If) TUT? DI?T7'C HTn PTTADn In the Service of This Paper for More than Fifteen Years V v TTTE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: JUTO 19, 1011. V ( V) : '' 1 -: . x r ( . . - A I ' :. 'y '. r i, I s . . fS J V- ' ' i ( lV i ; i - 'J ... I.ami mi H v -? 'v- " r T. W. MTTTLJJUaH. 1S91. THOMAS P. DOTLB. 1891. SKETCH Edward Rosewater, founder of The Be and tot thlrty-fiT yer iu editor, wai born in Bukowan, a Til lage about fifty milea south from the historical city of Trig, In Bohemia, on January 28, 1841, His elemen tary education was acquired in the common schools of a nearby town of Plsek, where Bohemian or Czech is the prevailing language. He also received instruction iu German from private tutors. At the age of eleven he was sent to an academy at Prague in which the branches taught are on about the same plane as those In American high schools. On Christmas day, 1854, he landed with his par ents In the city of New York and thence immediately moved to Cleveland, Ohio. Owing to the limited means of his parents and the fact that he was the oldest of a family of nine children he was at once compelled to earn his own livelihood. Having no knowledge of the English language he had great dif ficulty in finding something to do. The first per manent employment he was able to secure was in a wholesale tinware and stove store, where his muscles were developed in polishing stoves and in assisting journeymen tinners in manual work. By 18S6 he had acquired sufficient knowledge of English to secure a position as clerk in a retail grocery store at a sal ary of $7 a month and board. At the end of another year he found a clerical position in a small dry goods tore at a salary of SiuO a year and board. At the end of the first year be severed his connection with mercantile business and took a three months' course In a commercial college from which he graduated as an alleged accountant and bookkeeper. Thla was in the fall of 1857, a year of great financial depression and the first and only position he secured as book keeper In a wholesale willow ware and basket estab lishment terminated abruptly by the failure of the concern. Unwilling to resume the drudgery of a clerk and unable to secure a position as bookkeeper he left Cleveland in company with a young man who had been engaged as clerk In an employment' office and located in Sandusky, O., where his first venture on his own resources was made under the title of "Roue water ft Warren, Intelligence Office." The partner ship survived Just three months. It had intelligence enough but failed to secure employment either for Its patrons er Itself. Warren, the Junior partner of the Rrm, was a telegraph operator, but had tempor arily discarded bis profession. Becomes a Telegraph Operator. It was mutually agreed that the two partners would seek their fortune in the south and although they had less than $5 in cash, besides free transpor tation when they landed In Cincinnati in October, 1858, they, .were not In the least disconcerted or despondent. Within 24 hours after landing at Cin cinnati, Warren secured a temporary position as op erator in the Ohio & Mississippi railroad depot, and Rosewater at once began his apprenticeship as a telegrapher. At the end of three months he Imagined he had fully mastered the profession and accepted a position at Vlncennes, Ind., but he was chagrined when he found that he must continue to practice before he could hope to hold down a situation. Returning to Cleveland In January, 1859, he completed his prelim inary education as a telegrapher and was finally as signed to Oberlin, O., at a salary of 1 25 a month. In June, 1859, he accepted a position as operator at Murfreesboro, Tenn., 82 miles south of Nashville. Later he was transferred to Stevenson, Ala., at the Junction of the Nashville ft Chattanooga and Mem phis ft Charleston railroads. Here he remained until Alabama bad seceded. In March, 1861, he accepted a position In the commercial office of the Southwest ern Telegraph Co., at Nashville, where he remained until after the capture of Fort Donelson and the oc cupancy of the city by the Union army. Returning to Cleveland, where his parents still resided, be decided to enter the United States military telegraph corps and was mustered into the service at Wheeling, W. Va., In April, 1862,' and assigned to accompany Gen. John C. Fremont In the West Vir ginia campaign. On the first ot July, '62, he was ordered to report at Washington, where he was as signed to the navy yard, then under command of Commodore Dahlgren. When Gen. Pope was about to enter Into his famous "On to Richmond" oampaign, Rosewater made application to th iWfcr department ;.y;;.. CLTDB JL BAUMGARDNSR. 