Will Irwin

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William Henry Irwin
William Henry Irwin
Will Irwin in May 1918
Born September 14, 1873
Oneida, New York
Died February 24, 1948
Greenwich Village, New York
Nationality American
Occupation Journalist and author
Spouse(s) Inez Haynes Irwin

William Henry Irwin (14 September 1873 – 24 February 1948) was an American author, writer and journalist who was associated with the muckrakers.

Early life

Irwin was born in 1873 in Oneida, New York. In his early childhood, the Irwin family moved to Clayville, New York, a farming and mining center south of Utica. In about 1878, his father moved to Leadville, Colorado, establishing himself in the lumber business, and brought his family out. When his business failed Irwin's father moved the family to Twin Lakes, Colorado. A hotel business there failed too, and the family moved back to Leadville, in a bungalow at 125 West Twelfth Street. In 1889, the family moved to Denver, where he graduated from high school. He said he cured himself of a diagnosed bout of tuberculosis by "roughing it" for a year as a cowboy.[1]

University

Will Irwin, photo published in San Francisco Call December 9, 1910. page 6, to accompany the story by Mary Ashe Miller, "Will Irwin Weaves 'The City That Was' Into Strong Novel."

With a loan from his high school teacher, Irwin entered Stanford University in September 1894.[2] Irwin was forced to withdraw for disciplinary reasons but was readmitted and graduated on May 24, 1899.[3] According to journalism historians Clifford Weigle and David Clark in their biographical sketch of Irwin,

"During four riotous years at Stanford, Irwin 'specialized' in campus politics, undergraduate theatricals and writing, and beer drinking and inventive pranks. Expelled three weeks before he was to have received the B.A. degree in 1898, he got the degree a year later after final, solemn consideration by a somewhat reluctant faculty committee on student affairs."[4][5]

The Chronicle and The Sun

In 1901 Irwin got a job as a reporter on the San Francisco Chronicle, eventually rising to Sunday editor. For the San Francisco-based Bohemian Club, he wrote the Grove Play The Hamadryads, A Masque of Apollo in One Act' in 1904.[6][7][8] The same year, he moved to New York City to take a reporter's position at The New York Sun, then in its heyday under the editorship of Chester Lord and Selah M. Clark. Also in 1904, Irwin co-authored a book of short stories with Gelett Burgess, The Picaroons (McClure, Phillips & Co.)

Irwin arrived in New York City the same day as a major disaster, the sinking of the General Slocum. As a new reporter on The Sun, he was assigned to work the Bellevue Hospital morgue, where the more than 1,000 bodies of the victims of fire and drowning were taken.[9][10]

The City That Was

First installment of Irwin's series "The City That Was" as it appeared in The Sun, in New York City, Saturday, April 21, 1906, page 5

Irwin's biggest story and the feat that made him a professional writer was his absentee coverage for The Sun, in New York City, of the San Francisco earthquake of April 18, 1906.

Weigle and Clark described his activities:

"Because he knew the city so well, he was assigned to write – mostly from memory, supplemented by scant telegraphic bulletins – the story of the quake. Before the last-edition deadline on the first day, April 18, 1906, he wrote fourteen columns of copy. and he kept writing, eight columns or more a day, for the next seven days, as fire swept the ruined city. The booklet, for which Irwin is most widely known, resulted from six or seven columns of the general description of pre-earthquake San Francisco that he wrote on the afternoon of the third day of the story."[11][12][13]

McClure's and Collier's

Irwin was hired by S.S. McClure in 1906 as managing editor of McClure's. He rose to the position of editor but disliked the work and then moved to Collier's, edited by Norman Hapgood. He wrote investigative stories on the movement for Prohibition and a study of fake spiritual mediums.

Back on the Pacific coast in 1906–1907 to research a story on anti-Japanese racism Irwin returned to San Francisco and found it flourishing. Several years later, he wrote an article on the city's rebirth entitled "The City That Is" in the San Francisco Call, which concluded that San Francisco had become "a larger city, a more convenient city, and since it is also a more beautiful and more distinctive city I announce myself a complete convert. This city that was business is the old stuff."[14]

Irwin's series on anti-Japanese discrimination appeared in Collier's in September–October 1907 and Pearson's in 1909.[15]

"The American Newspaper"

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Then came the Collier's magazine series, "The American Newspaper", one of the most famous critical analyses of American journalism. The series was researched from September 23, 1909, until late June 1910 and published from January to June 1911.[1]

Collier's January 21, 1911. Cover of the first installment of Irwin's series "The American Newspaper."

