Everything about Chicago Democrat totally explained
The
Chicago Democrat was the first
newspaper in
Chicago, Illinois. It was published from
1833 to
1861.
History
Publisher
John Calhoun
was a
Jacksonian Democrat, lured west at the end of 1833 from
Watertown, New York to start the
Democrat inspired by traveler's stories about Chicago after a series of newspaper business failures in his home state of
New York.
Printing paid better than newspaper
publishing, but the paper was valuable to the new community both to boost the town and bring more people to it and to forward the affairs of its avowed
political party.
Publishing a newspaper on the
frontier was challenging. In May
1835 Calhoun issued a second prospectus that apologized for the paper's virtual disappearance over the previous four months and promised a new
editor would upgrade the quality of news when the
Democrat re-appeared. He cited a lack of available paper on which to print during the winter of 1834-1835. He didn't cite, but presumably was responding to, the appearance of his first competition, the
Chicago's American (sponsored by a rival political party, the
Whigs).
In
1836 Calhoun handed the paper over to a syndicate of Democratic politicians, perhaps in return for the party position to which he was appointed,
Cook County Treasurer. The syndicate meanwhile hired
"Long" John Wentworth, newly arrived in the city with solid Democratic credentials. Wentworth bought the paper outright from this syndicate within a few years.
Wentworth's rivals were probably at least partially correct when they accused him of printing more news about himself than the city. This strategy appears to have been successful, since Wentworth represented Chicago in the
United States Congress on and off throughout this period, and also served as
mayor of Chicago twice.
Lack of circulation figures for the
Democrat makes it hard to know much about the paper's audience, but it seems likely that in the 1850s their number dwindled. The staff was kept small while the number of reporters at other papers grew, and the printing presses failed to keep up with the times and other newspapers such as the
Chicago Tribune (started in
1847).
Wentworth, owner of the
Democrat, had become by the end of the 1850s a member of the new
Republican Party — a turnabout that can be said, with some oversimplification, to have resulted from the politics of the years before the
American Civil War when feelings about
slavery caused shifting alliances and political turmoil throughout the country.
In 1861, just before the war started, Wentworth closed the
Democrat. He said he was tired from his recent term as mayor and unable to continue after the death of his assistant,
David Bradley. Others speculated he didn't care to invest the money it would take to modernize and adequately cover the war many expected at any moment. A more pressing cause was a $250,000
libel lawsuit by another of Chicago's Old Settlers,
J. Young Scammon. Scammon was angry because Wentworth had published a
cartoon depicting him as a "wildcat" banker (the fat cat in the picture wore a pair of Scammon’s distinctive spectacles).
Wentworth gave his subscription list to the
Chicago Tribune, whose publishers induced Scammon to drop the suit in return. Wentworth’s political career went on but his paper was gone; although his own complete run of the paper was burned in the
1871 Chicago Fire, many issues are now available through the
Chicago History Museum,
Chicago Public Library, and other repositories.
Further Information
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