Thursday, March 10, 2022

Women's History Month : Part 2

 Nellie Bly

Muckraking stunt journalist, World Traveler


Sepia toned image of Nellie Bly board game

Nellie suggested to her editor that she take a trip around the world following the route in the novel Around the World in 80 Days.

Blue and gold cloth covered book titled Around the World in Eighty Days


On November 12, 1889, Nellie heard the good news- she was going on her trip! She packed two valises with only essentials: two traveling caps, three veils, a pair of slippers, a complete outfit of toilet articles, ink-stand, pens, pencils, and copy-paper, pins, needles and thread, a dressing gown, a tennis blazer, a small flask and a drinking cup, several complete changes of underwear, a liberal supply of handkerchiefs and fresh ruchings and most bulky and a jar of cold cream to keep my face from chapping "in the varied climates I should encounter." She purchased a blue travel gown, a Scotch ulster overcoat, a light raincoat, and a hat.  She was determined to show women could pack light and travel on their own without help.

Girl doll in blue dress packs suitcase of clothes
Nellie packs for her trip


 

On Thursday November 14, 1889 Nellie left New York at 9:40 a.m. and boarded a steamer bound for London!



Girl doll in gray and white tweed coat waves her arm
Goodbye New York!



There she heard Jules Verne wanted to meet her so she raced to Amiens. She didn't speak French and he didn't speak much English but Mr. Verne and his wife were quite delighted to meet her. He even showed Nellie his study and they compared her route to Phileas Fogg's.

[Susanna's note: Read an account of her journey with her own words and visuals at the Heinz History Center website.]



girl doll in gray and white tweed coat and tan baseball cap standing with black suitcase bag


Nellie traveled by steamships and railroads sending back short dispatches that were often delayed by weeks. She faced seasickness at first but soon recovered and made many new friends. 

 

Ruth stands in for Samantha.
Nellie Bly's trip did NOT take her on board Titanic!


Her trip went through England, France,  Brindisi, Italy, then through the Suez Canal, on to Asia through Colombo (Ceylon), the Straits Settlements of Penang and Singapore, Hong Kong, and Japan. In Ceylon she tried the local food. In Singapore Nellie bought a macaque she named McGinty. He became her friend and traveling companion for the rest of the journey. 




girl doll in gray and white tweed coat and tan baseball cap holds a plush monkey on her arm
Nellie Bly and McGinty


She faced a monsoon but still arrived in Hong Kong ahead of schedule! As her trip went on, Nellie became very famous back home. Officers on the Oceanic had written the following couplet all over the engine room:


“For Nellie Bly,
We’ll win or die.
January 20, 1890.”

Nellie arrived in San Francisco on January 21 only to learn blizzards stopped the Central Pacific Railroad. 



Girl doll in tan baseball cap and gray and white tweed coat holds plush monkey in front of backdrop of blue sky, beach, Ferris Wheel, sailboats
Nellie Bly and McGinty in San Francisco


No trains could get through for days. It was the worst snow the railroad had ever seen! 


backdrop scene of snowy mountains


Nellie was worried she wouldn't make it home in 80 days but she decided to go south through the desert across the new territories of Arizona and New Mexico with everyone cheering her on. She went through Kansas, Chicago, Indiana, Pennsylavia with crowds greeting her, cheering her on. She waved her cap and was soon on her way again. 

Girl doll in gray and white tweed coat waves her arm
Nellie waves to the crowds


On January 25, 1890 at 3:51 p.m. Nellie's train chugged into Jersey City, New Jersey. Her journey was now over after 72 days, 6 hours, 11 minutes, and 14 seconds! Canons boomed at Battery Park and boats in the Hudson River tooted their whistles as Nellie beat her own goal by 3 days!

As Nellie travelled, the newspaper held a guessing contest to see how many days it would take Nellie to arrive home

Black and white newspaper image of circular board game depiciting Nellie Bly's race around the world
black and white printed newspaper ballot for guessing Nellie's return time




Nellie was so popular, advertisers used her likeness to sell all manner of products, including this game from McLoughlin Brothers, based on a game board that appeared in the New York World

 

girl doll in long sleeves Victorian style dress and lace collar holds colorful Nellie Bly board game
Around the World With Nellie Bly board game



girl doll in tan baseball cap and gray and white tweed coat stands in the middle of a colorful puzzle game board depicting Nellie Bly's trip around the World
Day 73. I win!

