TABLE OF CONTENTS
Descriptive Summary of the Collection
Administrative Information
Biography of Horatio Winslow Seymour
Scope and Content of the Collection
Arrangement
Selected Search Terms
Container List
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The Newberry Library Roger and Julie Baskes Department of Special
Collections 60 West Walton Street Chicago, Illinois 60610-7324 USA Phone: 312-255-3506 Fax: 312-255-3646 E-Mail: specialcolls@newberry.org URL: http://www.newberry.org
Machine-readable finding aid encoded by
Lisa Janssen,
2007.
©2007.
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| Collector |
Jones, Louise Seymour
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| Title |
Horatio Winslow Seymour
Papers
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| Dates |
1867-1948 |
| Dates |
bulk
1903-1918
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| Extent |
2 cubic ft. (4
boxes)
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| Abstract |
Editorial columns,
clippings, manuscripts, correspondence, three photographs, and family materials
from publisher and editorial writer Horatio Winslow Seymour.
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| Language |
Materials are in
English.
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| Repository |
Newberry Library, Roger and Julie Baskes Department
of Special Collections
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| Collection Call Number |
Midwest MS Seymour |
| Collection Stack Location |
3a 42 4 |
Horatio Winslow Seymour Papers, Midwest Manuscript Collection, The
Newberry Library, Chicago.
Gift of daughter Louise Seymour Jones, ca. 1948.
Lisa Janssen, 2007.
This inventory was created with the generous support of the National
Endowment for the Humanities. Any views, findings, conclusions, or
recommendations expressed in this inventory do not necessarily represent those
of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Access
The Horatio Winslow Seymour Papers are open for research in the
Special Collections Reading Room; 1 box at a time (Priority III).
Ownership and Literary Rights
The Horatio Winslow Seymour Papers are the physical property of the
Newberry Library. Copyright may belong to the authors or their legal heirs or
assigns. For permission to publish or reproduce any materials from this
collection, contact the Roger and Julie Baskes Department of Special
Collections.
Return to the Table of Contents
Newspaper editorial writer and publisher.
Horatio Winslow Seymour, was born at Genoa, Cayuga County, New York on
July 29, 1854. His parents were Andrew M. and Louisa M. Goodyear Seymour. His
father died when he was nine years of age, at which time he was cared for by
his uncle, H. G. Winslow, of Racine, Wisconsin.
Seymour’s first position in the newspaper business was in the printing
department of the Racine Advocate. His experience
at the Advocate would prove invaluable in the
years to come when navigating union disputes as president of the Chicago
Newspaper Publishers Association. In 1873 he became city editor of the
Milwaukee News, and two years later took the
position of telegraph editor of the Chicago Times.
His thorough and capable work soon attracted the attention of the veteran
editor, Wilbur F. Storey, and in 1879, was promoted to night managing editor.
In 1883 he left the Times and became an
editorial writer on the Chicago Herald. There he
developed into a highly respected columnist who wrote several influential
pieces on tariff reform, labor, and government which were collected in the
books Editorials that Won; Arguments that Live,
and Government & Co., Ltd. Seymour left the
Herald in 1895 when it was sold to James W. Scott
and changed its editorial focus to support Republican issues. That same year,
Seymour, along with investors Martin J. Russell and John R. Walsh, created the
Chicago Chronicle to fill the void for Democrats
in the Midwest.
The Chronicle was forced out of business
in 1907 by the sudden closeout of its major financial backer, the Chicago
National Bank. Seymour was quickly enlisted by Joseph Pulitzer to fill the
position of editorial supervisor at the New York World. He spent virtually the rest of his career
overseeing the editorial department and writing for the World. He left briefly during 1911 after the death of
Joseph Pulitzer, and went to the St. Louis
Republic, but was convinced to return by Pulitzer’s son Ralph after nine
months.
Seymour was married to Annie Jones of Racine, Wisconsin in 1876. They
had three daughters, Louise, Mary, and Anna. He suffered ill health starting in
the early 1900s and wintered in Pasadena, California for his remaining years.
