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Newspaper Accounts
Editorial Note: The most thorough coverage of the 1850 Worcester Convention
appeared in the New-York Daily Tribune, edited by Horace Greeley.
Greeley (1811-1872) was one of the most influential editors/publishers of
the middle third of the nineteenth century and a long-time crusader for
a variety of reforms, especially the abolition of slavery. The reports were
written by Rev. J.G. Forman of West Bridgewater, Massachusetts, who took
an active part in the Convention and was named to one of the Committees
created to carry forward its work. This "insider" status gave
Forman access to the leading figures who assembled in Worcester. As a result,
his account is highly detailed and accurate. Because he recorded much of
the substance of the extemporaneous remarks made from the floor and the
give-and-take of the debate, Forman's articles provide an invaluable supplement
to the published Proceedings.
His standing as a member of the women's rights movement also led him to
pull his journalistic punches in both minor matters (his description of
speaker after speaker as "eloquent," for example) and major. He
did not report the substance of Abby Kelley Foster's speech at the opening
session but did recount Lucretia Mott's efforts to tone down her friend's
rhetoric about women having the right to use "violence" and "bloodshed"
to achieve justice. Greeley did not directly comment on the Convention until
November 2, 1850 when an anonymous reader, "A," asked him to do
so. "A's" letter and Greeley's editorial are both included here.
James Gordon Bennett's New York Herald, the Tribune's chief
rival, also gave the Convention extensive coverage, particularly its first
day. The Herald apparently lifted much of its coverage of the second
day from the Tribune, a common journalistic practice. But, since
Bennett was intensely hostile to the movement for women's rights, and intensely
scornful of Greeley's support for a variety of reform movements, he appended
a vituperative commentary to the Tribune's basically friendly account.
Its editor's bias does not mean that the Herald's account, particularly
of the first day, is untrustworthy. Its reporter made frequent sport of
the speakers, but he also faithfully recorded much of what they said as
with his recounting of the occasionally humorous discussion about the marriage
vow of obedience during the evening session of the first day. And, where
the Tribune hesitated to go into detail about Abby Kelley Foster's
incendiary speech, the Herald was only too happy to do so.
The Boston press also gave the Convention extensive coverage. The Chronotype's
editor-publisher, Elizur Wright, was an advocate of woman's rights and sent
a letter which was read aloud at the Convention. Also strongly supportive
was The Liberator, edited and published by William Lloyd Garrison.
Garrison and his wife signed the "Call"
to the Convention and both attended. In the weeks leading up to the convention
The Liberator printed excerpted versions of the "Call"
along with the full list of signers. Garrison also played an active role
at the Convention itself and gave a brief speech at the close of the second
day. The Liberator for November 15 devoted its entire front page
to publishing the "Proceedings" of the Convention including the
full texts of all resolutions, a list of speakers, and the names of all
of the officers. Garrison published the text of Paulina Wright Davis's presidential
address on the back page, though without attribution. The following week's
issue, November 22, contained more Convention material in the form of letters
read aloud during the meetings. All of this information is available in
the Proceedings
and so has not been reproduced here. Other related materials, such as an
open letter to Paulina Wright Davis, are reproduced. See the On-line
Resources and On-line Archive pages.
The Boston Daily Mail was, like the New York Herald, highly
critical. Its coverage is nonetheless among the most thorough.
Only the Massachusetts Spy among the Worcester papers covered
the Convention in detail. Its favorable view dated from before the opening
session as an October 23, 1850 editorial demonstrated.
In creating hypertext versions of these newspaper accounts, I have corrected
obvious typographical errors, inserted relevant information (such as first
names where known) in brackets, and annotated Biblical and other quotations
(where possible). I have also attempted to identify contemporary references.
I have not corrected the spellings of proper names, such as the New York
Herald's spelling of Abby Kelley Foster's name as Kelly or of Frederick
Douglass's as Douglas, since some of these were deliberate (as when some
papers referred to abolitionist Charles C. Burleigh as Burley). I have deleted
material, such as Paulina Wright Davis's keynote address and the text of
various resolutions, available in the Proceedings.,
instead inserting links to that document. Otherwise the materials below
are verbatim transcriptions and are presented in their entirety.
If you have suggestions or criticisms, please use the e-mail button below.
- New-York Daily Tribune, October
24, 1850
- New-York Daily Tribune, October
25, 1850
- New-York Daily Tribune, October
26, 1850
- Massachusetts Spy, October
23, 1850 [editorial]
- Massachusetts Spy, October
30, 1850
- New-York Daily Tribune, November
2, 1850 [editorial]
- New York Herald, October 25, 1850
- New York Herald, October 26, 1850
- New York Herald, October
28, 1850
- New York Herald, October 29, 1850
[editorial]
- The [Boston] Daily Chronotype, October
24, 1850
- The [Boston] Daily Mail, October
24, 1850
- The [Boston] Daily Mail, October
25, 1850
- The [Boston] Daily Mail, Evening
Edition, October 25, 1850
- Practical Christian (as
reprinted in The Liberator, November 8, 1850)
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