This month I'd like to share with you a source I've come to enjoy
as much for recreation as research. It's the Wyoming Newspapers project
(newspapers.wyo.gov) and unlike similar online services, this one is free. One
of several searchable online database projects from the Wyoming State Library
(WSL) it competes with Wyoming Inventors, Wyoming Legislation and Wyoming
Places for most compelling content. Dozens of newspapers from several decades
are available in searchable PDF format. As you’d expect from the era, the ads
are a hoot and the editorials, inflammatory. In the style of the day there's
plenty of yellow journalism and spurious headlines. What today we'd call
Clickbait.
For quite a while I just had fun poking around aimlessly. But then
I started following Laramie’s city council notes for the years 1898-1904.
A little background. In our day job, Gina and I work with a
wide variety of businesses making up marketing programs, developing web sites,
and writing copy. To me, the most interesting groups we work with usually have
something to do with the nuts and bolts of the real world, or maybe it's better
to say, the world's foundation. The
utility companies, the freight distributors, and the economic development
associations. During the past 25 years, it's sometimes been surprising to see
how the world actually works, and more, to see how that reality is communicated
to the public through the media. (Read: not always so accurately.)
So I when I noticed the City Council debating over bids to supply
the city with arc lamps, I was hooked.
Arc lamps were in use in Wyoming as early as February, 1884 (in
Cheyenne) and it's something you rarely see in movies or read about in
traditional westerns. The bid to put up the first poles was won by the
Brush-Swan Electric Light Company. (More at BlackHillsCorp.com).
The lamps were placed on corners and above intersections and gave
off intense white light due to high voltage electric arcs jumping through air
between carbon electrodes. Usually powered by relatively small steam powered dynamos,
arc lamps were the first practical public lighting in the West. By the turn of
the century, their use was already in decline, though many small towns were
just getting into the act.
I won’t try to recreate the entire saga here, but if you search by
city (Laramie) and paper (Daily Boomerang)
and look for “arc lamps,” you’ll see what I mean.
Step back more than a century. The excitement of new technologies
and the progress of economies struggled with petty regulations and unfortunate
infighting. (Sounds like our world today, doesn’t it?) Such was life on the
Wyoming frontier.
Toss in a good character, a decent subplot or two, and you'd have a crackling fun story grounded in
oft-ignored history.
Then, like now, a hero wasn't as often the guy with the gun, but
the person who could keep the lights on through whatever silly obstacles stood
in his or her way.
You have hit upon one of my favorite pastimes, reading the old newspapers from areas I'm researching. You are correct, the stories they contain are priceless and fun to read.
ReplyDeleteAs I research the women doctors, this type of information is priceless. Here is to wonderful stories in the papers than can lead to great stories the authors today can tell. Doris
Richard,
ReplyDeleteThanks. Very fascinating.
Charlie
Thanks! What a great article. Thanks for sharing this source. I know from teaching about and doing my own family history that newspapers can be a great source of information. Very interesting to learn about the use of arc lights in 19th century Wyoming cities.
ReplyDeleteRobyn Echols writing historical novels as Zina Abbott
Thanks for this post, Richard. newspapers.wyo.gov is an excellent resource full of fun stories.
ReplyDeleteI absolutely love reading old newspapers--can get caught up in it for hours and hours. There's always an article that sparks yet another idea, and the characters where drawn in such a colorful way. The language is entertaining, too.
ReplyDelete