He died of angina pectoris on December 17, 1920.
Return to the Table of Contents
The collection contains primarily clipping scrapbooks of editorials
from Seymour’s years as editorial manager at the New York World. The majority of incoming correspondence consists
of readers’ letters regarding his editorial columns while in Chicago. Several
prominent Chicago figures wrote to Seymour praising his editorials including
John P. Altgeld, Marshall Field, Frank O. Lowden, George Pullman, John R.
Walsh, and Booker T. Washington.
There is one personal scrapbook compiled by Seymour starting at age
ten, and three photographs. There is also a small amount of outgoing
correspondence to his daughters written while convalescing in Pasadena, a
biographical manuscript written by daughter Louise, and materials collected
from colleagues after his death also by his daughter Louise.
Return to the Table of Contents
Arranged alphabetically by type of material followed by materials
collected by daughter Louise, and lastly photographs and scrapbooks.
Return to the Table of Contents
The following terms have been used to index the description of this
collection in the Newberry Library's public catalog. Researchers desiring
additional materials on a particular topic should search the catalog using
these headings.
Names
- Chicago Newspaper
Publishers Association
- Jones, Louise
Seymour
- Pulitzer, Joseph,
1847-1911
- Seymour, Horatio Winslow,
1854-1920
- World (New York, NY:
1860-1931)
Subjects
- Clippings --
1867-1918
- Manuscripts, American --
Illinois -- Chicago
- Newspaper
publishing
- Newspaper editors --
United States
- Newspapers -- Illinois --
Chicago
Return to the Table of Contents
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| Box |
Folder |
Contents |
| 1 |
1 |
Outgoing Correspondence - Eddy, Allen, Sept. 22, 1920 |
| 1 |
2 |
Outgoing Correspondence - Jones, Louise Seymour (2 letters
also addressed to Louise and Mary), 1896-1918
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| 1 |
3 |
Outgoing Correspondence - Pulitzer, Joseph, ca. 1907 |
| 1 |
4 |
Outgoing Correspondence - Seymour, Anna, 1900 |
| 1 |
5 |
Incoming Correspondence - Altgeld, John P., Dec. 18, 1895 |
| 1 |
6 |
Incoming Correspondence - A, 1895-1918 |
| 1 |
7 |
Incoming Correspondence - B, 1903-1918 |
| 1 |
8 |
Incoming Correspondence - C, 1903-1914 |
| 1 |
9 |
Incoming Correspondence - D, 1903-1912 |
| 1 |
10 |
Incoming Correspondence - E, 1902-1917 |
| 1 |
11 |
Incoming Correspondence - Field, Marshall, May 23, 1903 |
| 1 |
12 |
Incoming Correspondence - F, 1903-1918 |
| 1 |
13 |
Incoming Correspondence - G, 1904-1912 |
| 1 |
14 |
Incoming Correspondence - H, 1903-1919 |
| 1 |
15 |
Incoming Correspondence - J, 1904, n.d. |
| 1 |
16 |
Incoming Correspondence - K, 1903-1918, n.d. |
| 1 |
17 |
Incoming Correspondence - Lowden, Frank O., Aug. 25, 1904 |
| 1 |
18 |
Incoming Correspondence - L, 1904-1920 |
| 1 |
19 |
Incoming Correspondence - M, 1903-1918 |
| 1 |
20 |
Incoming Correspondence - N, 1903 |
| 1 |
21 |
Incoming Correspondence - Pulitzer, Ralph, 1915, 1918 |
| 1 |
22 |
Incoming Correspondence - Pullman, George M., Feb. 12, 1897 |
| 1 |
23 |
Incoming Correspondence - P, 1897-1918 |
| 1 |
24 |
Incoming Correspondence - O, 1904-1916 |
| 1 |
25 |
Incoming Correspondence - R, 1903-1918 |
| 1 |
26 |
Incoming Correspondence - Selfridge, Harry, 1903-1906 |
| 1 |
27 |
Incoming Correspondence - S, 1903-1920 |
| 1 |
28 |
Incoming Correspondence - T, 1903-1918 |
| 1 |
29 |
Incoming Correspondence - Walsh, John R. (includes letter
to Victor Lawson), 1905, 1907
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| 1 |
30 |
Incoming Correspondence - Washington, Booker T.,
1905, 1907
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| 1 |
