Displays of American athletes with the flag are great when heartfelt, but can be outright wrong.
Find resources for planning your wedding and local bridal shops and services. mvbride.com.
Show everyone how much you love your pet — or how they're driving you nuts. 937pets.com.
Exchange ideas for managing kids, homelife, relationships and work. 937moms.com.
Get your own free photo page and see photos from other Dayton-area residents. ohsnap.daytondailynews.com.
ThinkTV provides a wide variety of programming that informs, inspires and delights audiences of all ages. thinktv.org.
Are you a UD sports fan? Whether you like basketball, volleyball, soccer, men's or women's teams — Doesn't matter — this site is for you. udpride.com.
He was a three-term governor of Ohio and the 1920 Democratic nominee for president (with a young Franklin D. Roosevelt as his running mate), but in Dayton Gov. Cox is best remembered as publisher of the Dayton Daily News. This essay was published on the newspaper's 100th anniversary in 1998.
In August 1898, young James Cox bet his wad on a losing horse - the
Dayton Evening News. At its best, fish wrap. At its worst, a money pit for
banker and News owner Charles H. Simms - who, with his paper up for sale, must
have been thrilled by the appearance at his door of a wide-eyed, would-be
newspaper tycoon with dreams of becoming another Joseph Pulitzer.
For his foundering paper - with its meager staff, rickety equipment and
equally rickety finances - Simms wanted $26,000. He had no takers until Cox
came along.
Cox was 28, too young to be running a newspaper and lacking the capital to
meet Simms' asking price. So Paul Sorg, a recently retired Middletown
congressman and Cox's former boss, put $6,000 into Cox's pocket and lined up
local investors to buy stock in the new venture.
Simms sealed the deal with Cox on Aug. 15, 1898. Like most publishers who
bought papers in the burgeoning era of muckrakers, Cox changed his new
acquisition's name. His Dayton Daily News debuted unceremoniously a week
later, on Aug. 22.
The competing Dayton Journal hit the streets with a prediction of Cox's
demise: `The Evening News has been sold and will hereafter be a Democratic
paper. Democratic papers have never paid in Dayton and never will. Four of
them have failed.'
But the young publisher was undaunted. He had a newspaper of his own.
Before he was 20, printer's ink had moved into his blood. A schoolteacher
during the week, Cox was a newsboy on Saturdays, delivering the entire
circulation of his brother-in-law's Middletown Weekly Signal. In 1892, the
Cincinnati Enquirer hired him as a copy reader on the telegraph desk. Before
long, he was out on the streets, chasing spot news and learning all he could
about the city.
Cox was a shrewd and enterprising reporter. When a train wrecked near
Middletown early in his Enquirer career, he ran first to the local telegraph
station and asked the operator to send the telephone directory over the wire
to the Enquirer newsroom, thus tying up the first-come, first-served wire and
preventing other reporters from filing their stories first. In the meantime,
Cox raced back to the wreck, got the story, then returned to the telegraph
station to file his own piece. It was one of many scoops.
Before long, his relentlessness got him in trouble at the Enquirer. A
railroad magnate, displeased with Cox's reporting of his business deals,
convinced Cox's editor to get rid of the young man. Outraged but obligated to
support his wife, pregnant with their first child, Cox jumped at the chance in
1894 to become an aide to Middletown Congressman Paul Sorg, who was heading to
Washington, D.C. Cox spent three eye-opening years in the capital, returning
to Ohio in 1897 with a fire in his belly for the newspaper business.
`The most fortunate circumstance in my life was the selection of Dayton in
which to ... operate a newspaper of my own,' Cox wrote later.
A fan of newspaper icon Joseph Pulitzer, Cox knew he had to change
virtually every aspect of the News to birth a newspaper that was truly
metropolitan with great mass appeal, and not a mere political-party sheet.
So change everything is what he did.
Women? Cox paid attention to their interests, snagging even more female
readers after he hired Dayton's first woman's page editor for his new society
section.
Stock market quotes? Cox made them timely - and thus more sought-after by
readers. Later, he expanded to a full market page, with stock-exchange, grain
and livestock tables.
