Daniel M. Grissom
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Daniel M. Grissom (1829-1930) was an American journalist of the 19th Century.


Personal life

Grissom, who was born in Daviess County, Kentucky, was the son of Alfred Grissom, a tailor, and Abrilla or Adaline Pittman, 13 years his junior.1850 census
/ref> He studied at Cumberland University, Tennessee, and he became a lawyer."When Lincoln and Douglas Debated," ''The Courier-Journal,'' Louisville, Kentucky, image 77
/ref> He moved to
St. Louis, Missouri St. Louis () is the second-largest city in Missouri, United States. It sits near the confluence of the Mississippi River, Mississippi and the Missouri Rivers. In 2020, the city proper had a population of 301,578, while the Greater St. Louis, ...
, in 1842, when he was 21.Betty Johnson Douglas, "'Front Page Stuff' of the 50s and 60s Recalled by a Veteran Editor," ''The St. Louis Globe-Democrat Magazine,'' March 6, 1927, image 74
/ref> In the 1880 census, Grissom was living in Carondelet Township, adjoining Kirkwood, Missouri, with his wife, Frances R. Grissom. The 1910 census stated he was widowed. In 1930 he was feted with a party to mark his 100th birthday in a Kirkwood retirement home, where he lived for 18 years. He died at the age of 101 on May 17, 1930, and was buried in Kirkwood Cemetery.


Professional life


Editing

Grissom's initial journalistic job, in 1842 or shortly after, was with the '' St. Louis Evening News,'' where he first covered a lecture series at the library. He was soon made editor, a position he held for ten years. An interviewer wrote of him in 1927: "As a boy he had felt the urge to write and the career of a journalist attracted him strongly. . . . Grissom had the somewhat detached, impersonal attitude toward events often found in newspaper men." In September 1861, the first year of the American Civil War, he and Charles G. Ramsey, proprietor of the ''Evening News,'' were arrested and the newspaper was ordered repressed . The two were released and the suppression was lifted when "satisfactory guarantees" were made to the commanding general of Union forces that the newspaper "should not hereafter contain articles of a character calculated to impede the operations of the Government or impair the efficiency of the operations of the army of the West." He continued as editor when the ''St. Louis Union'' bought the ''News'' and the name of the combined newspapers was changed to '' Evening Dispatch.'' Some "five or six years later" he moved to the ''
Missouri Republican The ''Missouri Republican'' was a newspaper founded in 1808 and headquartered in St. Louis, Missouri. Its predecessor was the ''Morning Gazette''. It later changed its name to ''St. Louis Republic''. After supporting the Whig Party, the paper bec ...
,'' where he became assistant editor to William Hyde. In 1863, while editor of the ''Union,'' Grissom was nominated to be state printer of Missouri but was not chosen. The ''Chicago Tribune'' at that time referred to him as a "conservative" and to his successful opponent, a Dr. Curry, editor of the ''State Times,'' as a "radical." St. Louis
city directories A city directory is a listing of residents, streets, businesses, organizations or institutions, giving their location in a city. It may be arranged alphabetically or geographically or in other ways. Antedating telephone directories, they were i ...
listed Grissom as an editor working for the '' Dispatch'' in 1865 and the '' Republican'' in 1878 and 1880. Historian Walter B. Stevens said of him in 1911:"St. Louis, The Fourth City, 1764-1911," page 171]
He was at home in every field of editorial comment. What he wrote was easy to read. The style was virile and straightforward. There was no striving after effect in words.
By 1888, Grissom had retired; he was lauded that year in a speech by former ''Republican'' editor William Hyde, who said that Grissom, then living in Kirkwood, had done more "all-round work than any other man who ever wielded the pen in St. Louis."