31 |
Incoming Correspondence - Watterson, Henry, 1896-1904 |
| 1 |
32 |
Incoming Correspondence - W, 1903-1918, n.d. |
| 1 |
33 |
Miscellaneous - clippings regarding Seymour's various
editorships and a typographical guidebook, 1906, 1912
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| 1 |
34 |
Works - The Class Idea in America (manuscript),
ca. 1900
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| 1 |
35 |
Works - Clippings, ca. 1900-1915 |
| 1 |
36 |
Works - Democratic Expansion, published in the
North American Review, Jul. 1904
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| 1 |
37 |
Works - Editorial proofs from the New York
World, ca. 1907-1920
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| 1 |
38 |
Works - Editorials from the New York World, 1908, 1910
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| 1 |
39 |
Works - Miscellaneous manuscripts - personal / memoir,
n.d.
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| 1 |
40 |
Works - Miscellaneous manuscripts - journalism,
ca. 1900-1915
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| 1 |
41 |
Works - Not a Profession but a Business (manuscript),
n.d.
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| 1 |
42 |
Works - Notes, 1895-1915 |
| 2 |
43 |
Works - St. Louis Republic - circulation figures
(clippings), 1912
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| 2 |
44 |
Works - The Strong Arm - clippings with notes,
ca. 1900
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| 2 |
45 |
Works - To the Managing Editor, the Night Editor, the City
Editor and All Copy Readers ( proof from the Chicago
Chronicle), ca. 1900
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| 2 |
46 |
Works - Women in Newspaper Work by a Retired Editor
(manuscript), ca. 1920
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| 2 |
47 |
Denslow, W. W. - print signed to H. W. Seymour,
ca. 1899
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| 2 |
48 |
Goodyear, C. B. (uncle) - obituary, correspondence,
1872-1875
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| 2 |
49 |
Jones, Louise Seymour - biographical manuscript written
about Horatio Seymour, 1948
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| 2 |
50 |
Jones, Louise Seymour - incoming correspondence from
Seymour's colleagues written to Jones, 1945-1947
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| 2 |
51 |
Reunion Dinner in Honor of Horatio Winslow Seymour -
program, draft of speech, letters to Herbert L. Jones, 1918
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| 2 |
52 |
Photographs - Eddy, Allen (with portrait of H. W. Seymour
in background), 1946
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| 2 |
53 |
Photographs - Seymour, Horatio W. - portrait, ca. 1918 |
| 2 |
54 |
Photographs - Seymour, Horatio W. - group portrait with
Henry Ford, Harvey Firestone Sr. and Jr., and Thomas Edison taken during one of
the group's annual trips, Asheville, North Carolina, 1918
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| 2 |
55 |
Scrapbook - personal - clippings and poems collected by
Seymour with notation by daughter Louise Seymour, 1867-1937
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| 3 |
56 |
Scrapbook - clippings - Oct. 1909-Jun. 1911 |
| 3 |
57 |
Scrapbook - clippings, Aug. 1911-Apr. 1912 |
| 3 |
58 |
Scrapbook - clippings, Jun. 1912-Feb. 1914 |
| 3 |
59 |
Scrapbook - clippings, Feb. 1914-Jun. 1915 |
| 3 |
60 |
Scrapbook - clippings, Jun. 1915-Jan. 1917 |
| 4 |
61 |
Scrapbook - clippings, Jan. 1917-May 1918 |
| 4 |
62 |
Scrapbook - Letters of condolence to Mrs. H. W. Seymour
and obituaries from various newspapers, 1920
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