Wall Paper News of the Sixties*
by Hugh Awtrey
HISTORICAL units of the national park system include
fields of battle, birthplaces of famous men, memorials of superlative
contributions to human progress, and physical mementoes of many another
episode that illuminates the career of a nation. Whether they recite
stories of war or of peace, of a single individual's impress upon the
centuries' record, or of the collective achievement of America as an
astonishing crucible of the world's races, they usually embody a central
historical theme. Such fundamental narratives are familiar enough, for
they are phasic chapters of national history and form the principal
outline of the expanding chronicle of man's endeavors west of the
Atlantic Ocean.
|
Increasingly diverting today, therefore, are the
growing footnotes which project revealing spotlights on the skeletal
story. Humble second-thoughts, they clothe the stark silhouettes of the
bony frame and provide the meatier upholstery of romance for the gaunt
ribwork of common fact. Paradoxically, the lower-page fine print day by
day is making more entertainingly readable the capital letters of the
text.
An ancient rifle may speak more eloquently than wordy
tomes of George Washington at Fort Necessity; a primitive kitchen
sometimes may excel the historian in recounting the struggles of
frontier life; or an old wharf may evoke, far better than a multidegreed
researcher, the glories of Yankee ships that defied Britannia's seas.
All these are but modest annotations of a greater work, but they afford
refreshing pauses which encourage the reader to keep his book open.
Such a footnote to America's history is to be found
in the museum of Vicksburg National Military Park, Miss., where a
rectangular scrap of paper symbolizes, with a sparkle of ironical humor,
one of the many grim battles which journalism has survived on this
continent in its climb from the lowly station of a tolerated evil to the
happier position of a public necessity. It is a copy of The
(Vicksburg) Daily Citizen, issued July 4, 1863, at the end of the
47-day siege of the famous river port during the War between the States.
It relates, by suggestion, a far more significant story than is told
literally in its meager columns. It was printed first by a beleaguered
Confederate editor and then, with pointed emendations, by Union victors.
The back of the single sheet is not printed at all in the usual
sensebecause it is befigured wallpaper.
The occurrence is a trifling but instructive episode
of the vicissitudinous development of paper, that all-powerful
instrument for the diffusion of knowledge, which had its traditional
origins nearly twenty centuries ago in the inventions of Ts'ai Lun, an
ingenious Chinese who lived in what now is war-torn Hunan
Province.1 Paper has been made from an almost incredible
variety of substances ranging alphabetically from asbestos, cabbage and
dandelion roots, through potatoes, thistles and wasps' nests. In such
contempt was it held in the twelfth century, as opposed to parchment
(from sheep and goats) and vellum (from calves), that documents written
upon it were held to be without legal authority.2
|
Wood pulp paper, the staff of life of the voracious
press of today, did not reach the experimental stage until 1800, and the
mass production sulphite process was not devised until 1874.3
There have been many periods of paper scarcity, and consequently of
price fluctuations which often took their roots in frank and homey soil.
The growing ascendency of linen over woolen underwear in France during
the fifteenth century provided cheaper rags for paper makers and
nurtured the timid growth of printing.4 The resulting premium
placed on the casual remnants of one's more personal garments must have
been transplanted in America by early colonists, for John Holme, who
wrote in 1696 A True Relation of the Flourishing State of
Pennsylvania (said to be the first metrical composition of that
Quaker region), admonished his fellow citizens:
Kind friend, when thy old shift is rent
Let it to th' paper mill be sent,5
More earnest still was the poetic entreaty of an
up-State New York paper maker of the eighteenth century, who
published a notice to fair householders of his day:
Sweet ladies pray be not offended,
Nor mind the jest of sneering wags;
No harm, believe us, is intended,
When humbly, we request your rags.6
Scarcity of paper was not uncommon in later Colonial
days and particularly during the Revolutionary War when importations
ceased and several of the 40-odd American mills halted
production.7 Even near the end of the century, so hard beset
with printing woes was John Scull, founder of The Pittsburgh
Gazette (1786), that he had to procure from the fort commandant the
material upon which to publish his journal: ". . . twenty-seven quires
of cartridge paper,"8 a notable instance which conceivably
may be the substantiating exception to the rule that the pen is more
potent than the sidearm. The first mill "beyond" the Alleghenies was not
established until 1793, and the West suffered shortages throughout the
period of its early expansion.

Three different patterns of wallpaper
are found among the known originals of the July 2-4 issue of The
Daily Citizen. The one shown above is the back of one of the sheets
preserved in the Library of Congress.
|
Confronted by this somewhat forbidding historical
background in which the role of paper was often conspicuous by its
dearth, the South was warned in 1860 by The New Orleans Bulletin
that it should temper its opinions on secession until it became
independent of Northern ink, type, presses, and paper.9 In
1852 the United States was importing rags from 32 countries, and its
consumption of paper already had equalled that of England and France
combined.10 Yet, by 1860, with 555 paper-making plants in the
country, only 24 were operating in the South.