1M FRED - . a OF EDWARD ROSEWATER - Self-Made Career of the Founder of The Bee Grateful Words from Tfcxittb Btatts Senate. (7 fry- Insists!- s-tJ j- -'C to accompany Pope and was assigned with Oen. Pope's staff to duty in the field. He accompanied' the army of Virginia on Its march to the Rapldan and its re treat across the Rappahanock, and during the three days' battle near Bull Run, August 29th, 80th and 81st transmitted all Gen. Pope's dispatches from the battle field. On the first of September, 1862, he was re called to Washington and assigned to duty in the War department. The members of the telegraph corps in the War department were men picked from the most skilled and trusty operators in the service, this office being the receptacle ot all dispatches directed to President Lincoln, Secretsry Stanton and the general f the army. ' Locates In Omaha In 1863. In September, 1868, at the instance' of Edward Crelghton, who had the year previous built the Pa cific Telegraph, Rosewater resigned his position in the army telegraph corps and entered the serivce of the Pacific Telegraph Company at Omaha. In the spring of 1864 he was appointed manager of the Omaha office and continued In that capacity until January, 1870. A few months later be accepted the position of manager of the Atlantic and Pacific and Great Western telegraph lines. While acting as local manager of the Pacific Tele graph company he was also agent ot the Associated Press and telegraphio correspondent of leading Chi RAPPLET, ISO. H. t. rmu ISO. C Axr: , a- I I 1 IXJUIS WORM, 18TT8. Hanna ' f cago, New York, Cincinnati and St. Louis papers. In cidentally with this work he established a tele graphic correspondence bureau, which gathered im portant news from the Rocky Mountain region as far west as Montana and Idaho. In the spring of 1870 he, in conjunction with others, founded the Omaha Daily Tribune. When the paper made its first advent on July 26, 1870, Its editor in chief, a scholarly Massachusetts Journalist, had failed to put in an appearance and his place was supplied during the first week by Mr. Rosewater, al though ostensibly the editorials had emanated from the pen of the gifted New Englander. This was Mr. Rosewater's first direct venture in Journalism. The Tribune, although an excellent paper," was from the Btart a losing undertaking. Owing to differences as regards its management, Mr. Rose water resigned his directorship in September, 1870, and fortunately for himself he had not severed his connection with the telegraph company, but had merely dipped into newspaper work as an amateur with no expectation ot following it as a profession. A few months later, November, 1870, he was elected a member of the most stormy and protracted legislature that has ever been held In Nebraska. In that body he took a leading and active part in the impeachment of the governor, David Butler, and in the investigations into the corrupt management of state Institutions. Among measures with which he was prominently connected was the endorsement of " - f J06EPH R- CAMPBEUU mi. r-r3 A --e A rr--' ' . rV in QEORQE RAPPLET. 1S90. W. B. R1PLET. 1S9. Charity that Counts , Omgh&Neb 1 M s - a oV the postal-telegraph system, the regulation of the practice of medicine, the location ot the State Deaf and Dumb Institute at Omaha and the creation of the Board of Education for that city. The latter meas ure met with strenuous, opposition from, the Omaha daily press. Reason f of Starting The Bee. The act creating the Board of Education required its submlBslon to and ratification by the citizens of Omaha. Desiring to counteract the adverse public opinion created by the press, Mr. Rosewater started, on June 19, 1871, a small sheet in the shape ot a theater program under the heading of The' Omaha Dally Bee." These sheets were given free distri bution for several weeks. They contained the latest telegraphic and local news in brief and editorial com ments on city and state politics. The Board of Edu cation law was sustained by the people by an over whelming majority. Encouraged by this evidence ot popular favor the paper after four weeks' free distri bution was enlarged and started on its career as an afternoon dally with local carrier subscriptions. From the outset the paper met with most phenomenal suc cess. ' Within less than five years It outstripped tho old established dallies in circulation and influence, notwthstandlng the most determined and powerful opposition both from the ruling politicians e( its own time and corporate Influences inimical to Its vigorous