Henry Demarest Lloyd

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Henry Demarest Lloyd

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Henry Demarest Lloyd 1847-1903, American reformer, b. New York City. He was on the editorial staff of the Chicago Tribune from 1872 to 1885 but resigned to study social problems. His Wealth against Commonwealth (1894) is an attack on monopolies, based especially on an analysis of the Standard Oil Company. He traveled widely, writing about conditions in various countries and always supporting the causes of the underprivileged.

Bibliography: See biography by C. A. Lloyd (1912); study by C. M. Destler (1963).

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Lloyd, Henry Demarest

The Oxford Companion to American Literature | 1995 | | © The Oxford Companion to American Literature 1995, originally published by Oxford University Press 1995. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Lloyd, Henry Demarest (1847–1903), after practicing law and opposing Tammany in his native New York City moved to Chicago to serve as an editorial writer on the Tribune (1873–85) but turned his whole attention to independent fighting against monopolies and to muckraking. These ideas and his practical experience defending men convicted in the Haymarket Riot and Debs in the Pullman strike lay behind his Wealth Against Commonwealth (1894). Later works praised social and industrial reforms in England in Labour Copartnership (1898), in New Zealand in A Country Without Strikes (1900), and in Switzerland in A Sovereign People (1907).

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James D. Hart and and Phillip W. Leininger. "Lloyd, Henry Demarest." The Oxford Companion to American Literature. Oxford University Press. 1995. Encyclopedia.com. 23 Dec. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

James D. Hart and and Phillip W. Leininger. "Lloyd, Henry Demarest." The Oxford Companion to American Literature. Oxford University Press. 1995. Encyclopedia.com. (December 23, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O123-LloydHenryDemarest.html

James D. Hart and and Phillip W. Leininger. "Lloyd, Henry Demarest." The Oxford Companion to American Literature. Oxford University Press. 1995. Retrieved December 23, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O123-LloydHenryDemarest.html

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Henry Demarest Lloyd

Encyclopedia of World Biography | 2004 | Copyright 2004 Gale, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Henry Demarest Lloyd

American reformer Henry Demarest Lloyd (1847-1903) epitomized the patrician social reformer in late-19th-century America. His career is characterized by the motto of a journal he helped found: "Independent in everything, neutral in nothing."

Henry Demarest Lloyd was born in New York City on May 1, 1847. His father was a poor Dutch Reformed minister, but the relatives with whom the Lloyds lived were well-to-do, and he was raised comfortably and given a good education. He graduated from Columbia College, attended Columbia's law school, and was admitted to the New York bar in 1869.

Lloyd's background of strict moralistic Calvinism and Jacksonian egalitarianism inclined him toward concern with social ills. He accepted a position with the Free Trade League that involved editing the Free Trader and arguing against a high protective tariff. He was also active in the Young Men's Municipal Reform Association, which helped topple the notorious Tweed ring from New York City politics. His association with the People's Pictorial Tax-payer, a Liberal Republican organ, plunged him into the anti-Grant movement of 1872, aimed at corruption in politics.

In 1873 Lloyd moved to Chicago, where he served in several editorial positions on the Tribune. He married the daughter of a wealthy stockholder in the paper, but estrangement from his father-in-law began when Lloyd showed interest in purchasing his own newspaper. However, Lloyd never fulfilled his wish to control his own crusading liberal organ. Instead, he became the leading freelance journalist of his day after writing a denunciation of the Standard Oil monopoly for the Atlantic Monthly in 1881. This became the core of his famous book Wealth against Commonwealth (1894).

In 1885 Lloyd resigned from the Tribune and began his 20-year career as spokesman for the reform programs of the day. He supported insane-asylum reform, the cooperative movement, attempts at organizing a utopian colony in the unsettled West, Jane Addams's Hull House, organized labor and its 8-hour movement, and several celebrated academic-freedom cases. In 1889 Lloyd's father-in-law disinherited him because of his "radicalism, " but his own means were enough to provide a comfortable upper-middle-class life, with two homes and leisure time for writing.

Wealth against Commonwealth, Lloyd's most important book, indicted John D. Rockefeller and Standard Oil as the prototypes of the industrial monopolies Lloyd despised. The book appealed to America's intellectual elite and converted many to Lloyd's genteel reformism, which suggested that democratic brotherhood be applied to the economy. Although he supported a great many specific causes, Lloyd never developed a more concrete ideology. A courageous, militant, and unbending spokesman of the genteel crusading tradition, he never accepted the socialist principle of class conflict.

Further Reading

A good biography of Lloyd is Chester McArthur Destler, Henry Demarest Lloyd and the Empire of Reform (1963). Historical background is in Richard Hofstadter, The Age of Reform (1955), and John G. Sproat, Best Men: Liberal Reformers in the Gilded Age (1968).

Additional Sources

Digby-Junger, Richard, The journalist as reformer: Henry Demarest Lloyd and Wealth against commonwealth, Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1996.

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Free newspaper and magazine articles

Free Article Labor and Urban Politics: Class Conflict and the Origins of Modern Liberalism in Chicago, 1864-97.(Review)
Magazine article from: Journal of Social History; 6/22/2000

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Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 2/23/1999; 304 words ; ...at her Winnetka home. She was 85. Mrs. Lloyd was the granddaughter of Henry Demarest Lloyd, one of the creators of muckraking journalism...the Tribune in 1858. Her grandfather, Henry Demarest Lloyd, helped persuade Gov. John Altgeld to...
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Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 5/6/1986; ; 438 words ; ...was surprised. Delightfully surprised." Lloyd is the great-granddaughter of William Bross...The Rise of a Great American Newspaper, by Lloyd Wendt. Her grandfather, Henry Demarest Lloyd, a Tribune financial editor in the late 1800s...
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Newspaper article from: Winnetka Talk (IL); 6/7/2007; 420 words ; ...sculptures and busts by Lola Maverick Lloyd; Watercolors and drawings by Rowena...Books including first editions of Henry Demarest Lloyd's works; Two large Moroccan...verso "Felicity Flat was where Henry D. Lloyd, Sr. and his wife Jesse...
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Newspaper article from: Winnetka Talk (IL); 2/25/1999; 700+ words ; ...Foundation or the American Lung Association. Georgia Lloyd Georgia Lloyd, 85, died Feb. 18 in her home in Winnetka after...granddaughter of the American muckraking journalist, Henry Demarest Lloyd. Her mother, Lola Maverick Lloyd was a founder...
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Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 11/22/2003; ; 700+ words ; ...1884, a famous Chicagoan, one Henry Demarest Lloyd, published "Wealth Against Commonwealth...the Pennsylvania legislature, Lloyd wrote Rockefeller did "everything...competition was impossible," Lloyd remarked "he was unconsciously...
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Newspaper article from: The Christian Science Monitor; 6/22/2009; ; 700+ words ; ...reporting dates to the 1880s, when Henry Demarest Lloyd showed how John D. Rockefeller...state lawmakers. In Pennsylvania, Lloyd famously wrote, Standard Oil...it." Today, we look back on Lloyd as America's first "muckraker...

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