A part-time Associated Press wire service? Cox bought full-time double AP
wire service in 1901 so the News could have more national, international and
sports news than its competitors.
Art? Illustrations were O.K., but Cox knew photographs would fascinate, and
got them in print. The News' first photographs were produced from chalk
plates.
He also ran book serializations and inserted McClure's Saturday Magazine
supplement. Readers in outlying communities were drawn to Cox's suburban
columns, which became a regular feature.
Seasonal advertisements out of season? Cox banned them, then changed the
rules. One of his first deals was with Dayton's Rike-Kumler Co.: If Rike's ran
half-page ads for 90 days, prepared by a full-time ad man, and they brought
results, Rike's would pay the newspaper at regular rates. If Rike's didn't get
worthwhile results, Cox bargained, the ads would be free. Rike's bought Cox's
plan, watched in amazement as fresh advertising generated business and soon
became one of the News' largest advertisers.
Cox reached out beyond Montgomery County. A year after buying the News,
Cox was distributing it in Xenia, Piqua and Greenville. He fought a bigger
circulation battle to the south, as he slowly lured Dayton readers away from
the Cincinnati papers.
Knowing that technology would get him everywhere faster, Cox bought a
triple-deck, gasoline-powered press, nudged deadlines back two hours and still
got fresher news on the streets faster than the competition. By 1900, the News
had become the leading paper in Dayton, and Cox had made enough money to buy
out his investors of 1898.
He was, at last and unquestionably, the boss.
Hell-bent on boosting circulation, Cox continued making changes in the News
at a frenzied pace. And then came the crusades.
When he discovered that Dr. Joseph E. Lowes, a Republican Party boss who
dominated Dayton politics, was involved in finagling some government deals
that profited his own company, Cox publicized Lowes' practices. In the
process, Cox portrayed himself as a crusader for the people; the News he
christened as "the people's paper."
The Cox-created scuttlebutt made Daytonians take note. Later, Cox admitted
culpability in the libel suits Lowes filed against him, but the $1 judgment
against him was ironic in the face of what he and his paper had gained: more
readers.
"There were stirring times," Cox wrote in 1948, reflecting on the News'
first 50 years. "Publishers without backbone have wilted before their
vociferous fronts. I would be less than frank if I did not say that I enjoyed
these experiences, because every one of them through their accruing results
told us that regard for the general welfare, rather than for selfish
interests, paid handsome rewards."
In 1907 Cox went head-to-head with John H. Patterson. Cox never worried
about making enemies, even if that enemy happened to be the powerful founder
and president of Dayton's National Cash Register Co.
Patterson, who later faced federal indictment for antitrust violations, had
just learned that only bribery would get him a new railway spur for NCR.
Enraged, Dayton's leading businessman called a meeting of 1,000 civic leaders,
lost his temper, complained about the corrupt element in the city and said he
was moving NCR out of Dayton.
Cox couldn't resist Patterson's taunt. So he ran an ad poking fun at
Patterson and his famous meeting.
Daytonians, worried about the possible move, were appalled at the News'
stance. When an NCR worker died after being thrown from a horse during a
training session mandated by Charles Palmer, Patterson's personal trainer, Cox
took up where he'd left off, accusing Patterson of being under Palmer's spell.
Patterson spent so much time battling Cox in court that he closed down NCR
for a short time while he pursued his quarry. Cox's attorney, in the meantime,
was preparing for the trial. After being questioned by this attorney just days
before the trial would have begun, Patterson gave up, dropped his lawsuits and
paid Cox's legal expenses. It's unclear just what they discussed.
"I had a great liking for Dayton and was outraged by the unwarranted attack
upon it and its citizens," Cox wrote later. "I could not dismiss the
conviction that it was the duty of our newspaper to stand by the community
regardless of consequences."
He was elected to Congress in 1908. He was elected Ohio's governor in 1912
and 1914. After losing the 1916 gubernatorial election, he won the governor's
seat again in 1918, Ohio's first three-time governor. Much of his progressive
legislation became law, including school, tax and prison reforms as well as a
landmark workmen's compensation bill.