When Nellie returned home she was a hero to many people! She thought she would get paid more money but her male editors refused to pay her more. She said "I quit!" and walked away from the paper. She went on a lecture tour, wrote a book about her adventures, and wrote fiction serials for a the New York Family Story Paper

Three years later Nellie came back to work for the World writing about Pullman Palace car workers on strike. Then she took a job with the Chicago Times-Herald. Five weeks later she quit to get married! (Her husband is even older than my GrandMary. I think he tried to court GrandMary once but her heart belonged to Grandfather Samuel and now Admiral Beemis.) It was a big shock to all Nellie's friends and family. She kept writing for awhile and even interviewed Susan B. Anthony! Now she is living here in New York as a wealthy widow running a business of some sort. Perhaps my cousin Susanna will come and tell you about it. For now, that is all. 

Thank you for listening to my presentation! 

 

Wednesday, March 9, 2022

Women's History Month Part 1

 Nellie Bly

Muckraking stunt journalist, World Traveler

Good afternoon to everyone, once again Samantha has a school report to share with her class and everyone else who will listen. Let's see what she has to say this year.

This year I am reporting on another one of my journalist heroes, Nellie Bly! You may have heard of her, she was the first person to go around the world in less than 80 days, inspired by the Jules Verne novel Around the World in 80 Days. I am going to share a bit more about her with you.

Samantha in Nellie Bly's blue dress and lace color
Nellie Bly



Nellie Bly was born Elizabeth Jane Cochran on May 8, 1864 in the village of Cochran's Mills, Pennsylvania. Why, yes, it was named after her family. Her father was a local politician, judge, made money from selling land and also owned a general store and ran a grist mill for grinding grain. The western Pennsylvania village of Pitt's Mills was renamed in his honor. When Elizabeth was born, she was the youngest of 16 children! 12 of her older siblings were half siblings and already grown when she was born. Her nickname was "Pink" or Pinkey because Elizabeth loved and often wore that color. 

Girl doll in pink Victorian dress standing in front of a sepia toned photo of a wood frame house
Pink Cochran 


You can see I am wearing my pinkest dress today in her honor. (No, I don't own any other pink dresses, why do you ask? It is not a popular color for children). 

Here is the house where Nellie Bly was born, on Crooked Creek. It still stands today in 1906 but it may not exist if you try to find it in the future. 

Then when Pink was 5, she moved with her parents and three older brothers to a much nicer, custom built house in the town of Apollo. They brought their cow, two dogs and a horse when they moved because there was a large yard for the animals. 

Girl doll in pink Victorian dress stands with plush cow, two beanie dogs and sepia photograph of a large Victorianhouse
Pink Cochran and animal companions

(No silly girls, this isn't a REAL cow. A cow wouldn't fit in the classroom. Please hold your questions until the end, thank you.)

Pink's father became ill and died whenwas only 6 years old without leaving a will. The court decided all surviving children, including Pink and her baby brother, were to get an even share, once their house was sold, with the money held for the little ones until they grew up. Mrs. Cochran's income was only $16 a month. Did you know many families like my friend Nellie's live on much less? Can you imagine any of your mothers making do with only $16 a month for herself and 5 small children? What would she do?

Well, Pink's mother did what anyone else back in our grandmothers' day would do- she married someone else. By 1870, Pink had a new stepfather, one she did not like because he was angry a lot and drank too much alcohol. He threatened and hit Pink's mother so she decided to divorce him. 

At 15, Pink was determined to go to work and help her family. She did not want to have to depend on any man to support her the way her mother did. So then Pink went to college to learn to be a teacher., studying reading, writing, arithmatic and grammar. She changed her name back to her birth name and added an e to the end of her surname, becoming Elizabeth J. Cochrane. Sadly she ran out of money before she finished college. She tried to sue the bank holding her father's money but the law suit went on too long and cost too much.

girl doll in pink Victorian dress carrying leather bookstrap and school books stands in front of a blackboard classroom scene
Elizabeth J. Cochrane at school


Her life changed forever in January 1885 when Elizabeth read a series of newspaper columns in the Pittsburgh Dispatch titled "What Girls Are Good For." The writer said girls were only good for keeping house and having babies!



