{"id":3413,"date":"2011-02-18T09:00:39","date_gmt":"2011-02-18T09:00:39","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.badreputation.org.uk\/?p=3413"},"modified":"2011-02-18T09:00:39","modified_gmt":"2011-02-18T09:00:39","slug":"unsung-heroes-nellie-bly","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/badreputation.org.uk\/2011\/02\/18\/unsung-heroes-nellie-bly\/","title":{"rendered":"Unsung Heroes: Nellie Bly"},"content":{"rendered":"
Nellie Bly<\/strong> (born Elizabeth Jane Cochran) was not the sort of
person who took nonsense from anybody. A pioneering journalist, she got her
first break in writing when she grew angry at the appalling views on women
touted by Erasmus Wilson, the most popular columnist of the
Pittsburgh Dispatch<\/em>, and wrote them a letter to complain. The
paper, impressed by the spirit of the letter, took her on as a
columnist.\u00a0 This is a fantastic way to get a job, declaring \u201cNo,
you\u2019re awful. I could do this much better. Let me show you how,\u201d
and then backing up that claim.<\/p>\n
Bly\u2019s initial work for the
Dispatch <\/em>showed glimpses of the journalistic style she would go
on to develop. She covered the difficulties faced by working class
women and girls, the urgent need for reforming the state\u2019s
divorce laws, and the lives of local factory workers. So the editors
decided after this to put her in the ‘women\u2019s
interest’ pages and have her cover minor fashion events and
flower shows. Bly tried to get back to serious reporting by having
herself sent to Mexico to write as the
Dispatch<\/em>\u2019s foreign correspondent, but this only lasted
for a few months before she was returned once again to the
women\u2019s pages.<\/p>\n
Did Bly settle for a career writing lighthearted fluff, or give up
journalism, accepting Wilson\u2019s claim that a woman doing more
serious work would be \u201ca monstrosity\u201d? Of course she
didn\u2019t, because she was awesome. She left a suitably
withering note for Wilson and moved to New York in order to find
work on a paper that would take her seriously.<\/p>\n
Now, getting into journalism is not an easy task. It isn\u2019t
easy now and it wasn\u2019t easy in 1887, particularly if you
happened to be poor and female. Generally after six months of
failing to get a job, one might give up and return home to do
something easier. The people covered in this series are not the
sort of people who give up and go home when things get hard,
however, and after six months of knocking on doors Bly managed an
interview at the
New York World<\/em>, owned by
Joseph Pulitzer <\/strong>(he of the prize). The editor, John
Cockerill, – possibly in an attempt to deter her –
challenged Bly to write a piece on Blackwell\u2019s Island<\/strong><\/a>, then home to a
notorious New York asylum.<\/p>\n
In order to fully appreciate how blazingly fantastic what
Bly did next was, it\u2019s important to realise that
investigative journalism wasn\u2019t really a thing that
existed at that point. People didn\u2019t go undercover to
write reports, or press closely-guarded inside sources for
facts. It just wasn\u2019t something that happened. This
is what made Nellie Bly a pioneering journalist: she went
undercover, and feigning insanity for 10 days, managed to
have herself sent as a patient to the Women’s
Lunatic Asylum on Blackwell\u2019s Island to see for
herself what was going on. This was particularly bold, as
she had no guarantee she would be able to secure her
release when the piece was done, and indeed had some
difficulty regaining her freedom. She came back with a
story of cruelty, beatings and poor conditions –
examples of pretty much everything that was wrong with
19th century mental health care. Not only did Bly\u2019s
report get her the job at the
New York World<\/em>, it also drew public and political
attention to the institution. This brought money and
much needed changes, improving the lives of the people
treated there. An impressive achievement for someone
only just starting their career.<\/p>\n
Could I pass a week in the insane ward at
Blackwell’s Island? I said I could and I
would. And I did.<\/p>\n
\u2013 Nellie Bly<\/p><\/blockquote>\n
Pioneering the field of investigative journalism and
spending her career writing important pieces on
workers’ rights, the treatment of women, and
other socially important issues wasn\u2019t quite
enough for Bly, however. She still had a significant
quantity of badass in her that she needed to make
use of, and there was only one outlet for it that
held sufficient coolness: a race around the world.
Phileas Fogg\u2019s<\/strong><\/a> 80 day trip
around the world was all well and good, but it was
fictional. Bly was going to be the first person to
do it for real, and she was going to do it
better.<\/p>\n