Walter B. Stevens

Walter B. Stevens (1848-1939) was a journalist and secretary and publicity director of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition Company and the author of books on the history of Missouri.

Walter Barlow Stevens (1921)

Personal life

Stevens was born to A.A. Stevens and Mary Bristol Stevens on July 25, 1848, in Meriden, Connecticut, and spent his early life in Illinois. He had five siblings.[1][2]

He graduated with honors from the University of Michigan in 1870 and earned a master's degree there in 1873.[1]

After retirement, he lived on a farm in Kansas, where he raised livestock and continued his writing. He moved to Georgetown, South Carolina in 1926.[3]

He died at the age of 91 in Georgetown on August 28, 1939, and was buried in Georgetown Cemetery, South Carolina. He was survived by his wife and brothers M.P. Stevens of Los Angeles and E.A. Stevens of New York.[1][3]

Professional life

Journalism

Stevens began work as a reporter for the St. Louis Times in 1870[1] and by 1877 was its chief editor.[4] He worked for the St. Louis Globe-Democrat in 1875.[5] He was city editor of the Times in July 1878 when he was overcome by a heatstroke during exceedingly hot weather.[6] He was still working for the Times when it went out of business in 1880.[7]

He moved to the St. Louis Globe-Democrat in 1881, becoming city editor and leaving that position in 1883. He was then made correspondent in Washington, D.C., and the Globe sent him on assignment through Missouri, Canada, Mexico, Cuba, Jamaica, and Panama; his articles, signed W.B.S., brought him recognition as a writer.[1][8][9][10]

In May 1888, Stevens was a witness for six hours during the Lancaster v. Glover libel trial in Washington concerning events he took part in when on assignment there.[11] In 1891, he was called as a witness to a House of Representatives hearing concerning an investigation of speculation during proposed silver legislation.[12]

Stevens became one of the editors and proprietors of The Southport (North Carolina) Leader in 1894[13] and continued working for the Globe. [14]

Other work

Stevens left journalism in 1901 to become secretary and publicity director of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition Company.[1][15]

Memberships

Stevens was one of the organizers of St. Louis's Veiled Prophet Ball and Parade in 1878.[16] He was elected president of the Washington Gridiron Club in December 1894.[17]

He was a member of the St. Louis Burns Club, secretary of the St. Louis City Plan Commission from 1912 to 1916 and executive secretary of the Fourth American Peace Conference in St. Louis in 1913. He was president of the State Historical Society of Missouri from 1916 to 1925.[1]

References

  1. Floyd C. Shoemaker, "Walter B. Stevens, Early-Day Reporter, Historian," The Tri-County News, King City, Missouri, December 15, 1950, image 4
  2. "Doctor Stevens Dies at Peoria," The (St. Louis) Republic, July 17, 1901, image 2
  3. "Walter B. Stevens Dies in South at 91," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, August 28, 1939, image 17]
  4. "Sale of the St. Louis Times," Detroit Free Press, May 19, 1877, image 1
  5. "The Boogher Libel Suit," St. Louis Globe-Democrat, November 10, 1877, image 8
  6. "St. Louis: The Situation Yesterday," The Inter Ocean, Chicago, July 19, 1878, image 1
  7. "Col. Cundiff's Paper," St. Joseph (Missouri) Gazette, December 14, 1880, image 3
  8. "City Personals," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, July 17, 1883, image 3
  9. No headline, St. Joseph (Missouri) Gazette-Herald, February 15, 1884, image 4, column 1
  10. "Literary Aliases," The Macon (Missouri) Republican, February 3, 1887, image 4
  11. "The Civil Courts: Lancaster vs. Glover," St. Louis Daily Globe-Democrat, May 23, 1888, image 12
  12. "Washington: Senator Quay's Contemplated Designs Foiled by Timely Exposure," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, January 18, 1891, image 2
  13. Editorial staff box, column 1, and no headline, cited to the Wilmington Messenger, The Southport (North Carolina) Leader, March 15, 1894, image 2
  14. "A Grave Offense," Macon Times, November 23, 1894, image 1
  15. No headline, The Printer, Wichita, Kansas, May 1, 1901, image 1,column 3
  16. Susan Nance, "The Veiled Prophet's Oriental Tale: St. Louis's Famous Festivals in Context," Missouri Historical Review, 103 (2009)
  17. "Gridiron Club Officers," St. Louis Globe-Democrat, December 11, 1894, image 6

Other reading

  • Stevens as a speaker at University of Michigan graduation, 1870. "Michigan: The University," Detroit Free Press, June 30, 1870, image 1
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