The Life of Ida Tarbell
By Kate O'Dell
()
About this ebook
Ida Tarbell was one of the leading muckraking investigative journalists from the Progressive Era during the late 19th, and early 20th centuries. She was a writer and journalist, whose work appeared in McClure's Magazine, Scribner's, and a great many more publications.
She was known for her extensive and comprehensive biographies of famous historical figures – such as Abraham Lincoln, and Napoleon Bonaparte. She was also known for her exposé 'The History of the Standard Oil Company', which had delved deep into the corrupt oil company, and oil tycoon John D. Rockefeller.
'The Life of Ida Tarbell' is a look into Tarbell's life – from her early years in the oil fields, to her writing career that spanned more than sixty years. Ida Tarbell is a fascinating historical figure, one who paved the way for investigative journalists more than a century later. She is a remarkable woman, who lived a full life.
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The Life of Ida Tarbell - Kate O'Dell
IDA TARBELL’S CHILDHOOD
Ida Minerva Tarbell was born on November 5th, 1857, in Hatch Hollow, Amity Township, Pennsylvania. Ida’s mother was Esther Ann (née McCullough), who was a teacher. Her father was Franklin Summer Tarbell, who was also a teacher, and had worked as a joiner, and an oilman. She had three younger siblings – Walter, Franklin Jr., and Sarah. Franklin Jr. died very young of scarlet fever. Sarah also had scarlet fever, but she survived. Weakened by the disease, she later became an artist. Walter would go on to be an oilman like his father.
Esther had been born in Norwich, New York, and as a child, she’d moved to Pennsylvania with her father, Walter Raleigh McCullough, and her four siblings. He had remarried, then had another daughter after the move.
Esther had always been told about her heritage by her mother, which she passed on to her daughter. ‘Remember that your father is a McCullough of an ancient and honoured Scotch clan, his mother a Raleigh of Sir Walter’s family, that I am a Seabury, my great-uncle the first Episcopal bishop in the United States, my mother a Welles, her father on George Washington’s staff.’ The genealogy lesson was passed down to her daughter, which Ida later wrote about in her autobiography.
Esther believed that women should have a proper education. In her youth, she had gone to boarding school at a Methodist female seminary, in Poughkeepsie, New York. She also went to a private school in Pennsylvania. By eighteen, Esther had graduated and went on to be a teacher. She taught a great deal of topics – geography, arithmetic, grammar, reading, and writing. At that time, only about fifty percent of women were able to read.
Her parents, Esther and Franklin, dated for six years before finally getting married on April 17, 1856. They were both twenty-six years old. Within their first year of marriage, Esther Tarbell got pregnant. The couple discussed their future in Hatch Hollow, Pennsylvania. It was a very small town – with only a school, a creamery, sawmill, and Methodist church. They thought that it would be better for their future child, to live in a better community.
They discussed the move to Iowa, trying to figure out what they wee going to do. Esther wouldn’t have any income as a stay-at-home mother. If Franklin were to leave the state, she would become an ‘economic dependant’, and not entitled to any of his income, or property. But moving to Iowa seemed like the best option for the young couple.
In 1857, travel to Iowa would be difficult. They couldn’t take the train, and a wagon trip was extremely difficult, especially for pregnant Esther. She feared leaving behind her family and friends, but wanted to be with her husband. And so it was decided, that Franklin would travel on his own to Iowa, and send for his wife when the homestead was ready.
Franklin believed that he could manage being on the road to Iowa. In his youth, he had worked piloting flatboats filled with cargo, travelling along the Ohio, Allegheny, and Mississippi Rivers. These trips were often in treacherous waters, stormy days, and meant that he’d had to survive on the small amount of food he’d brought aboard. He had had plenty of travel experience by the time he planned his trip to Iowa.
in 1857, Franklin left for Iowa, so he could build the family home. Iowa was much more economically safer than living in southern Pennsylvania. Iowa had only been a state for eleven years, and he hoped that the fertile soil would be a better farming choice for the family. Franklin Tarbell received farmer’s income, as well as money from being a welder, and teacher.
Franklin’s decision to move to another state was hardly unique. A great number of migrants were facing money troubles. People were moving out of states that supported slavery, and going to states that were more sympathetic to the abolition movement. Others, like Franklin Tarbell, felt restless, and needed to move on. Pennsylvania was not on the brink of starvation, and Tarbell’s neighbours were bemused at his decision to leave. It is interesting to note, that even the Rockefeller family had moved from upstate New York, to Ohio in 1853. John D. Rockefeller had been fourteen years old at the time. Rockefeller was blissfully unaware of the Tarbell family at that time, but their futures were entwined, when Ida Tarbell would decide to write a scathing exposé about him and his oil company.
Franklin Tarbell successfully made the trip to Iowa, and picked out a plot of land that he thought would work well for his family. It was located in the southwest corner, north of the Missouri border. The federal government had been trying to entice settlers to move to Iowa, and also to the untouched land west of the Mississippi River. The government was selling the land at a cheap price – at $1.25 per acre. And at times, they were even giving away land for free (this was done as bounties for war veterans who were killing the Indigenous people, as the government hated anyone that was native, and preferred them dead so they could colonize their land). These genocidal bounties, as well as the land that the government sold for cheap, meant that there were about 36 million available Iowan acres, during the 1840s and 1850s.
Life in Iowa was difficult, as the new settlers had to deal with angry displaced Sioux, who fought back against the people who’d moved onto their land. There were some attacks, and the year that Franklin moved there, 34 settlers were killed in an attack (Spirit Lake Massacre).
The settlers built tiny cabins, that were cramped and barely kept out the frigid winters. Their cabins were usually about 18x16 feet, and they had to huddle together to keep from getting frostbite, or dying. Sod houses weren’t much warmer than the log cabins. It was an especially trying time for the settlers, as the land they lived on was freezing cold in winter, and was a harsh environment.
Franklin was eager to build his house, and so he got a job at the sawmill. He was then able to buy building supplies, while he built the house with his own hands. Franklin would write letters home, describing the flat Midwest land, the constant flow of settlers in wagons, his excitement for their new home. He had written to Esther, that he planned for her to hitch a wagon ride in August, travelling the hundreds of miles to their new home. Baby Ida was supposed to be born on the plains. But his plans fell through.
During the summer of 1857, the economy suffered greatly. It was dubbed ‘the Panic of 1857’. With the suffering economy, and the poor harvest season, the banks shut down – defaulting on individual accounts. Franklin Tarbell couldn’t access his savings due to the banks collapsing. Cash was scarce. This left both Franklin, and Esther trapped by their lack of funds.
With so many settlers moving into the area, it had messed up the land market. Many settlers had bought more land than they had needed. With the farms getting mortgaged, and they were defaulting on their properties, the land was getting bought up by railroad companies, bankers, and others who were eager to buy the cheap land from the failing settlers. These companies profited greatly by buying up the land, despite the fact that these settlers were losing everything. For some, it was an inconvenience. For others, losing the land they had tried to settle on was a devastating blow.
On November 5th, Ida was born in a log cabin that belonged to her maternal grandfather, Walter Raleigh McCullough, and his wife. McCullough had been a Scottish-Irish pioneer. Ida’s father’s family had immigrated to New England in the 17th century. Ida had been told by her grandmother that their family was descended from Sir Walter Raleigh – the first American Episcopalian bishop, who had been in George Washington’s staff. Ida, born on the cusp of the American civil war,