Cox reached the pinnacle of his political career in 1920, when he won the
Democratic nomination for president. His Dayton Daily News staff sent him a
huge bouquet to congratulate the man they had routinely called "the Governor"
since 1912.
As a politician, Cox participated in many major historical events, meeting
many of the diplomats, leaders and statesmen of the day: people like Woodrow
Wilson, Harry S. Truman and Franklin Delano Roosevelt - Cox's 1920 vice
presidential running mate, who became president in 1933, working from the
springboard into national politics he'd gained from campaigning with Cox.
But first and foremost, Cox was a newspaperman; when he lost the
presidential election in 1920 (to another Ohio newspaperman, Marion Star
publisher Warren G. Harding, of the G.O.P), he was neither desperate nor
despondent. "I had this great advantage," Cox wrote later. "I was still in
public life. I had my newspapers."
Cox never again ran for public office, instead plunging back into the
newspaper business. Back in Dayton, he added an annex to the original Daily
News building in 1922 to house new presses, editorial rooms and offices. In
1956, a six-story building was attached to the original 1910 office. Here Cox
housed the Dayton Daily News and The Journal Herald, which he created in
1949 after having bought The Journal and The Herald the year before.
But by the time he got to The Journal Herald, Cox was used to buying
papers. In 1923, he had bought two: the Miami Metropolis in Florida, which he
renamed the Miami Daily News, and Ohio's Canton Daily News, which he later
sold. He bought the Springfield Morning Sun in 1928; the Atlanta Journal in
1939; and the Atlanta Constitution in 1950. That year, his worth was
estimated at $40 million.
THE PEOPLE'S PAPER
"Wherever there was a Cox paper there was a Cox influence," inventor
Charles F. Kettering once said. It was true: Cox saw his papers as a way to
educate and influence the masses. He maintained that the quality of life and
conditions in Dayton could always be improved, and he used his press to
advocate what he thought should be done, and arouse the public into supporting
community reforms.
Still the politician at heart, Cox wanted the public's confidence. Without
it, he knew, the News could not grow. "If a reader picks up a paper and
after perusing its columns finds that the germ of discontent or pessimism has
been wafted away, he is certain ... to develop a sort of affection for it,"
Cox wrote in 1923.
But doing what he could to waft away the germ of discontent could also put
him in occasional conflict with another of his oft-stated principles, that of
holding steadfastly to the truth. "If public opinion has an untruth fed to
it," Cox once said, "it will be just as harmful as though we had deadly poison
in our drinking water."
In the wake of the 1929 stock market crash, for example, Cox ordered all
his papers, including the Dayton Daily News, to keep stories about the crash
off the front page. News of Cox's mandate made the wire. Cox had little
trouble justifying the difference between absolute truth-telling and
bolstering public confidence; he told the Associated Press he made the
decision with the best interests of the community at heart, since stock buying
was an "incidental thing" in the life of the country: "(The crash) is nearly
if not quite over and yet all of our newspapers are filling the public mind
with the idea of disaster. This can easily develop a psychological condition
hurtful to the general interest. The great masses of the people who are not
involved can pursue, uninterrupted, their part in commerce. Otherwise, the
impression will grow that we are on the verge of a serious industrial
depression. My thought as publisher was to help our public forget the
panic...."
During the Depression, Cox took care of his own. Carl Beyer remembered
former city editor Herb Koehl telling him about the Governor's soft side.
"During the Depression, ad sales were on straight commission," Beyer said.
"There were not a lot of ads being sold, so the Governor told the ad people,
'This Depression isn't your fault; from here on, you're on straight salary.'
It wasn't until the '60s that they went back on draw and commission."
Beyer said Cox also instituted a policy of unlimited sick leave.
"The Governor believed when a person is ill, the last thing he needs to be
worried about is who will pay his medical bills, or how he'll be able to
support his family," Beyer said.
GREAT EXPECTATIONS
Sam Rubin, a member of the News' editorial staff for nearly 45 years,
remembers seeing the Governor come and go, getting off the elevator and going
into his office with his big cigar. "Sometimes he would phone the desk and ask
questions about some current event, and you had better be ready with the
correct answer and the details," Rubin said.
