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The crusading American journalist Ida Minerva Tarbell (1857-1944) is known as the muckraker who cracked the oil trust. She was also an outstanding biographer of Abraham Lincoln.
Ida Tarbell was born on Nov. 5, 1857, in Erie County, Pa., the daughter of a small oilman driven to the wall by the Rockefeller oil monopoly. Tarbell, unlike many famous people, spent an unusually well-adjusted childhood and had a healthy appreciation of her parents. She wrote of the log house in which she was born and of the pleasant memories it gave her. She felt loved and was perhaps even smug about it.
In Titusville High School, Tarbell led her class and decided never to marry. She took a bachelor of arts degree at Allegheny College in 1880. In 1882 she became a staff member of the Chautauquan newspaper and eventually became its managing editor. Driven by desire for more education, she went to Paris and studied at the Sorbonne and the University of Paris from 1891 to 1894, sustaining herself by writing magazine articles. She was with McClure's Magazine from 1894 to 1896, when she became associate editor of the American Magazine; she remained in that post until 1915.
Tarbell's fame for biography rests mainly on her two-volume Life of Abraham Lincoln (1900). However, in Paris she also did studies of Madame de Staël (1894), Napoleon Bonaparte (1895), Madame Roland (1896), Judge Elbert H. Gary (1925), and an "ideal businessman, " Owen D. Young (1932). Eight of her books relate to Lincoln. Nevertheless, when she shifted to Lincolniana, her heart fell, and she told herself, "If you once get into American history …, that will finish France." It did mean the end of great attention to her other projects, her desire to determine the nature of revolutions, and any important contribution to women's rights.
Tarbell is particularly well known for her two-volume History of the Standard Oil Company (1904), first issued as a 19-installment series in McClure's. Despite her reputation as a trustbuster, she came to the defense of American business in her later years. Her book on Young, plus other writings at the time, were expressions of hope and faith in a new kind of businessman. She supported "socialized democracy" and was opposed to left-flank movements, which she said would make people "mere cogs in a machine."
Tarbell died of pneumonia in Bridgeport, Conn., on Jan. 6, 1944. The New York Times noted editorially that "her mind and personality never took age, they simply matured in richness and wisdom."
Further Reading
Tarbell's autobiography, All in the Day's Work (1939), is easily the most informative and helpful work relating to her. Harold S. Wilson, McClure's Magazine and the Muckrakers (1970), has extensive biographical and background material on her life and career. See also Cornelius C. Regier, The Era of the Muckrakers (1932), and David Mark Chalmers, The Social and Political Ideas of the Muckrakers (1964).
Bibliography
See her autobiography, All in the Day's Work (1939).
| 1900 | Life of Abraham Lincoln. Tarbell's popular biography remained the standard work until 1947, when the Lincoln papers were made available to scholars. |
| 1900 | The Shubert Brothers--Sam S. (c. 1876-1905), Lee (1873-1953), and Jacob J. (1878-1963)--begin producing plays and acquiring theaters in New York, challenging the monopoly of the Theatrical Syndicate. Their first production is The Brixton Burglary (1901), a failure. But their second, the musical A Chinese Honeymoon (1902), succeeds. By 1916 they broke the syndicate's hold and became the most powerful theater managers and producers in America, operating more than a hundred theaters and controlling the bookings for a thousand others. |
| 1904 | The History of the Standard Oil Company. Personally motivated by her conviction that her father had been ruined by the company, Tarbell documents a case against Standard Oil and its founder, John D. Rockefeller, in one of the great achievements of the muckraking era. Commenting on the connection between Tarbell's book and the 1911 Supreme Court decision to break up the company, historian Charles D. Hazen would observe that "Miss Tarbell is the only historian I have ever heard of whose findings were corroborated by the Supreme Court of the United States." |
| Ida M. Tarbell | |
|---|---|
Portrait taken in 1904 |
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| Born | Ida Minerva Tarbell 5 November 1857 Hatch Hollow, Amity Township, Erie County, Pennsylvania, United States |
| Died | 6 January 1944 (aged 86) Bridgeport, Connecticut, United States |
| Occupation | Teacher, writer and journalist |
| Notable work(s) | The History of the Standard Oil Company |
Ida Minerva Tarbell (November 5, 1857 – January 6, 1944) was an American teacher, author and journalist. She was known as one of the leading "muckrakers" of the progressive era, work known in modern times as "investigative journalism". She wrote many notable magazine series and biographies. She is best known for her 1904 book The History of the Standard Oil Company, which was listed as No. 5 in a 1999 list by New York University of the top 100 works of 20th-century American journalism.[1] She became the first woman to take on Standard Oil. Her direct forerunner was Henry Demarest Lloyd. She began her work on The Standard after her editors at McClure's Magazine called for a story on one of the trusts.
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Tarbell was born in the village of Hatch Hollow in Amity Township, Erie County, Pennsylvania on November 5, 1857.[2] She was born in a log cabin that was the home of her maternal grandfather, Walter Raleigh McCullough, a Scots-Irish pioneer.[3] She grew up in the western region of the state, where new oil fields were developed in the 1860s. She was the daughter of Esther Ann (née McCullough) and Franklin Summer Tarbell, a teacher and a joiner by trade,[3] who used his trade to build wooden oil storage tanks.
In 1860 Ida's father moved the family to Titusville, Pennsylvania. He built a house which was her mother's first home of her own.[3] He later became an oil producer and refiner in Venango County. Her father's business, along with those of many other small businessmen, was adversely affected by the South Improvement Company scheme (circa 1872) between the railroads and larger oil interests. Later, Tarbell would vividly recall this situation in her work, as she accused the leaders of the Standard Oil Company of using unfair tactics to put her father and many small oil companies out of business.[2]
Tarbell graduated at the head of her high school class in Titusville and went on to study at Allegheny College in 1876. She majored in biology.