Reporting


Lincoln-Douglas

Grissom covered one of the Lincoln–Douglas debates, debates between Abraham Lincoln and Stephen A. Douglas, in Alton, Illinois, in 1858. In 1928, he recalled:
Douglas, styled the "Little Giant,' was a small man scarcely 5 feet 4 inches, with broad shoulders and a stalwart neck. His head was massive and majestic-looking and his voice could deepen into a roar. He was well groomed and prosperous-looking and strode the stage as one at ease. At all times he seemed sure of himself.
Lincoln's clothes hung loosely on his 6-foot-4-inch frame. His small, twinkling gray eyes shone from beneath shaggy brows. . . . Sometimes he seemed all legs and feet and again all hands and neck. He had no stage manners, no studied art. His speech was full of short, homely words. . . . His very loneliness, modest bearing, air of mingled sadness and sincerity excited sympathy and won the hearts of the quiet, plain people.


Gasconade Bridge

As a journalist with the ''St. Louis Evening News,'' Grissom was seated in the last car of the Pacific Railroad train involved in the
Gasconade Bridge train disaster The Gasconade Bridge train disaster was a rail accident in Gasconade, Missouri, on November 1, 1855. The Gasconade bridge collapsed under the locomotive ''O'Sullivan'' while crossing. More than thirty were killed in the first major deadly bridge c ...
of 1855, in which more than thirty people were killed when a bridge collapsed under it. He recalled seventy-two years later:
Suddenly there was an awful crash, a sickening lurch—another—another. We were moving forward jerkily, sickeningly. Horrid sounds came from ahead. We realized in a flash what must have happened—the bridge was gone—we were being pulled into the river by the weight of the cars ahead, which had already crashed over the bank! Then—our car was going, too. The violent motion threw us to the floor. . . .
When a relief train from St. Louis came to our aid it was a very different kind of crowd . . . Hardly a word was spoken as we leaned our heads upon our hands, some uttering groans and low cries of despair caused by their own sufferings or the realization of the loss of friend or relative in the disaster.


Other

Grissom was captain of Company G of the Ninth Regiment of the Enrolled Missouri Militia, which took action against Shelby in September–October 1863, fought at Booneville, Merrill’s Crossing and Dug Ford (near Jonesborough ) and Marshall in October, and was mustered out in November.''History of St. Louis''
/ref> At a large public meeting in Courthouse Square on June 17, 1865, Grissom was appointed, along with
James O. Broadhead James Overton Broadhead (May 29, 1819 – August 7, 1898) was an American lawyer and political figure. He was a member of the House of Representatives and of the Missouri Senate, he was also the first president of the American Bar Association.Ro ...
and Fred M. Kretschmar, to a committee to protest against the forcible removal of three judges from their chambers by armed men upon the order of Governor
Thomas Clement Fletcher Thomas Clement Fletcher (January 21, 1827March 25, 1899) was the 18th Governor of Missouri during the latter stages of the American Civil War and the early part of Reconstruction. He was the first Missouri governor to be born in the state. The ...
. In 1892, Grissom produced a "handsome pamphlet of eighty-four pages" for the Merchants Exchange of St. Louis in which he laid out a proposal to Congress for separating the Mississippi River from all the other inland waterways of the United States when making appropriations for improvements.


Legacy

Grissom's Landing on the
Ohio River The Ohio River is a long river in the United States. It is located at the boundary of the Midwestern and Southern United States, flowing southwesterly from western Pennsylvania to its mouth on the Mississippi River at the southern tip of Illino ...
, ten miles below
Owensboro, Kentucky Owensboro is a home rule-class city in and the county seat of Daviess County, Kentucky, United States. It is the fourth-largest city in the state by population. Owensboro is located on U.S. Route 60 and Interstate 165 about southwest of Lou ...
, was named for him"Daniel Grissom, 97, Recalls His Early Days Here," ''The Messenger,'' Owensboro, Kentucky, May 29, 1927
/ref> or his family.


See also

* William Hyde (1836-1898), Grissom's managing editor on the ''Missouri Republican'' * Radicalism and Reconstruction in Missouri * St. Louis in the American Civil War


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Grissom, Daniel 1829 births 1930 deaths 19th-century American journalists People from Daviess County, Kentucky Cumberland University alumni