| THE NEW YORK HERALD |
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| Written by AAI Staff | |
| Wednesday, 30 May 2007 | |
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The
The New York Herald was launched in 1835 by James Gordon Bennett, a Scottish immigrant. Bennett originally charged readers 2 cents for the paper, but within a year or so dropped the price to 1 cent # making the Herald one of the notorious "penny -papers" that became popular in American cities in the mid-1800s. As such, the Herald hungrily reported
Politically, the Herald resisted affiliation with any particular party. In 1840, the paper leaned toward the Whigs; in later years, during the Civil War, it took on a tone that was distinctly Democratic and sympathetic to the South. Still, by the standards of the day, the Herald was not particularly partisan.
The Herald was fiercely critical, though, of reform movements, especially abolitionism. It waged an ongoing war against the overtly abolitionist papers, calling them "nigger papers." And throughout the Amistad incident the paper launched repeated attacks against Lewis Tappan and the Africans' other sympathizers. The Herald's coverage of the Amistad dwelt on the Africans' "savagery" and the shocking violence of their revolt. In short, the Herald's take on the Amistad story was virulently racist # and often even more outspoken than that of the Southern press.
For this reason, the Herald makes for some ugly reading, and we are a little uncomfortable putting it on-line, since some material here amounts to hate speech. But it is important to recognize that this kind of thing was circulating in the
Some of the key Herald articles in the "Exploring Amistad" library include:
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| Last Updated ( Tuesday, 10 July 2007 ) |
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