The admonition of The Bulletin probably was
soon forgotten, but fulfillment of its implied prophecy was not long
delayed. The outbreak of war, with the resulting cessation of paper
shipments from the North, was reflected quickly in a shortage of
printing stock. As early as September 1, 1861, The Charleston
Courier, a leading mouthpiece of the Confederacy, was compelled to
reduce the size of its pages. Progressive shrinkages followed
periodically throughout the lengthening years of the struggle until, by
February 1865, that journal appeared as a four-columned sheet of 10 by
15 inches.
Some newspapers collected their own rags, some raised
subscription prices as high as $120 a year, some rejected orders for any
period exceeding 60 days, and some led a peripatetic existence,
publishing here today and there tomorrow (even in railroad freight
cars), as they fled approaching invaders and sought new sources of
printing supplies. Many suspended publication altogether.
Among those which managed to survive the famine of
paper and other misfortunes of war, several were forced to resort to
heroic measures. Long established organs appeared on wrapping paper,
tissue paper, writing paper, ledger paper, and, in final extremities, on
odds and ends of wallpaper of many hues and patterns. Dainty bedroom
designs featuring the interwoven tendrils of vague and unbotanical
plants often vied, in the same edition of a journal containing the
affrighting news of battle, with the more formal geometric whimsies of
the living room and library.
|
At least 13 newspapers, all of them published in
Louisiana and Mississippi, are known definitely to have been printed on
wallpaper. Of these, 31 different issues have been found in the larger
repositories of the country by Clarence S. Brigham, director of the
American Antiquarian Society, who believes that many others may have
appeared, only to be discarded as of trifling value because readers were
interested in the stirring news of victory or defeat rather than in the
stop-gap fashion by which it was disseminated.11
Institutionally catalogued specimens include Louisiana organs edited in
both English and French, such as Le Courrier des Opelousas the
Unconditional S. Grant, an army sheet published in 1863 by
Federal troops stationed at New Iberia, and The (Alexandria)
Southern Sentinel. The harassed sponsor of the latter journal, in
his issue of March 21, 1863, lamented editorially:
Even the apology for paper which we are forced to use
to print one page on, and which we will change for the better as soon as
possible, costs four or five times as much as a full sheet of four pages
would have done two years since. . . .
|
Most interesting of all the wallpaper press, however,
is Vicksburg's Daily Citizen, edited by J. M. Swords in an
easy-going town seated comfortably on the river bluffs where, for 47
days, Confederate forces made a last stand for control of the lower
Mississippi. In the prewar days of 1860 The Citizen was a
four-page newspaper of full dimensions. Even by June 13, 1863, after 26
days of a siege whose encircling fetters General Grant drew ever
tighter, Editor Swords' daily account of the progress of war appeared on
genuine newsprint. But the thin fingers of scarcity already had begun to
pinch. The Citizen that day was a single sheet, two columns wide.
Yet, however modest the format of the journal, it must have enjoyed a
demand sufficiently brisk to inspire street-corner profiteering. That
became evident 5 days later when the hard-pressed Swords explained to
his readers:
The price of our paper at the office is twenty-five
cents, Newsboys who charge fifty cents on the streets are not authorized
by us to sell at that price; and those who object to the extortion
should call at the office and get their papers at first cost. We cannot
control the trade nor the prices of newsboys and can only sell our
papers to them at the same prices that we get from those who call at the
office.
Swords must have read the handwriting on the
wallpaper, because that issue, June 18, 1863, is one of the six numbers
of The Citizen now known to exist which were published on that
medium. Like those of June 16, 20, 27, and 30, it was a single sheet of
four columns printed on the blank side. The series reached a noteworthy
climax a few days later. On July 2, just before the capitulation of the
imprisoned city, The Citizen appeared again on wallpaper. Its
columns relate with hopeful nonchalance the news of local casualties and
food profiteering, praises mule steak as "sweet, savory and tender," and
reports cheerfully:
On Dit.That the great Ulyssesthe Yankee
Generalissimo, surnamed Granthas expressed his intention of dining
in Vicksburg on Saturday next, and celebrating the 4th of July by a
grand dinner and so forth. When asked if he would invite Gen. Jo.
Johnston to join he said, "No! for fear there will be a row at the
table," Ulysses must get into the city before he dines in it. The way to
cook a rabbit is "first to catch the rabbit," &.
