKinley’s mother and Mrs. Jefferson Davis. After many bribes to prison officials, the correspondents finally organized a jailbreak and took “Miss Cisneros” to New York. There the Journal covered her first elevator ride and a shopping trip and sponsored a speaking tour before losing interest in her.
Remember the Maine. In early 1898 President McKinley dispatched the USS Maine, a second-class battleship, to Havana. It was anchored near shore for three weeks, until 15 February, when a massive explosion sent it to the bottom of Havana Harbor. Two hundred sixty men of a crew of 354 were killed. No one knew what caused the explosion. Intelligent observers realized Spain had nothing to gain by blowing up the ship. (The U.S. Navy later theorized that a fire in a coal bunker onboard ship was the most reasonable explanation.) Nevertheless, many assumed that war with Spain had become inevitable, and indeed the nation moved closer to it. Hearst’s, Journal began a memorial fund for the dead. President McKinley asked Congress to declare war on Easter Sunday, 9 April 1898. It was not clear what the United States would do with Cuba once Spain had been defeated.
Enterprise. Two hundred correspondents covered the war, twenty-five of them employed by Hearst. Publishers spent unprecedented sums to scoop each other’s stories. Cable costs to transmit a single story to New York some times reached 18,000. The Associated Press ran a fleet of boats that routinely crossed the lines under fire to find cable stations. Correspondents inflated their copy to match the growing headlines at home. Stephen Crane covered the famous charge up San Juan Hill by Theodore Roosevelt’s Rough Riders as a blaze of glory. Most papers applauded the imperialistic impulse that sent the navy to Cuba and sent troops to suppress the Philippine insurgency of 1899 to 1902. After the Twentieth Kansas swept through a town of seventeen thousand in the Philippines leaving not a single survivor, Hearts’s Journal proclaimed the righteousness of American expansionism: “The weak must go to the wall and stay there. . . . We’ll rule Asia as we rule at home. We shall establish in Asia a branch agent of the true American movement to wards liberty.”
Amateur Spies. Throughout the war Sylvester Scovel and other members of the press corps provided intelligence to American commanders about the location of Spanish ships and troops. Yet the correspondents drew fierce criticism from military authorities for endangering American troops and violating censorship in pursuit of sensational stories. Scovel even carried messages back and forth to General Gomez, who feared that America’s intention was not to grant Cuba its independence but to annex it as a colony. On the whole, leading correspondents such as Creelman and Davis added glory to a conflict that had few clear outcomes.
Phillip Knightley, The First Casualty: From The Crimea to Vietnam, the War Correspondent as Hero, Propagandist, and Myth Maker (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1975);
Sidney Kobre, The Yellow Press and Gilded Age Journalism (Tallahassee: Florida State University Press, 1964);
Joyce Milton,, The Yellow Kids: Foreign Correspondents in the Heyday of Yellow Journalism (New York: Harper & Row, 1989);
W. A. Swanberg, Citizen Hearst (new York: Scribners, 1961).
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
Ermine: the white weasel is no wimp!(Animal Angles)
Magazine article from: Odyssey; 3/1/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...corn? Just call the ermine infantry! Best known...On the other hand, ermines like to eat chickens...version of a ferret, the ermine is pure white in winter...When hunting, the ermine perches on its short...those can't be found, ermines will eat birds, eggs...
|
|
ENGINEER BACKING EXTENSION ERMINE STREET PROJECT STILL ON FRONT BURNER.(News)
Newspaper article from: Daily News (Los Angeles, CA); 11/1/2005; 692 words
; ...A city traffic engineer says extending Ermine Street to Golden Valley Road would reduce...than be impacted, but will people (on) Ermine be affected? Yes.'' Traffic from Brookfield...but the developer had planned to extend Ermine as a condition of building The Keystone...
|
|
Morphological and Molecular Discrimination of Mustela erminea (Ermines) and M. frenata (Long-tailed Weasels) in Eastern Canada
Magazine article from: Northeastern Naturalist; 4/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...M. erminea Linnaeus (ermine), and M. nivalix Linnaeus...Long-tailed weasels and ermines are reported to be sympatric...New Brunswick. As for the ermine, its range extends throughout...long-tailed weasels from ermines date back 50 years and have...
|
|
Lordly affairs of stoat; Tale of tails: The black spots in lordly ermine came from the tail of the stoat (inset).
