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Our Pioneers
E.W. Scripps -
The founding father
Born: June 18, 1854 Died: March 12, 1926
E.W. Scripps was born in Rushville, Ill., and spent his early years
there. At 18, he went to Detroit with $80 in his pocket. After working briefly
as a drugstore clerk, he founded The Detroit News with his older brother, James
E. Scripps. The newspaper remains in operation under this name today, but is not
affiliated with The E.W. Scripps Company. In 1878 E.W. Scripps began his first
newspaper, The Penny Press in Cleveland, an inexpensive and clearly written
newspaper targeted toward blue-collar readers. Scripps lived to be 71, and had
six children. At his death, he left 25 newspapers; United Press, an
international news service he founded to compete with The Associated Press;
Newspaper Enterprise Association, a newspaper syndication service and forerunner
of United Media; and numerous public buildings and projects that had been
funded by Scripps' charitable giving.
Some of his biographers have created an image of E.W.
Scripps as a farm boy sitting on a rail fence, contemplating the
whole range of his ultimate purpose. This is a doubtful idealization
of a genuinely precocious intellect. Like most men with the capacity
for mental and spiritual growth, it is more probable that his
philosophy of journalism and his sense of social justice flowered as
he grew in stature.
Neither would it be an
exact picture of E.W. Scripps to imagine him a bowed, sorrowful
figure, brooding over the miseries of mankind. As a young man he was
serious in purpose, but was of a lively disposition. He liked horses
and drove a fine span. He smoked cigars and drank whiskey until
almost the day of his death. He liked a rowdy game of poker. In his
later years, he was gruff in manner; he wore boots and dribbled
cigar ashes on his vest. His language was not always elegant. He
was, in fact, a tough customer.
He was a humanitarian,
but not a sentimentalist. He was tough-minded, tough-fibered and
realistic. His idealism was intellectual, not emotionalism.
E.W. Scripps was no
soft-hearted paternalist. He strove to provide jobs, not charity. He
believed self-reliance created self-respect.
Men looking for soft and
easy journalistic careers rarely sought service with E.W. Scripps.
It was hard, tough work. The hours were long; and good men more
often than not worked for less pay than they could have drawn for
commensurate work at the opposition's paper.
But for men of a
particular breed, there was a quid pro quo- men who considered
journalism an exciting adventure, of who had instincts for social
reform, or who liked to deflate pomposity and pretense. Scripps
papers stood in awe of no person or institution. Scripps men worked
in an atmosphere of journalistic and creative freedom.
E.W. Scripps was born in Rushville,
Ill., June 18, 1854. His father, James Mogg Scripps, emigrated to
America from England in 1844. He was a widower with six children,
ranging from three to thirteen, He bought a farm in Illinois and
soon thereafter married his second wife, Julia A. Osborne.
E.W. Scripps was born of
James and Julia. When he was 18, he went to Detroit with $80 in his
pocket and a determination to make his way in the world. He clerked
in a drugstore briefly, then, with his brother, James E. Scripps,
started a newspaper. It was called the Detroit News, and still is.
Associated with Ed and James in this venture were another brother,
George, and a sister, Ellen Browning Scripps.
E.W. Scripps was put to
work in the circulation department, but soon gravitated to the
editorial department. By the time he was ready in 1878 to launch his
first paper, he must have formed some clear and fixed concepts as to
the kind of paper it would be. That newspaper, The Penny Press -
later to become The Cleveland Press - was a paper designed to reach
the greatest possible number of people. It was inexpensive and
popular in appeal. It was simply and clearly written. It was a
medium of popular education.
Scripps lived to be 71,
and had six children. To the very end he left no doubt who was in
charge. On March 12, 1926 his yacht, Ohio, was anchored in Monrovia
Bay, Liberia. His health was poor; he had a hunch this might be his
last voyage. "If I die," he had told his secretary, "bury me at
sea." After dinner Scripps complained of feeling ill, and in 20
minutes was dead.
As he wished, the crew
slid his body into the Atlantic Ocean. They wouldn't have dared not
to.