After graduating from college, Tarbell began her career as a teacher at Poland Union Seminary in Poland, Ohio. She taught two classes each of four languages, geology, botany, geometry and trigonometry. After two years, she realized teaching was too much for her and that she enjoyed writing more.
Tarbell returned to Pennsylvania, where she met Theodore L. Flood, editor of The Chautauquan, a teaching supplement for home study courses at Chautauqua, New York. She was quick to accept Flood's offer to write for the publication; as she said, “I was glad to be useful, for I had grown up with what was called the Chautauqua movement.” In 1886 she became managing editor. Her duties included proofreading, answering reader questions, provide proper pronunciation of certain words, translation of foreign phrases, identifying characters and defining words. “Doing this job I began to think about facts and reading proofs. It was an exacting job which never ceases to worry me. What if the accent was in the wrong place? What if I brought somebody into the world in the wrong year?” [4]
In 1890 Tarbell moved to Paris to do post-graduate work and write a biography of Madame Roland, the leader of an influential salon during the French Revolution. While in France, she wrote articles for various magazines, catching the eye of publisher Samuel McClure. He offered her the position as editor for the magazine. While working for McClure's Magazine, Tarbell wrote a popular series on Napoleon Bonaparte.
Her 20-part [5] series on Abraham Lincoln doubled the magazine's circulation, and was published in a book, giving her a national reputation as a major writer and the leading authority on the slain president. Her research in the backwoods of Kentucky and Illinois uncovered the true story of Lincoln's childhood and youth. She vividly chronicled his rise to the presidency.
In 1900 Tarbell began to research the Standard Oil trust with the help of assistant, John Siddall.[6] Tarbell began her interviews with Henry H. Rogers. Rogers had begun his career during the American Civil War in western Pennsylvania oil regions where Tarbell had grown up. In 1902 she conducted detailed interviews with the Standard Oil magnate.
Rogers, wily and normally guarded in matters related to business and finance, may have been under the impression her work was to be complimentary. He was apparently unusually forthcoming. However, Tarbell's interviews with Rogers formed the basis for her negative exposé of the business practices of industrialist John D. Rockefeller and the massive Standard Oil organization. Her investigative journalism series first appeared in a 1903 issue of McClure's Magazine alongside articles by Lincoln Steffens and Ray Stannard Baker that ushered in the era of muckraking journalism. The series was later published as a book, The History of the Standard Oil Company in 1904.
"Tarbell's biggest obstacle, however, was neither her gender nor Rockefeller's opposition. Rather, her biggest obstacle was the craft of journalism. She proposed to investigate Standard Oil and Rockefeller by using documents - hundreds of thousands of pages scattered throughout the nation - then fleshing out her findings through well-informed interviews with the company's current and former executives, competitors, government regulators, antitrust lawyers, and academic experts."[7]
"And then, in an inspirational tale for journalists, Ida Tarbell went to work. Her History of the Standard Oil Company spotlighted Rockefeller's practices and mobilized the public. Readers nationwide awaited each chapter of the story, serialized in 19 installments by McClure's between 1902 and 1904." [8]
Tarbell's look into the oil industry is known to have reinvented investigative reporting.[7] Her stories on Standard Oil began in the November 1902 issue of McClure's and lasted for nineteen issues. She was meticulous in detailing Rockefeller's early interest in oil and how the industry began. After the series was over, she wrote a profile of Rockefeller, perhaps the first CEO profile ever, though she never met, or even talked to Rockefeller.
Tarbell developed investigative reporting tactics, digging into public documents across the country. Separately, these documents provided individual instances of Standard Oil's strong-arm tactics against rivals, railroad companies and others that got in its way. Organized by Tarbell into a cogent history, they became a damning portrayal of big business. Indeed, a subhead on the cover of Weinberg's book encapsulates it this way: "How a female investigative journalist brought down the world's greatest tycoon and broke up the Standard Oil monopoly." [9]
Tarbell's reporting and writing of Standard Oil stood above everything else for two reasons. It was the first corporate coverage of its kind, and it attacked the business operations of Rockefeller, the best-known CEO in the country at the time. That a prominent person in American society could lead a company that used such unsavory operating tactics was eye-opening.[9]
Tarbell disliked the muckracker label, and wrote an article, "Muckraker or Historian," in which she justified her efforts for exposing the oil trust. She referred to
"this classification of muckraker, which I did not like. All the radical element, and I numbered many friends among them, were begging me to join their movements. I soon found that most of them wanted attacks. They had little interest in balanced findings. Now I was convinced that in the long run the public they were trying to stir would weary of vituperation, that if you were to secure permanent results the mind must be convinced."
Tarbell died of pneumonia at Bridgeport Hospital in Bridgeport, Connecticut on January 6, 1944, after being in the hospital since December 1943. She was 86.[10]
Imagination is the only key to the future. Without it none exists — with it all things are possible.[13]
Tarbell, Ida M. "All in the Day's Work. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press Tarbell, Ida M., "Peacemakers Blessed And Otherwise" The Macmillan Company,1922 Tarbell,Ida M., "The Business of Being a Woman", The Macmillan Company, 1921 Tarbell, Ida M., "He Knew Lincoln" Doubleday, Page & Company, 1909 Tarbell, Ida M., "The History of the Standard Oil Co."
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