Newspaper article from: The Daily Mail (London, England); 11/14/2008; 700+ words
; ...anything) by the rows of dots on the ermine in the regalia of members of the House...silk velvet, traditionally trimmed with ermine with lines of black spots. Parliamentary...turning white and becomes known as an ermine. Even in winter, its tail remains black...
|
|
Masarik, Ermine
Newspaper article from: The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 6/1/2009; 419 words
; Masarik, Ermine (Nee Waraksa) Rose to Eternal Life on...relatives and friends. A celebration of Ermine's life will be Wed., June 3, 9...Whitnall Ave. Interment Holy Sepulcher. Ermine's life was one of faith and family with...
|
|
Encounter with an ermine
Magazine article from: Training & Development; 4/1/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...as his hiking encounter with a playful ermine in the Teton Mountains. Personal transformation...and wilderness settings; fortuitous THE ERMINE ENCOUNTER It was October 1977, Joseph...walked along, he was surprised by an ermine that appeared out of the deep snow about...
|
|
Pomposity of honours exposed by newly-ennobled Socialists in ermine
Newspaper article from: The Scotsman; 6/22/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...directing the pupils and me clad in an ermine-trimmed red velvet gown with gold facings...we have all these Socialists taking the ermine on, the coronet set upon the carapace...men, all of them will be there in the ermine and knee breeches. (The late Lord Tonypandy...
|
|
Da Vinci work making rare U.S. showing 'Lady With Ermine' opens next month in Milwaukee
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 8/13/2002; ; 696 words
; ...Vinci's 15th century "Lady With an Ermine," one of only three portraits by the...public museum in 1802--"Lady With an Ermine" has traveled from castle gallery to...great intelligence," Winters said. The ermine Cecilia caresses--or teases?--in...
|
|
Four sisters reveal how they have stayed married to 'the right man' for more than 50 years. (Ermine, Jessica, Ella, and Lurline, daughters of the late Jessie and Joseph Pearson)
Magazine article from: Jet; 10/27/1997; 700+ words
; When Ermine Pearson got married 63 years ago, her...she was marrying "the right man." When Ermine Pearson's three sisters got married years...daughter's wedding. The four sisters, Ermine, Lurline, Ella and Jessica, and their...
|
|
Vibrant hues return to Leonardo masterpiece 'Lady with an Ermine' with virtual restoration
News Wire article from: AP Worldstream; 12/4/2007; ; 700+ words
; ...of Leonardo da Vinci's Lady with an Ermine, but the scan has revealed bolder hues...red and blue dress as she holds a white ermine. Historians believe the subject was Cecilia...digital scan also revealed a much whiter ermine, as well as a more vibrantly colored...
|
|
ermine
Book article from: The Oxford Dictionary of Phrase and Fable
ermine a stoat, especially in its white winter...x2018;Armenian (mouse)’. Ermine also denotes the white fur of the stoat...the spots represent the dark tips of the ermines' tails, and are usually elaborated into...
|
|
Ermine Street
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
Ermine Street Saxon name for the Roman road in Britain that ran from London to Lincoln...which the road passed. The road from Silchester to Gloucester was also called Ermine Street. Bibliography: See I. D. Margary, Roman Roads in Britain (3d...
|
|
Furs
Book article from: Fashion, Costume, and Culture: Clothing, Headwear, Body Decorations, and Footwear through the Ages
...soft and luxurious furs from mink, sable, ermine, fox, or muskrat. The 1950s saw a return...time, the 1920s, which saw such movies as Ermine and Rhinestones (1925), Orchids and Ermine (1927), and The Lady in Ermine (1927...
|
|
Frankie Lymon and The Teenagers
Book article from: Contemporary Musicians
...doo wop. In 1955, one group, the Ermines — school friends Herman Santiago...Frankie Lymo, joined the group that the Ermines, now renamed the Coupe de Villes, became...x201D; By late 1955, the once Ermines and Coupe de Villes, changed their name...
|
|
Rutherford, (Dame) Margaret
Dictionary entry from: International Dictionary of Films and Filmmakers
...1936—film debut in Dusty Ermine ; 1939—first appearance as...May 1972. Films as Actress: 1936 Dusty Ermine (Hideout in the Alps ) (Vorhaus...making her first film in 1936, Dusty Ermine. She had a highly unorthodox appearance...
|