anti-monopoly policy. Under his energetic manage ment it grew and flourished In spite of murderous J. V. WEAVER, ma. X 4 f ' 1, 1 " - .v- ' . - , K ' ' V V -; ' , f . MeMkaasMHei. , H&ai. iawtalsslsMst D WIGHT WILLIAMS, MO. Remarkable assaults upon the editor and bushwhacking warfare; upon the paper. From its inception -until bis death, Mr. Rosewater remained the chief editor and owner ot The Be which for years has occupied a front rank among th great newspapers of America. Having firmly estab ll9hed his paper Mr. Rosewater conceived the Idea ot erecting a monumental newspaper building and this project was carried out by the erection ot The Bee building, which was begun in 1887 and completed la 1889. This structure is perfectly fireproof and ad the time it was built covered a larger area of ground; than any other newspaper building erected oa either aide of the Atlantic. The later years of his life were given much morel to public affairs and made him a figure of national prominence as a political adviser of presidents and party leaders, and as a champion of the people la many popular movements. As a member ot the re, publican national committee he bad active charge oil the presidential campaign In Nebraska In 1892, and. be was a delegate-at-large to the Philadelphia con ventlon in 1900, in which he was also secretary ot the committee on resolutions that framed the plat form. He was on the advisory committee of tho national party organization In 1896, in 1900 and la 1904. He went to the forefront to combat the 16 to 1 free silver fallacy in the campaign of 1896, publicly) debating the subject with "Coin" Harvey aad witK William J. Brjan. OfHrlal and Other Honors. Edward Rosewater was a member of tho United States Mlat commission by appointment of President Cleveland In 1896, and in 1897 was named a delegate' tor the United States and : vice president ot tho World's Postal congress that mot at Washington. He was the original promoter and one of the Board o Managers of the Trans-Mlsslsslppl exposition, held la Omaha In 1898. He participated in the two national conferences on trusts,' In the reciprocity convention )i . In the National Sound Money League, in the Interna- tional Arbitration congress, in the Lake Mohonk eon ference, in National Civic federation meetings and la many other similar progressive gatherlnga In none of them did he occupy a back seat. One of his most strenuous undertakings was that, which be person ally Instituted and prosecuted, with all his vlgorto force a more equitable assessment of railroad prop erty In Nebraska for taxation, which, while only par tially successful at first, found Its capstone In the new revenue law designed to bring railway taxes to tho same basis as taxes on other property. Mr. Rosewater was a candidate for United B tastes senator before the legislature of 1901, leading on many ballots, but withdrawing at the close in order to break the protracted deadlock and save Nebraska from being left unrepresented In the senate. Even in this campaign, although it was not required ot him, he Insisted on submitting his name to a prefer entlal vote of the people at the election pursuant to his long advocacy of the election of United States sena tors by direct popular vote. j life Closes With Sudden Call. In 1906 he was again appointed to represent tho United States as its delegate to the World's Postal congress meeting, this time at Rome, and while absent abroad was projected as a candidate for tho nomination for United States senator on the republic can ticket. Returning to this country, he again ap pealed to the popular vote, demanding that all dele, gates to the convention be put under Inst ructions bfl the rank and tile of the party and had these lnstruo tion been carried out he would have been nominated.. Although defeated by treachery he accepted the situa tion philosophically, promptly pledging support to his successful competitor in a speech before the con ventlon, and admonishing his bearers to complete tho ticket with men of integrity for whom no apology) would be needed. '. It turned out, however, that he had but a short time more to live. On Augusct 30, 1906, Edward Rosewater delivered an address to an Old Soldiers reunion at Waterloo, returning home In the early eve ning, and having died suddenly ot heart failure the same night, was found the next morning, sitting on a bench in a court room in The Bee building, where he had evidently stopped to rest. Mr. Rosewater had been married in 1864 to Miss Leah Coleman, ot Cleveland, Ohio, and had five children, of whom all survive excepting one daughter. , c r. axntaEKLAWQ, H ,u v. ' . : ' .