Publication information |
Source: Pacific Source type: magazine Document type: editorial Document title: “Yellow Journalism” Author(s): anonymous Date of publication: 19 September 1901 Volume number: 51 Issue number: 38 Pagination: 4-5 |
Citation |
“Yellow Journalism.” Pacific 19 Sept. 1901 v51n38: pp. 4-5. |
Transcription |
full text |
Keywords |
yellow journalism (impact on Czolgosz); Allan McLane Hamilton (public statements); Hearst newspapers; Johann Most (public statements); McKinley assassination (personal response: anarchists); New York Journal; William Randolph Hearst; yellow journalism. |
Named persons |
Leon Czolgosz; Allan McLane Hamilton [first name misspelled below]; Marcus Hanna; William Randolph Hearst; William McKinley; J. Pierpont Morgan; Johann Most [variant first name below]. |
Notes |
Click here to view a New-York Tribune interview with Dr. Allan McLane Hamilton that includes the statement quoted below. |
Document |
Yellow Journalism
Wanton criticism of Presidents is no new thing.
But only in these later years has it led to results so deplorable. Whether insane
or an anarchist, there is unquestionably a connection between the shooting of
William McKinley by Czolgosz and the defamations of the yellow journals. Says
Dr. Allen McLane Hamilton, Professor of Mental Diseases in the medical college
of Cornell University: “No one except a physician who sees much of insanity
or persons whose mental condition is doubted can appreciate the influence of
the present distorted public sense of decency. This is manifested by a lawlessness
which finds expression in some of the public prints and in the deliberations
of societies instituted for the relief of the oppressed. This literature and
these societies are usually a menace to law and order in putting into the heads
of half-cracked people pernicious ideas which they almost immediately act upon.”
Dr. Hamilton says that there have come to his notice lately numerous cases of
disturbed mental states which were due directly to such influences. Only a few
weeks ago a man went to him with a number of newspaper clippings of an incendiary
nature; and, after showing them, announced his intention of killing several
prominent persons, among them being J. Pierpont Morgan and Senator Hanna.
The Chicago Journal, in an editorial on “The Yellow
Press and Anarchy,” says: “If what Hearst’s newspapers have said, printed and
portrayed about President McKinley were true, he was not fit to live, much less
to rule. * * * They could not have made more scandalous,
more bitter or more degrading charges against the greatest scoundrel on earth.”
And John Most, the leader of the anarchists, says to the police as he repudiates
Czolgosz: “You wish to make this man one of us. Why don’t you read the New York
Journal? Look at the caricatures on the last pages, where your President is
portrayed in a way that would make even a bootblack ashamed.”
What wonder, then, that Czolgosz should get it
into his brain to put President McKinley out of the way, after reading the articles
defaming him, either in the Hearst papers or in some other just as disreputable!
It is with extreme sorrow that The Pacific sees the pernicious influence of
such papers. It seems strange that a man of such life-long advantages as W.
R. Hearst should give himself to that which is so generally regarded as one
of the basest uses of talent and wealth. It is with astonishment that we compare
what is said and printed in his papers since McKinley was stricken down with
what was said and portrayed previous to that time. And all without any admission
of previous mistake or injustice. In one of these papers it is said: “To William
McKinley was intrusted [sic] the care of a nation, great, powerful, self-sufficient,
free from dangers and turmoil. His duty was to guide the great machine honestly,
cautiously, according to the will of the people. He did his duty and he died
at his post. * * * His life was complete. The nation
for which he worked he leaves powerful and prosperous. * * *
He knew that in the land where millions had opposed and disagreed with
him politically, not one was free from deep sorrow, not one but felt the national
calamity as a personal loss.”
But as we read there is constantly before the
eyes that printed cartoon in which McKinley is pictured as applauding the trusts
which are represented as riding down, in an automobile, the common people.
In the presence of such journalism The Pacific
can not remain silent. We dare not let it pass unnoticed and unrebuked. The
San Francisco Call and The Bulletin have spoken plainly, but these are daily
rivals of one of Hearst’s papers, and as such their utterances might be discounted
in some circles. The readers of The Pacific will not question our motive nor
discount what we say. The present writer, recognizing the great influence of
the press, devoted himself at the close of his college life twenty years ago
to journalism. We have no less an estimate today of that influence. It molds
thought and life far more than most people are aware; and we tremble for the
welfare of the nation when we think of some [4][5]
of the hands into which it has fallen. We were glad to read in the newspapers
of this city extracts from recent sermons by ministers, denouncing yellow journalism,
but not one named any paper as such, and it is a singular fact that some of
those denunciations were printed in the very paper at which they were hurled.
It would seem that there are publishers whose moral judgments are so conditioned
that they are unaware of the fact that they are issuing such pernicious papers.
Or else, in the hour when the thunder and lightning of wrath is playing, they
seek by the publication of the denunciatory utterances to protect themselves
from its strokes.
Let us hope that in this experience yellow journalism
may receive a lesson which will tend to its profit and purification.