World War I

Irwin continued to write articles, some in the muckraking style until the outbreak of World War I. He sailed to Europe in August 1914 as one of the first American correspondents. According to media historians Edwin and Michael Emery

"[Irwin's] beats on the battles of Ypres and the first German use of poison gas were also printed in the Tribune. Irwin was one of several correspondents who represented American magazines in Europe; he first wrote for Collier's and then for the Saturday Evening Post.[16] Irwin's article appeared on the front page of The New York Tribune on April 27, 1915.[17]

Irwin served on the executive committee of Herbert Hoover's Commission for Relief in Belgium in 1914–1915 and was chief of the foreign department of George Creel's Committee on Public Information in 1918.

Spiritualism Skeptic

Irwin was skeptical of paranormal claims. In 1907-1908, for the Colliers Weekly, he published four installments of "The Medium Game: Behind the Scenes with Spiritualism" to cover fraud and trickery associated with spiritualism.[18]

Psychical researcher Hereward Carrington described Irwin as a well-known "exposer of fraudulent mediums."[19]

Books and plays

During and after the war Irwin wrote 17 more books, including Christ or Mars?, an anti-war treatise (1923); a biography of Herbert Hoover (1928); a history of Paramount Pictures and its founder, Adolph Zukor, The House That Shadows Built (1928); and his own autobiography, The Making of a Reporter (1942). He also wrote two plays and continued magazine writing.

Personal life

Irwin was married to feminist author, Inez Haynes Irwin, who published under the name Inez Haynes Gillmore, author of Angel Island (1914) and The Californiacs (1916).[20][21] The Irwins summered in Scituate, Massachusetts, in the early 1900s.[22] Will Irwin wrote a story in 1914 for The American Magazine about summer life in Scituate.[23]

Irwin died in 1948, at the age of 74.[citation needed]

See also

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Robert V. Hudson. The Writing Game. A Biography of Will Irwin. Ames, IA: The Iowa State University Press, 1982.
  2. Will Irwin. Charles K. Field. (1900) Stanford Stories: Tales of a Young University (gutenberg.org free download)
  3. Irwin is sometimes said to have been a member of the Stanford Chaparral. However, Irwin graduated on May 24, 1899, and the first issue of The Chappie was published in October of that year. See Robert V. Hudson. The Writing Game. A Biography of Will Irwin. Ames, IA: The Iowa State University Press, 1982, p. 19.
  4. "About Will Irwin." In Will Irwin, The American Newspaper. A Series First Appearing in COLLIERS, January – July 1911. With comments by Clifford J. Weigle and David Clark. Ames, IO: The Iowa State University Press, 1969, pp. ix–x.
  5. "Class of '99 Bids Farewell to Alma Mater. Stanford Men and Women Who Go Forth to Fight Life's Battles." The San Francisco Call Tuesday, May 23, 1899, p.2.
  6. http://ead-pdfs.library.yale.edu/1685.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  7. http://pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/berkeley/bancroft/mch109_cubanc.pdf[bare URL PDF]
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  10. "49 More Bodies; 680 in All." The Sun June 20, 1904, p.5
  11. Will Irwin. The City That Was: A Requiem of Old San Francisco (from newspaper) (gutenberg.org free download)
  12. Will Irwin The City That Was: A Requiem of Old San Francisco 1906. New York: B. W. Huebsch, Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Library. 47 p. OCLC 671922810 (free download)
  13. review
  14. San Francisco Call March 12 1910, p. 12.
  15. "The Japanese and the Pacific Coast," Collier's, 40 (September 28, 1907), 13–5; (October 12, 1907), pp. 13–5; (October 19, 1907), 17–9; (October 26, 1907), pp. 15–6; "Why the Pacific Slope Hates the Japanese," Pearson's, 21 (1909), pp. 581–91.
  16. Michael Emery, Edwin Emery, and Nancy L. Roberts. The Press and America. An Interpretive History of the Mass Media. Eighth Edition. Boston and London: Allyn and Bacon, 1996, p. 261.
  17. "Germans Use Blinding Gas to Aid Poison Fumes"
  18. Hudson, Robert Vernon. (1982). The Writing Game: A Biography of Will Irwin. Iowa State University Press. p. 63
  19. Carrington, Hereward. (1913). Personal Experiences in Spiritualism. T. Werner Laurie Ltd. p. 140
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  22. Harold Howard, compiler, Towns of Scituate and Marshfield Massachusetts Directory 1918: Containing an Alphabetical List of the Inhabitants, a Summer Resident Directory … (Boston: Harold Howard, 1918), 79.
  23. Will Irwin, “Togo, Mayor of Scituate: A True Dog Story”, Illustrations by Henry J. Soulen, The American Magazine, Vol. 78, No. 2, August 1914 (New York: Phillips Pub. Co., 1914), 11-16 & 83-86, accessed June 17, 2016.

External links