Is the journalists' traditional sign-off “30” – also the number of pieces in some
versions of the game, or the number of minutes in some matches - an added clue to
Brogan’s checkers fixation in Berton Braley’s 1915 poem “The Dead Reporter”. Braley
had also worked in Butte as a reporter, and may well have gotten to know
Brogan. Brogan certainly seems the sort of colourful character who would have interested Braley.
I came across Braley’s “The Dead Reporter” - published in his
collection Songs of the Workaday World - after being alerted by an
ex-Irish Press colleague to an updated, PC-ed version of another of Braley’s poems,
“Type Was Made To Read”. Braley wrote this for the March 1915 edition of the Linotype
Bulletin. As the subject matter is close to my heart, I couldn’t resist
adding a fifth stanza to the verse, one referring to the type produced by
typewriters. After all, Braley did come from near the home of the typewriter.
Braley was born in Madison, Wisconsin, on January 29, 1882. He
was published for the first time at age 11, a fairytale called “Why The Grass
Is Green” in The American Youth. In 1905 he graduated from the
University of Wisconsin and began work as a reporter at The Butte Daily
Inter-Mountain (predecessor of the Butte Daily Post). The next year
Braley switched to The Butte Evening News and later worked for the Daily
Gazette. In 1909 he moved to New York and worked for Life magazine
and the New York Evening Mail. He was at one time an associate editor of Puck
magazine and sold poems to the Saturday Evening Post. Braley joined the Newspaper
Enterprise Association in 1911 and the next year started writing for
McGraw-Hill magazines and for United Press. From 1915-16 Braley was a special
correspondent in northern Europe for Collier's and from 1918-1919 as a
special correspondent in England, France and Germany. In 1922 he travelled
through the Orient and in 1927 was a correspondent in London. He died of cancer
in St Petersburg, Pinellas County, Florida, on January 23, 1966, aged 83.
-30-
ReplyDeleteis what a reporter types (or used to type) at the end of his story, to signify the end.
I rather like these ditties!
ReplyDeleteJust one little note: interesting evidence here that "mill" referred to a typewriter in general back then, not just an all-caps telegrapher's machine.