Jim Nichols, who joined the News as a full-time sports reporter in 1940,
said Cox had his finger into everything. "He would stop, walk into the
newsroom and see what was going on. He was the personality of the Dayton Daily
News."
And yet, surprisingly, many long-time News employees believed the Governor
seemed awed, almost humbled, by how large his enterprise had grown. Said
Rubin: "One day he came out and looked the place over and he said, `Do all
these people work here?"
A LONG AND HAPPY LIFE
Roz Young was just coming into the building. "Everybody was standing around
talking ... people were sorry because they felt he was a great man. There was
genuine sorrow over his death."
In his will, Cox set down that his newspapers should remain devoted to the
working people, since they bought and read the paper. Once, reflecting on what
he might become after this life, Cox mused not about the political prowess
that had taken him from the halls of the Capitol to within a few steps of the
White House, but about being a newspaperman.
"If there is anything in the theory of reincarnation of the soul," Cox
wrote, "then in my next assignment, if I be given the right of choice, I will
ask for the aroma of printers ink."
•
MORE: Our historic headquarters
•
BACK: Return to the history home page
•
FRONT PAGE: Go to daytondailynews.com's front page
By Teresa Zumwald
For the Dayton Daily News
At first, Cox's new adventure must have seemed more a nightmare than a
dream come true. Subscribers were scarcer than Cox had been promised; when he
set out to find the 7,500 he thought were on the books, he could locate only
2,600. The News' ledger ran red for several years; even if Cox filled every
column with advertising, said the bookkeeper, the News would still lose $500
a week.
COX THE JOURNALIST
Born on March 31, 1870, Cox was the youngest of seven children. He was
self-taught, an avid reader of literature, biography and history who left
school at age 16 after being raised on the Old Home Farm, his family's
Jacksonburg homestead in Butler County.
BUILDING A NEWSPAPER
Business, like journalism, came easily to Cox. Righting what was wrong with
his fledgling paper was his passion. He was a true workaholic: "I read all the
copy, looked after make-up, answered the business correspondence and kept an
eye on details, writing my editorials after dinner at night," Cox wrote in his
1946 autobiography. At one time or another, he served as editor, reporter,
circulation manager, ad solicitor and business manager.
TOWARD A MEDIA EMPIRE
By 1903, the Dayton Daily News had become a business success. Two years
later, with annual profits equaling his original purchase price, Cox had put
his chief competitor, the Dayton Press, out of business. He celebrated by
buying the Press' equipment - and the Springfield Press-Republic, which he
renamed the Springfield Daily News. In 1908, Cox's attention was diverted to
politics. By then the News had a circulation of about 20,000 and was
recognized among the 100 best newspapers in the country.
Cox's success during his first 10 years of running the Dayton Daily News
allowed him to expand his local news staff, who began bringing readers stories
about Dayton's industrial and suburban development. Cox, who believed his
newspaper should lead change, sometimes dedicated an entire page to
opportunities in the Miami Valley.
THE PEOPLE'S PUBLISHER
In spite of his accumulated wealth and prestige, Cox remained in touch with
the common people. Governor of Ohio during the 1913 flood that devastated
Dayton, Cox directed rescue and relief efforts, calling on his governor
friends to garner what supplies they could to save the city and help it
rebuild. In 1914, Cox signed into law the contested Ohio Conservancy Act,
which put Dayton on course to safety from future floods.
Rare was the publisher who was also a great editor. Cox was both. Never did
he lose interest in the daily details of running the News, or of any paper he
owned, always keeping a firm hand on the editorial and business sides. Roz
Young recalls a day when the Governor called the editor of every page at the
Daily News and bawled them out for any number of offenses. "Gave 'em hell,"
she said.
Cox died on July 15, 1957, at the age of 87 after suffering a series of
strokes that began at the News building.
Copyright © 2008 Cox Ohio Publishing, Dayton, Ohio, USA. All rights reserved.
By using DaytonDailyNews.com, you accept the terms of our visitor agreement and privacy policy. You may wish to note our other business policies.