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CHAPTER XVIII.
NEWSPAPERS AND MAGAZINES. THERE was
a large
number of publications in the city, the owners of which were among the
losers
in the great fire. The most unfortunate among the newspapers was “The
Boston
Daily Evening Transcript,” a periodical which well deserves the
compliment of
“The London Telegraph,” that it is “a literary news publication of a
most
excellent order.” Their loss would have been a national calamity had
not the
proprietors been endowed with a wonderful amount of energy, courage,
and hope.
While their building was yet burning, they prepared for the next issue
from the
office of “The Boston Daily Globe.” The building then being burned was
the
fourth structure occupied by the proprietors of the paper, started in
July,
1830, at Nos. 10 and 12, Exchange Street. In May, 1845, the
establishment was
removed to Nos. 35 and 37, Congress Street; where it remained until the
erection of the building Nos. 90 and 92, Washington Street, in 1860. By each of
these
removals, larger and more convenient quarters were secured. The
contrast
between the premises in Exchange Street, where the paper was printed
forty-two
years ago, and the large and elegant edifice in Washington Street,
suggests the
great changes which have taken place in the publishing .of newspapers
since
1830. 1n July, 1830, the first number of “The Transcript” was issued by
Dutton
and Wentworth, then the State printers. Mr. Lynde M. Walter, the
editor, was
one of the proprietors. The enterprise was an experiment of doubtful
success.
The paper was coldly received by its contemporaries of the Boston
press, some
of whom refused to exchange with it. But “The Transcript “kept on in
the even
tenor of its way; the ability and tact of Mr. Walter winning friends
and
patrons, and commanding the respect of influential citizens. It was the
pioneer
of the evening press in Boston, and is now the second in age of the
Boston
dailies; “The Advertiser” alone being its senior. “The
Transcript”
was under the sole management of its first editor until his death in
1842.
After this date it was conducted with signal success for several years
by a
sister of Mr. Walter, aided by Mr. Henry W. Dutton, the senior
proprietor, who
still lives to witness the growth and prosperity of the little
“Transcript “he
took the lead in launching more than forty years ago. After the
retirement of
Miss Cornelia W. Walter, the paper, for a series of years, was under
the
control of Mr. Epes Sargent. In
February, 1853,
he was succeeded by Mr. Daniel N. Haskell, who has been editor for
nineteen
years. The two immediate predecessors of the present editor are now
occasional
contributors to the paper. The
building occupied
by “The Transcript” at the breaking-out of the fire was one of the
finest
structures in the city. It was situated on the easterly side of
Washington
Street, the second estate south of the old South Church, on the site of
the
premises occupied for many years by Smith and Gore. The structure was
erected,
in a great measure, of enduring and fire-proof materials, — iron,
stone, and
brick, — and most favorably compared with those of similar
newspaper-establishments in our own or other cities of the United
States. Its
ground dimensions were a hundred and three feet in depth east to west,
with a
frontage-width of twenty-seven feet on Washington Street, gradually
reduced, by
angles and recesses in the north side of the same, to twenty-one feet
at the
rear or east end of the site, and bounding upon a passage-way
communicating
directly with Milk Street. “The
Boston Post”
had the misfortune to be nearly burned out; which is, in every
sense, the next
thing to a conflagration. The new post-office building did most
excellent
service in warding off the flames from the structure owned by the
publishers of
“The Post,” on the corner of Devonshire and Water Streets, and from
which “The
Post” was issued. But the demon crept so near, and so often seemed to
have such
a powerful grasp upon it, that much damage was done, and much
inconvenience
suffered, because of the hasty moving. “The Post” was started by Mr.
Charles G.
Greene in 1831, who proposed “to exclude from it every thing of a
vindictive or
bitter character,” and who has most honorably kept his promise. It has
dealt
fairly with all parties while advocating the tenets of the Democrats;
and many
a man honors and supports the paper because of its considerate
generosity and
cheerfulness who is much opposed to its politics. It is the leading
Democratic
paper of New England; and yet no politician on the other side has, to
our
knowledge, found in it any desire to take a “mean advantage” of him.
