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Sreat The tory of the T imes- Picayune its bunding to 1940 THOMAS
EWING DABNEY LOUISIANA STATE UNIVERSITY Baton ouge - PRESS -
tyuisiana 1944 COPYRIGHT, 1944, BY LOUISIANA STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS
DEDICATION There always have been, there always will be editors and
writers whose names shed luster on a news paper, and the history of
the Times-Picayune con tains many to whom this booJ could be
dedicated. But they are only incidental to its life the radiant
complexion, so to speajf while the anonymous uforkr ers are its red
blood corpuscles, for they are its daily contacts, its careful
recorders whose sincerity and truth give enduring and increasing
authority to that which must be created anew every day. I therefore
inscribe this booJ f not to the stars but to the firma ment which
contains the stars, the men and women unknown to fame who have
carried the Times-Picayune to greatness during the past hundred
years, and are carrying it and will carry it to a still larger
service during the next hundred. flUG 4 1944 Preface President
Leonard K. Nicholson of the Times-Picayune Publish ing Company in
June, 1936, gave me the assignment to compile the editorial matter
for a special edition which the Times-Picayune would issue on
January 25 of the next year in commemoration of its hundredth
anniversary It was an assignment right down my alley, for I had
long been a student of Louisiana history. For that 268-page issue I
wrote 240 columns, signed and unsigned, and directed the
preparation of nearly 300 more columns When I had finished, I
realized that I had but outlined the story of the largest and most
creative century in the history of my country, my state, and my
community. Hence this book, which isan assignment I gave myself in
order to bring that hundred years into sharper focus, and to create
a con nected narrative with evaluating emphasis on the human impli
cations reflected in the papers increasing columns. The work if you
wish to call it that first called for a reading of every issue,
from the first to the present time. When I had done that I found I
had just begun for, how can one tell the history of a newspaper
without telling the history of its community and how can one
understand the history of a city without knowing the history of the
state and how can one comprehend the history of a state without
knowing the history of the country and of what value is the history
of a country unless it is cogged with the world developments which
gave it motivation as well as background The task consumed nearly
five years of intensive work reading, making notes, writing, and
rewriting to say nothing of the months of revision. The material
for my shaping contains some of the most interest vii viii PREFACE
ing, most sensational, and most important developments in our
countrys history and the growth of the newspaper exemplifies the
value of a free press to the human cause. Those who hurriedly scan
the headlines do not realize that they are enjoying the privilege
of first sources when the present Is evaluated by the future. My
study of the daily recordings of a century, revealing as they do
the motives and understandings of the men and women who brought
forth the eventuations, has given me a larger appreciation of a
newspapers value to history, I have, for instance, an entirely
different conception of the War Between the States than the school
books taught, as a result of the reports in theDaily Picayune. The
historian in writing social history should give more attention to
newspapers than to state documents and eco nomic summations for the
newspaper columns, whatever their errors of fact or conclusion,
reflect the beliefs and the interests and the emotional content of
the times, and these are the road which humanity has always
followed in the long and painful progress up from the primordial
ooze...
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