Posts Tagged ‘James McGrath Morris’

The Digital Detective: Tracking Criminals When the Trail Runs Cold (by Stephen Mihm)

Thursday, October 6th, 2011

[The article below by University of Georgia professor Stephen Mihm first appeared in The Readex Report (Sept. 2008). Last month, an op-ed by Mihm headlined "The Biographer's New Best Friend" was published in The New York Times Sunday Review section. In his Times piece, Mihm quotes historians and biographers James McGrath Morris, Joshua Kendall and Graham Hodges to help explain why "Readex's America's Historical Newspapers...has the potential to revolutionize biographical research."]

The Digital Detective: Tracking Criminals When the Trail Runs Cold

By Stephen Mihm, Associate Professor of History, University of Georgia

When I began work on a history of American counterfeiting between the Revolution and the Civil War, I was faced with some peculiar research problems. With a few rare exceptions, counterfeiting during this period was a crime that was not prosecuted by federal authorities. The problem was instead left to state and local law enforcement officials who were often outnumbered and incompetent. This was partly a consequence of the fact that the paper money in circulation originated not with the federal government, but with hundreds of state-chartered banks. But it was also a reflection of the relative weakness of the federal government’s policing.

And therein lay a serious problem, not only for the police of the day, but for the historian who would attempt to reconstruct this kind of criminal activity. Counterfeiting involved vast numbers of players spread out across state and even national lines. This meant that local law enforcement officials often operated in the dark as to the scope and scale of the network of manufacturers, distributors, retailers and passers of bogus bills. Local law enforcement records—what few have survived—often provide but a fleeting snapshot of an individual counterfeiter who typically posted bail and fled, never to be seen again. What, then, is a historian to do, particularly a historian who wants to reconstruct the entire criminal careers of some of these colorful individuals?

When I began research for A Nation of Counterfeiters, I started keeping tabs on the names of criminals who surfaced at multiple times and places in the historical record. But this is like looking for the proverbial needle in a haystack: you could spend many lifetimes reading through newspapers and other sources, trying to track your quarry. The advent of a new generation of digital resources—particularly America’s Historical Newspapers—made life much easier, and netted results that not only surprised me, but would have stunned the detectives and bounty hunters who spent so much time unsuccessfully tracking counterfeiters in the early republic.

Take a man like Seneca Paige. The epitaph of his gravestone notes that he was a “poor man’s friend,” a not-so-subtle reference to the fact that he was the head of a counterfeiting syndicate that straddled the border between Vermont and Canada. Paige was a notoriously slippery individual, someone who constantly escaped from the clutches of the law. That initially made tracking him almost absurdly difficult. I made a few serendipitous finds in records on both sides of the border, but when I ran searches for “Seneca Paige” or “Seneca Page” in millions of pages of America’s Historical Newspapers, some interesting things turned up.

Paige was everywhere. He showed up first in September 1809, where he was busted in Jersey City after trying to pass a counterfeit note.

He wriggled free in that instance, but was again in the news in April 1812, when a thousand dollar reward for his capture had the desired effect, and Paige was escorted to Baltimore to face charges.

The same key word searches revealed that after being indicted and committed to jail in Baltimore, he made his escape—only to be captured again a year later in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania.

Judging from the news reports, the local authorities weren’t aware that Paige had already escaped from other jails: how could they be? Local law enforcement officials didn’t correspond with one another on a regular basis, and they didn’t have access to every newspaper in the Union. If they had, they might not have been surprised at what happened next: Paige escaped from prison once more, “without breaking any locks or bolts,” as the Commercial Advertiser reported in August 1816.

Paige chose not to push his luck at this point: he apparently relocated to Canada, where he quickly assumed leadership of the so-called “Canada Counterfeiting Company.” And yet news of Paige’s movements continued to drift south of the border, sometimes in court papers, but just as often in the pages of newspapers.

In this particular case, finding Paige required expanding the search, dropping his first name and simply running searches for articles containing both “Paige” or “Page” and “counterfeiter.” When I did this, I found a curious mention of him in a Baltimore newspaper from 1826.

It seems that a man was caught in New Haven with a shipment of counterfeit money concealed in a mahogany dressing case. When examined, he confessed that he had received the bills and the case from “a Mr. Page, in Dunham, Canada.” Dunham was the town where most counterfeit money was manufactured in the 1820s. Again, a serendipitous find, but one that would have been impossible before the advent of digital resources.

