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Commercial Journal

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Commercial Journal
TypeDaily and weekly (and sometimes triweekly) newspaper
Founder(s)J. Heron Foster, J. McMillin, J. B. Kennedy
Founded19 April 1843 (1843-April-19)
Political alignment
LanguageEnglish
Ceased publication8 May 1861 (1861-05-08)
CityPittsburgh, Pennsylvania
CountryUnited States

The Commercial Journal was a mid-19th century newspaper in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States.

Beginnings

The paper was founded as the Spirit of the Age by J. Heron Foster, J. McMillin and J. B. Kennedy on 19 April 1843, with Foster as editor.[1][2] Both daily and weekly editions were published.[3]

R. White Middleton bought the young paper in mid-1844 and edited it for less than a year until "sickness, poverty and oppression" drove him to quit.[4][5] Foster retook the editorship for a short time before moving on and founding the Pittsburgh Dispatch.[6]

Riddle era

In the middle of 1845, the daily title changed under new ownership to Daily Commercial Journal and Spirit of the Age,[7] the latter half of which was eventually dropped.[8] The name change signified that the paper would cater more than before to the interests of "the Manufacturer, the Farmer, and Merchant."[7] New editor Robert M. Riddle, formerly postmaster of Pittsburgh and editor of the Advocate, promised to replace the paper's previous political neutrality with a "thorough going Whig" slant in accordance with his own party affiliation.[7][9]

In 1853 Riddle was elected with Whig backing as mayor of Pittsburgh, which post he filled a single one-year term, at the same time continuing to manage the newspaper.[10] As the Whig Party fell apart soon afterward, Riddle and the Journal shifted support to the ephemeral American Party[11] before aligning with the up-and-coming Republican organization,[12] all the while maintaining an anti-slavery, pro-Northern stance.

Pittsburgh newspaper consolidation timeline

The abolitionist weekly Saturday Visiter, founded by editor Jane Swisshelm in 1847, was published from the Commercial Journal office.[13] In 1854 it merged into the Journal's weekly edition, at the time called Family Journal, to form the Family Journal and Saturday Visiter.[14][15] Swisshelm edited a "Visiter Department" within the merged edition. From this platform she promoted the causes of anti-slavery, temperance, and women's rights.[16]

Riddle conducted the Journal until 1858, when failing health prompted him to sell his interest to Thomas J. Bigham, who assumed editorial charge.[10][17] Bigham was an abolitionist Republican who purportedly used his house as a refuge on the Underground Railroad.[18]

Consolidation

The Commercial Journal merged into Pittsburgh's oldest paper, the Gazette, at the dawn of the Civil War in 1861. The consequently titled Daily Pittsburgh Gazette and Commercial Journal explained that "Both papers have long advocated essentially the same political principles and labored in the same cause, so that their separate publication was not essential to any public or political interest, while to advertisers the union will be one of great advantage."[19]

References

  1. ^ Killikelly, Sarah Hutchins (1906). The History of Pittsburgh: Its Rise and Progress. B.C. & Gordon Montgomery Company. p. 500. ISBN 9783849673789.
  2. ^ "The Spirit of the Age". The Morning Chronicle. Pittsburgh. 20 April 1843. p. 2, col. 5. Messrs. Foster, M'Millin and Kennedy's new paper made its appearance yesterday ... under Mr. Foster's editorial charge.
  3. ^ "About Spirit of the age". Chronicling America. Library of Congress. Retrieved 26 January 2014.
  4. ^ "Editorial Change". The Pittsburgh Gazette (Weekly ed.). 5 July 1844. p. 2, col. 1.
  5. ^ "Out of the Past". The Gettysburg Times. 21 May 1945. p. 4, col. 2.
  6. ^ "Editorial Change". Pittsburgh Morning Post. 14 May 1845. p. 2, col. 1. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 13 November 2019.
  7. ^ a b c Riddle, Robert M. (1845), Prospectus (advertisement) in: Foster, J. Heron (1845). A Full Account of The Great Fire at Pittsburgh, on the Tenth Day of April, 1845. Pittsburgh: J. W. Cook. p. 10 of advertising appendix.
  8. ^ "About Daily commercial journal and spirit of the age". Chronicling America. Library of Congress. Retrieved 9 February 2014.
  9. ^ "[untitled]". Pittsburgh Daily Gazette and Advertiser. 30 June 1845. p. 2, col. 4.
  10. ^ a b Crosby, Nathan (1859). Annual Obituary Notices of Eminent Persons who Have Died in the United States: For 1858. John P. Jewett and Company. p. 279.
  11. ^ "The Know-Nothings, National Platform". Texas Ranger. Washington, TX. 14 July 1855. p. 2, col. 7.
  12. ^ Howard, Victor B. (Summer 1971). "Presbyterians, the Kansas-Nebraska Act, and the Election of 1856". Journal of Presbyterian History. 49 (2): 141.
  13. ^ Hoffert, Sylvia D. (2004). Jane Grey Swisshelm: An Unconventional Life, 1815-1884. The University of North Carolina Press. p. 80. ISBN 978-0-8078-2881-6.
  14. ^ "To Readers of the Family Journal". The Family Journal and Saturday Visiter. Pittsburgh. 4 February 1854. p. 3, col. 1.
  15. ^ "The Saturday Evening Visitor [sic]". The Daily Pittsburgh Gazette. Pittsburgh. 30 January 1854. p. 2, col. 2.
  16. ^ Blue, Frederick J. (2006). No Taint of Compromise: Crusaders in Antislavery Politics. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press. p. 153. ISBN 978-0-8071-3205-0.
  17. ^ Wilson, Erasmus, ed. (1898). Standard History of Pittsburg, Pennsylvania. H.R. Cornell & Company. p. 855.
  18. ^ "Thomas James Bigham". Pennsylvania General Assembly. Retrieved 14 May 2018.
  19. ^ "The Commercial Journal". The Daily Pittsburgh Gazette and Commercial Journal. 9 May 1861. p. 2.
This page was last edited on 26 February 2024, at 16:19
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