Newspaper ad Pittsburgh Dispatch
Google Doodle newspaper image showing two Victorian men
Google Doodle Nellie Bly

Elizabeth saw red! She wrote a letter to the editor explaining how this is very untrue and how that idea hurt her family. Even though she wrote under the name "Lonely Orphan Girl," and not her real name, the male editor of the paper was impressed enough by Elizabeth's writing to track her down and offer her a job writing about the women's sphere. She urged people to think about what life was like for girls without money, talent or beauty. If they had the same jobs as men their "lives would be brighter, their health better, their pocketbooks fuller." She also wrote about (Samantha lowers her voice to a whisper), divorce! That article was published under her new nickname "Nelly Bly," after an old popular song.

Girl doll in pink Victorian dress holding notebook and pencil
Nellie Bly, journalist at last


Nellie Bly also wrote about the conditions of women working in factories. You all heard my speech about thread factories. Nellie Bly said it all first, before we were born! Unfortunately, poor Nellie was then forced to write about boring stuff like gardening, fashion and society. She didn't like that and left the paper to be a freelance writer.

In early 1886 Nellie and her mother travelled to Mexico. They stayed in Mexico City and took train trips out to the country where Nellie showed off her independent spirit. She also wrote about the bad government which got her into trouble for defying censorship laws. Nellie and her mother had to return home. While in Mexico, Nellie posed for a photo in a fancy dress. 


A girl doll in fancy eyelet off white Victorian dress
Nellie Bly in Mexico

Woman in a light lacy Victorian dress in front of a Mexican blanket
The real Nellie Bly in Mexico
 


Back home in the United States, Nellie was able to freely criticize the Mexican government in her articles. She later compiled them into a book

Nellie rejoined the Pittsburgh Dispatch when she ran out of stories about Mexico. She was given more women's topics: arts and theater. 

cardboard folding illustrated theater curtain scene



Nellie Bly still thought that was too boring for her so she packed her bags and headed east to New York City! 

Here in New York Nellie Bly couldn't get a job right away! It took awhile and more boring articles on fashion. The male editors were very rude to Nellie. Women were ONLY fit to write about all that silly society stuff and not real news. Nellie published a series of interviews she had with the male editors and her reputation grew. FINALLY, the editor of the New York World liked Nellie's story ideas and hired her. 

New York World Building early 1900s
New York World Building c. 1900s


Her editor asked Nellie to investigate the conditions of the Women's Lunatic Asylum on Blackwell's Island- from the inside! Nellie rented a room in a women's shelter for a night and pretended to act mad. She acted mad as she was examined by a police officer, a judge and a doctor who sent her to Blackwell's Island. During the next 10 days Nellie got a first hand look at the terrible conditions at the Asylum. The women were not treated well at all. Many became poor and weakened by illness or couldn't convince the doctor they were sane because they did not speak English. 

black and white illustration of women in a 19th-century mental institution
Illustration of women in the mental hospital 


Nellie vowed to help her "suffering sisters" once she got out. Her editor sent a lawyer to convince the doctors she was sane and should be let out. She then wrote a two part story on her experiences [editor's note: please be advised that this story appeared in 1887 and contains images and language that may be offensive to modern viewers]. It made front page news in October '87! Other newspapers picked up the stories and Nellie's work helped make conditions better for women in asylums!

Antique newspaper image https://wp.wwu.edu/dreamteam2018/2018/07/31/nellie-bly-reports-from-inside-the-asylum/



Throughout '88 Nellie wrote other "stunt journalism" stories exposing all kinds of bad things happening in New York. At last she had a steady job and loyal readers but her best was yet to come! 

sepia toned image of Nellie Bly board game and quote about the New York World sending Nellie to discover the truth

I need a drin of lemonade. I shall be right back with the rest of the story!
... Intermission...