America’s Historical Newspapers and other digital resources are extraordinarily powerful tools, enabling historians to reconstruct the movements of fugitives with startling precision. Indeed, with a few keystrokes, a historian working in the 21st century can often reconstruct the movements and careers of obscure criminals two centuries ago with comparable—if not greater—accuracy than the constables and cops who fruitlessly chased them in their own time.

More about the author

Stephen Mihm is the author, with Nouriel Roubini, of Crisis Economics: A Crash Course in the Future of Finance (Penguin Press, 2010) and A Nation of Counterfeiters: Capitalists, Con Men, and the Making of the United States (Harvard University Press, 2007). He is also the co-editor, with Katherine Ott and David Serlin, of Artificial Parts, Practical Lives: Modern Histories of Prosthetics (NYU, 2002).

Be Sociable, Share!

Best of the Readex Blog: A 2010 Sampler

Tuesday, December 28th, 2010

In 2010 our 20 bloggers combined for more than 70 posts on a wide-range of topics related to the use of digital resources for historical research. Did you miss any of these during the past year? 

The United Nations as Teacher by Ed Beckwith

A Future That Never Arrived by Bruce Coggeshall

HMS Titanic and Deepwater Horizon: Lessons of Limited Liability Lost to History by Seamus Dunphy

If At First You Do Not Succeed: Walt Disney Introduces Mickey Mouse (May 15, 1928) by Kathie Flood

MARC Records for the U.S. Congressional Serial Set and American State Papers by Carol Forsythe

The Short-Lived Republic of West Florida: A Tale of Deception and Intrigue by Benjamin Hunt

The Curious Case of Sherlock Gregory: Social Justice Advocate or Proto-Know Nothing? by August A. Imholtz, Jr.

Acclaimed biographer James McGrath Morris — featured speaker at recent Readex event — participating in National Book Festival by Erin Luckett

The More Things Change: Selected U.S. Congressional Serial Set Documents, 1983 by Georg Mauerhoff

The Police in Revolt? The Jails Open? Four Views of Mexico on November 25th, 1911 by Remmel Nunn

Newspapers: “the rough draft of history” by Tony Pettinato

Indian Opinion: A Key Title in World Newspaper Archive: Africa by Tim Russell

The Personal and Poignant Stories of Civil War Soldiers: Uncovering the Claims of Veterans and Their Survivors in Government Publications by William Stearns

Washington Crosses the Delaware River: A Unique Christmas Tradition by Emily Stringham

“She Wields a Mighty Dashing Pen”: Journalist Jane Cunningham Croly by Leslie Tschaikowsky

Boston Honors its First African American Police Officer by Jim Walsh

How Uncle Wiggily Taught Me to Read by Lynn Way

Or Searching for Ancient Dead in the Modern Age, a guest post by SJ Wolfe, senior cataloguer at the American Antiquarian Society and independent mummyologist.

Thank you to all of our 2010 contributors! Each of our staff writers now has a brief biographical sketch, which can be found by clicking on the writers’ name in this post or in each of their own posts.

Don’t miss their forthcoming posts in 2011; subscribe to our RSS feed

Do you know someone else who should contribute to the Readex Blog? Would you like to recommend a specific topic for 2011? We look forward to your comments!

Be Sociable, Share!

A Light on Past Lives: The Illuminating Effects of Electronic Resources on Biographical Research

Monday, December 13th, 2010

[This post by James McGrath Morris, author of Pulitzer: A Life in Politics, Print, and Power (HarperCollins, 2010), first appeared in the November 2010 issue of The Readex Report.]

The most revolutionary change in biography writing is the advent of digitized newspapers. Unlike microfilm, which simply reproduced newspapers on film, these new electronic records provide what we biographers and historians have long dreamed for—a means of finding a needle in the haystack.

Let me explain. For years folks like me have been using the great newspaper collections in our nation’s libraries, archives, and other repositories. The contemporaneous accounts are like gold. But as with the pursuit of this precious metal, we have not been able to mine all of it. In fact, using our previously inadequate research tools, many of the best veins have remained untapped.

Essentially our choice was to read every page of a newspaper’s run or use dates to guide our research. So, for instance, if I wanted to discover what was said about a particular artist, I might have looked at issues of a newspaper published around the opening date of an exhibit. But if an art critic wrote a review several weeks later, the likelihood was that I would miss it.

