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2005

6 x 9 in.
288 pp., 19 halftones

ISBN: 978-0-292-70977-5
$30.00, paperback
Print-on-demand title; expedited shipping not available
33% website discount: $20.10

 
 
 
     

The First Texas News Barons

By Patrick Cox

 

Table of Contents and Excerpt

available through netLibrary

 

"Those interested in how power is used&#151as well as who gets to wield it—will enjoy this contribution to the study of journalism, often called the rough draft of history."

East Texas Historical Association

Newspaper publishers played a crucial role in transforming Texas into a modern state. By promoting expanded industrialization and urbanization, as well as a more modern image of Texas as a southwestern, rather than southern, state, news barons in the early decades of the twentieth century laid the groundwork for the enormous economic growth and social changes that followed World War II. Yet their contribution to the modernization of Texas is largely unrecognized.

This book investigates how newspaper owners such as A. H. Belo and George B. Dealey of the Dallas Morning News, Edwin Kiest of the Dallas Times Herald, William P. Hobby and Oveta Culp Hobby of the Houston Post, Jesse H. Jones and Marcellus Foster of the Houston Chronicle, and Amon G. Carter Sr. of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram paved the way for the modern state of Texas. Patrick Cox explores how these news barons identified the needs of the state and set out to attract the private investors and public funding that would boost the state's civic and military infrastructure, oil and gas industries, real estate market, and agricultural production. He shows how newspaper owners used events such as the Texas Centennial to promote tourism and create a uniquely Texan identity for the state. To balance the record, Cox also demonstrates that the news barons downplayed the interests of significant groups of Texans, including minorities, the poor and underemployed, union members, and a majority of women.

Patrick Cox is Assistant Director of the Center for American History at the University of Texas at Austin.

Focus on American History Series
Don Carleton, series editor

 Also by the Author Ralph W. Yarborough, the People's Senator
The House Will Come to Order (with Michael Phillips)
Profiles in Power (with Kenneth E. Hendrickson, Jr., and Michael L. Collins)
 Of Related Interest Cash and Sterling, The News in Texas
Segura, Belo

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