Consequently there was genuine sadness when that cheerful publication
was in
danger, and afterwards regret on every hand that it should suffer in
the
general ruin. Fortunately
the
“Journal,” “Herald,” “Advertiser,”
“Traveller,” “Times,” “Globe,” and
“News
“were not touched by the flames; although the
“Traveller” and “Journal” were in
uncomfortably close proximity to the devastation, and were considerably
disturbed by the preparations for moving. “The
American
Homes,” monthly magazine, published by Charles H. Taylor and Co., and
edited by
Col. Taylor, the senior partner in the publishing-firm, suffered
considerable
loss in type, paper, magazines, plates, valuable wood-cuts, chromos,
and
presses stored at the office in Water Street, and at the composing and
press
rooms on Federal Street. “The Success of the Nineteenth Century,” as
this magazine
has been so often named, on account of its wonderful increase in
circulation,
had no sooner been established on Cornhill, in the building occupied by
Rand,
Avery, and Co., than a fire broke out which drove the publishers a
second time
into the street; but, with commendable zeal, they secured a place at 61
Cornhill, and, in twenty-four hours, were filling their orders. Several
hundred
of their premium chromos and a package of magazines were all that was
saved of
very much value. “The Pilot,” a weekly publication owned by Patrick Donahoe, one of the veteran publishers of Boston, was located in the fated Franklin Street, in the same building with the great Catholic publishing-house and the Emigrant Savings Bank, all under the management of Mr. Donahoe. “The Pilot” has an able corps of editors; and the writer was listening to a speech from the editor-in-chief, at the press dinner, when the alarm of fire was given. It is one of the very best Irish-American publications in the States. It appeared for a short time in half-sheet; but was very soon issued at the usual time, and of the former size. The loss
to Mr.
Donahoe was over two hundred and fifty thousand dollars; and, as if it
were the
determination of the Furies to destroy every thing, he was also a heavy
loser
in the subsequent fire on Cornhill. “The Boston Globe” mentioned this
matter a
few days after the fire in the following apt manner:— “We have received ‘The Catholic World’ for
December from Patrick Donahoe, 360 Washington Street. Mr. Donahoe,
though an
earnest Catholic, will forgive us for subordinating the consideration
of “The
Catholic World’ to our sympathy with his individual case.
‘Individualism’ may,
or may not, be bad in theology; but it is very natural in business and
in
matters of personal friendship. There is much controversy as to which
particular class of Christians will be tenants of ‘the burnt districts’
in the
next world; but all publishers, at least, have a tender feeling for any
of
their brethren of the press who may happen to get into it in this. Mr.
Donahoe
has been so brave, resolute, cheerful, and confident in meeting the
calamity
which destroyed his magnificent building on Franklin Street, that the
hearts of
all of us go out to him in cordial sympathy. The burning, afterwards,
of a
whole edition of ‘The Pilot’ in Rand and Avery’s fire, made most of us
have a
semi-Catholic interest in the paper. Any third dispensation of
Providence in
the same direction will make some Protestants sympathize with the creed
as well
as with the man. He has been so thoroughly undaunted by vexatious
interruptions
with his ordinary work and business, that the inference is that he must
have
got some of his strength of will and heart through the church to which
he
belongs. At any rate, we feel sure that the ‘fire-fiend’ can never beat
Mr.
Donahoe, either in a fair or unfair fight, but that he will continue
his
Catholic paper, and distribute his Catholic books, in spite of all the
malice
of fate and fortune.” “The
Waverley
Magazine,” owned by Moses A. Dow, was located in Lindall Street, and
was
published from one of the most convenient and neatly-arranged
printing-establishments in New England. The destruction of the office
did not,
however, interfere with its regular publication. “The
Boston Journal
of Commerce,” which was hardly out of its infancy, was “thus early made
to fly
from its nest,” but appeared promptly on the next day of publication. “The
Saturday-evening Gazette” was driven from its long abode on Congress
Street,
and lost a vast amount of material. Fortunately for the readers, Mr.
Parker had
no thoughts of suspension; and, with hard work and many annoyances, a
temporary
abode was found for the homeless “defender of honest men,” and “The
Gazette”
appeared and re-appeared as if there had been no struggle and no loss. Among
those
periodicals, the offices of which were located in the burnt district,
were the
following:— “American Painter,” weekly; “American Railway
Times,” weekly; “American Union,” weekly; “Ballou’s Monthly Magazine;”
“Banner
of Light,” weekly; “Boston Almanac and Business Directory;’’
“Cabinet-Maker,”
weekly; “Christian Monthly; ““Freemason’s Monthly Magazine;” “Gleason’s
Home
Circle,” and “Gleason’s Monthly Companion;” “Harness and Carriage
Journal;”
“Journal of Applied Chemistry,” monthly; “Boston Journal of Chemistry,”
monthly; “Little Christian,” monthly; “Monthly Novelette;” “New-England
Postal
Record;” “Shoe and Leather Record,” weekly; “Shoe and Leather
Reporter,”
weekly; “Shoe and Leather Trades Journal,” weekly; “Sierra Magazine,”
monthly;
“Temperance Press,” weekly; and “The Yankee Blade.” There were
many
large printing-establishments consumed, where vast quantities of
material and
unbound periodicals and books were temporarily stored, which were owned
by
firms whose places of business were not included in the devastation; so
that
many publishers were heavy losers by the fire whose place of business
remained
unchanged. Wright and Potter, the State printers, had, besides their
own
enormous stock of type, presses, paper, plates, cuts, engravings, and
furniture, a vast quantity of property belonging to the State and to
individuals. The same might be said of a number of other
printing-offices which
passed out of existence on the wings of the wind. The loss to the
owners of
newspapers, magazines, and printing-material, was over one and a half
million
of dollars. |