Roy W. Howard -
The "Howard" In Scripps Howard
Born:Jan. 1, 1883
Died: Nov. 20, 1964
Roy Wilson Howard, who held the company's top
management post for more than 30 years, was born in Ohio in 1883. He
grew up taking care of his widow mother and was graduated from
Manual Training High School. For the next few years, he worked at
Scripps newspapers in Indianapolis, St. Louis and Cincinnati. With
his eyes set on Broadway, in 1906 he convinced management to send
him to New York as a correspondent for Scripps' four Ohio
newspapers. He caught E.W. Scripps' attention in New York and a year
later was made general news manager of Publishers Press. A year
later, when United Press evolved, Howard became its general news
manager; in 1912 he was named president of UP. In 1921, Howard
became chairman of the board and business director of what was then
known as Scripps-McRae. A year later, the concern's name was changed
to Scripps-Howard. Howard retired in 1952, but visited the office
daily until his death in 1964 at age 81. He is remembered for the
high profile he maintained among world leaders; and the development
of United Press, which broke The Associated Press's news monopoly
and made telegraph news available to all publishers.
Roy Wilson Howard was born in Ohio in 1883. His father
died when Roy was a boy, leaving him to support his mother. He did
not have the time or the money for a college education. He had to
hustle.
That's a familiar story
in that era of American life, a perfect setting for the Horatio
Alger theme. But a lot of mediocre men have gone through that mill
and it doesn't explain Roy Howard. His boyhood experiences helped
shape some of his thoughts, habits and outlooks, but whatever he was
originated from some deep, elemental spring of intuition and energy;
it flowed from an inner reservoir of natural endowments.
He had a complex
personality, full of contradictions. He was considerate by nature,
but would call important conferences for the end of the day when his
associates were fatigued; he formed quick and positive opinions, but
often put off making a decision. Roy was realistic yet had an
infinite capacity for rationalization; he was persuasive in argument
but had a soft touch for a salesman. He was skeptical and wary, but
could be taken in by sheer charm; he formed instant likes and
prejudices, but had little capacity for nursing a grudge.
When Roy finished
Manual Training High School in Indianapolis, he went to work for
The Indianapolis News as an $8-a-week reporter. He was raised to
that dignity after a week during which his returns as a
prolific correspondent netted him $35 -- approximately what the city editor
received. He later became sports editor of The Indianapolis Star
but, after a couple of years desiring to broaden, he went to St.
Louis and got a job on the telegraph desk of The Post Dispatch.
Roy had a friend, Ray
Long, who was managing editor of The Cincinnati Post -- then, as now,
of the Scripps group. When Roy was in St. Louis he got a bid from
Long and went to Cincinnati as assistant managing editor of The
Post.
Despite his better job,
he still had Broadway on his mind. In March of 1906, he finally
convinced Scripps' four Ohio newspaper editors to send him to New
York as a correspondent.
In the early summer of
1906, E.W. Scripps bought the Publishers Press, a news-gathering
agency which, in 1907, merged with the Scripps-McRae Association to
form United Press, a privately owned international news service. Roy
was made general news manager of Publishers Press upon its purchase
by Scripps. A year later when United Press evolved, he became the
first general news manager. He became president of the UP in 1912 at
age 29.
Roy understood that it
was impossible for United Press to cover everything completely, so
he urged reporters to specialize. He encouraged a lean, compact
style of news writing, featuring interviews and human interest
stories, which up to that time had been regarded as out of bounds
for press associations.
In 1921 E.W. Scripps
emerged from eight years of retirement to reorganize his newspaper
commonwealth. He persuaded Roy to resign from the United Press and
become chairman of the board and business director of the then
Scripps-McRae newspapers.
On Nov. 3, 1922, the
concern's name was changed from Scripps-McRae to Scripps-Howard.
E.W. Scripps retired and through a power-of-attorney vested his
stock control in his son, Robert P. Scripps, who, in 1925, extended
Roy's authority to include jurisdiction over both editorial and
business departments. Roy relinquished the title as board chairman
to W.W. Hawkins some years later but continued as head of the
concern, as president, until Dec. 31, 1952, when he turned that
title over to his son, Jack R. Howard. He was 69.
Despite his retirement,
he continued to visit the office daily -- often seven days a week,
title or no title -- where he sat was the head of the table, right
up until his death Nov. 20, 1964 at age 81.
As he lay dying of a
heart attack in his New York office, he sternly questioned the
methods of attendants arranging an oxygen mask. Roy Wilson Howard
never took anything for granted. He wanted to make sure they knew
what they were doing.
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