Courants, Messengers, And A Plain Dealer (October 1994 | Volume: 45, Issue: 6)

Courants, Messengers, And A Plain Dealer

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Authors: Mary Frech Mcvicker

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October 1994 | Volume 45, Issue 6

Is your newspaper a Gazette ? A Journal ? Do you read a Gleaner or a Quill or a Bee ?

Newspaper names are a catalog of history and motive. Some were chosen because they seem traditional, like Gazette or Journal ; others reflect a sentiment of the namer. A Journal originally was a work that contained extracts from a recent book, while a Gazette , according to Voltaire, was “a relation of public affairs.” The distinction between the two was soon lost, and both journals and gazettes came to contain both political and cultural information.

Many names, like Courier or Dispatch , refer to old means of disseminating news. When the Hartford Courant was founded in 1764, Courant was a fairly common newspaper name, for a courant was someone who ran from village to village spreading the news. Later the runner carried a written message, and eventually the message itself became known as a courant. (Hence the French phrase for being up on things: au courant .) Messenger and Mercury also refer to someone who carries news.

NEW-YORK DAILY TRIBUNE.

Commerce entered the newspaper world in the 160Os in France, where Théophraste Renaudot decided that people who had goods and services to sell needed an effective way of making contact with potential buyers. The result eventually combined news of warfare and politics with solicitations for employment, trade, and barter. In England Marchamont Nedham, a pragmatic fellow who changed sides twice during the Civil War, participated in “Offices of Intelligence,” which essentially sold information on goods and services. Thus the name Intelligencer for a newspaper.

The advent of mail service enabled newspapers to be more regional. Post-Boy , Post-Man , and Flying Post in the early 170Os told Londoners their papers were up-todate. The name Post is still used, of course: St. Louis PostDispatch , the Washington Post , and the New York Post .

The Western Telegraph.

The telegraph enabled newspapers to carry recent news from beyond their immediate region, and newspapers with Telegram , Telegraph , and Signal reflected this competitive stance, while World and Globe heralded the papers’ new, wider orientation.

Commercial news became increasingly important as an element of competition. In the mid-1700s Advertiser began to replace Post in newspaper titles, and by 1820 more than half of all newspapers in seven of the largest U.S. cities featured Advertiser , Commercial , or Mercantile in their titles.

Sometimes the origin of a