Lacking dates, I could alternatively turn to a newspaper index such as the one produced by the venerable New York Times. However, unbeknownst to many researchers, this index is not complete. In keeping with the newspaper’s motto “All the News Fit to Print,” its indexers only included those items they judged fit to be indexed. A lot never earned a reference. (more…)

Be Sociable, Share!

Videos: Presentations on Using Digital Resources for Historical Research

Thursday, December 9th, 2010

Readex hosted a special breakfast event focusing on the use of digital resources for historical research at the American Library Association (ALA) annual conference on Sunday, June 27 in Washington, D.C.

Our speakers were  James McGrath Morris, author of the acclaimed new biography Pulitzer: A Life in Politics, Print, and Power (2010), and Steven Daniel, internationally known authority on American government documents. (more…)

Be Sociable, Share!

Newest Issue of The Readex Report Now Available: November 2010

Tuesday, November 23rd, 2010

In this issue: how digitized newspapers shine a brilliant light on past lives; the profound impact of religion on African-American identity; the Boston Tea Party as perceived by both Colonialists and those loyal to the Crown; and the humor, hype and horror behind the mysterious minced pie. (more…)

Be Sociable, Share!

Acclaimed biographer James McGrath Morris — featured speaker at recent Readex event — participating in National Book Festival

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

We at Readex are excited to learn that the key speaker at our 2010 ALA breakfast, James McGrath Morris, will be participating in the National Book Festival next month in Washington, D.C. As in years past, you can vote for your favorite author via the festival website.

Book-lovers may select from among the roughly 500 authors who have appeared at the nine previous National Book Festivals, or will appear at this year’s festival, using an alphabetical listing or voting from the page that includes each author’s biography and photograph. The top 10 vote-getters are displayed on the voting page, with daily updates.

Morris, author of Pulitzer: A Life in Politics, Print and Power, is certainly one of our favorites. We hope he is one of yours as well!

Please go to this Library of Congress webpage and vote today. (You’ll find James McGrath Morris between Edmund Morris and Sylvia Jukes Morris.)

Be Sociable, Share!

Join Readex to Hear James McGrath Morris and Steven Daniel at the 2010 American Library Association Annual Conference

Friday, April 23rd, 2010

Will you be attending the American Library Association conference this summer?  If so, make a date with Readex to attend a special breakfast event focusing on the use of digital resources for historical research.

Photo by Michael Mudd

Featured speakers will include James McGrath Morris, author of the acclaimed new biography Pulitzer: A Life in Politics, Print, and Power (2010), and Steven Daniel, internationally known authority on American government documents.

Acclaimed biographer Morris will present A Light on Past Lives: The Illuminating Effects of Electronic Resources on Biographical Research, and celebrated speaker Daniel will offer Dredges, Gunboats, and Mosquitoes: The U.S. Congressional Serial Set and the Building of the Panama Canal.
 
To be held on Sunday, June 27 from 8 a.m. to 10 a.m., this event will take place at the Grand Hyatt Washington (ALA headquarters hotel ) in the Independence D/E Room. A complimentary breakfast will be offered, and time will be devoted to your comments and questions. (more…)
Be Sociable, Share!

Electronic Resources that Help Illuminate Past Lives

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

Increasingly, a writer attempting to produce the definitive biography of a 19th or 20th-century American will find that essential tools include searchable databases of government documents and newspapers.

T.J. Stiles, author of The First Tycoon: The Epic Life of Cornelius Vanderbilt (2009, Alfred A. Knopf), which recently won the National Book Award, was able to utilize the digital edition of the U.S. Congressional Serial Set to uncover vindicating facts about the patriotism of his often maligned subject. In his article “Commodore Vanderbilt: Patriot or War Profiteer?,” Stiles writes:

I was ready to indict and convict Vanderbilt of war profiteering, if that’s where the evidence led me. Instead, it convinced me that the Commodore deserved his gold medal. Vanderbilt has often been treated with cynicism by historians, who are ready to believe the worst of a staggeringly rich, secretive, and combative man. Certainly I did not set out to rehabilitate his reputation. But I couldn’t ignore the evidence—evidence provided in breathtaking abundance by Congress in its Serial Set, now more accessible than ever thanks to digitization.

William Fox, Founder of 20th Century Fox

(more…)

Be Sociable, Share!