It was then that the beleaguered Swords, despite his
airy taunts, gave up the editorial ghost. On July 3 Pemberton and Grant
agreed on the terms of a truce. Next day Blue soldiers marched into a
city whose reserves of food were as depleted as was its paper.

Most famous of all of the wallpaper
issues of Southern newspapers during the period of newsprint scarcity
was that of The {Vicksburg, Mississippi} Daily Citizen for July 2
and 4, 1863. Published on the first date by a Confederate editor, the
same paper was reissued by Federal soldier-printers two days later when
the besieged city fell. The "note" inserted by the victors at the
bottom of the fourth column provides a good-natured rebuttal for the
last paragraph of column two.
|
Printers may not be ubiquitous, but certainly they
are present in every army. Some of those under Grant soon found the
offices of The Citizen, with its type still standing in the lone
"form" of the issue of July 2. Two observations are supported readily by
the evidence: (a) The contents of the paper were read carefully,
and (b) there were some easy-humored typographical warriors among
the conquerors of Vicksburg. By recourse to the abandoned type cases the
newcomers composed a 14-line rebuttal. Its unanswerable repartee
appended a good-natured postscript to one of the most arresting
journalistic episodes of the American Civil War:

Now the property of a parochial
school, the building shown above was the city headquarters of Gen. John
C. Pemberton, Confederate commander, during the 47-day siege of
Vicksburg. It was occupied by Federal forces on the same day that
printers of General Grant's army reissued The Daily Citizen.
|
NOTE
July 4th, 1863.
Two days bring about great changes. The banner of the
Union floats over Vicksburg. Gen. Grant has "caught the rabbit;" he has
dined in Vicksburg, and he did bring his dinner with him. The "Citizen"
lives to see it. For the last time it appears on "Wall-paper." No more
will it eulogize the luxury of mule-meat and fricasseed kittenurge
Southern warriors to such diet never-more. This is the last wall-paper
edition, and is, excepting this note, from the types as we found them.
It will be valuable hereafter as a curiosity.
Using precious scraps of Swords' wallpaper remnants,
the visitors printed an undetermined number of copies of a "July 2-4"
edition, one of the most novel "replates" ever run through a press.
Three designs of paper are found among the known originals, but more
than 30 reprints have appeared since 1863. Henry S. Parsons, Chief of
the Periodical Division of the Library of Congress, has made a searching
study of them12 in order to establish nine unerring
typographical tests for distinguishing the genuine from the various
souvenir copies. Exuberant collectors, he explains,13 still
send "discoveries" to him for examination, only to learn that they are
somewhat unfaithful imitations.
Supplementing typographical clues are those provided
by the design of the paper itself. That of the original in the Library
of Congress is described with studied precision by Mr. Parsons:
"A large brocade pattern in faded red-purple over a
scroll design in faded rose on a cream background."
Altogether, the historical record appears to uphold
the forecast made July 4, 1863, by the waggish Federals who predicted
that The Citizen "will be valuable hereafter as a curiosity." It
is even more valuable, however, as a revealing footnote to an
interesting page of America's national record, for it substantiates the
validity of the warning sounded in 1860 by The New Orleans
Bulletin that ink and paper, as well as guns and swords, are
indispensable items in the materiel of war.
Notes
1 Andre Blum, On the Origin of
Paper (Harry Miller Lydenberg, trans., R. R. Bowker Company, New
York, 1934), 17.
2 Ibid., 23.
3 H. A. Maddox, Paper, Its History,
Sources and Manufacture (Sir Isaac Pitman and Sons, London, n. d.),
64.
4 Blum, op. cit., 35.
5 Dard Hunter, Papermaking through
Eighteen Centuries (William Edwin Rudge, New York, 1930), 36. This
author explains (p. 232) how a fifteenth century mosquito is preserved
in a sheet of his collection of paper.
6 Mary E. Wheelock, Paper, Its History
and Development (American Library Association, Chicago, 1928),
7.
7 James Melvin Lee, History of American
Journalism (Houghton Mifflin and Company, Boston and New York,
1917), 69, 97.
8 George Henry Payne, History of
Journalism in the United States (D. Appleton and Company, New York,
1920), 203.
9 Lee, op. cit., 305.
10 Wheelock, op. cit., 8.
11 "Wall-paper Newspapers of the Civil
War," Bibliographical Essays, A Tribute to Wilberforce Eames
(Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass., 1924), 203-209.
12 "Wall-Paper Editions of the Vicksburg
'Daily Citizen,'" Antiques, Vol. XXV, No. 3, March 1934,
97-98.
13 Personal interview, November 9,
1939.
*Reprinted from The Regional
Review (National Park Service, Region One, Richmond, Va.), Vol. III,
No. 6, December 1939, pp. 15-20. Illustrations by Tyler B. Kiener.
|