Saturday, April 4, 2015

Primary Sources: Newspaper Articles on Opening Day

Introduction
When the World’s Columbian Exhibition officially opened in Chicago on May 1, 1893, the fair was not quite ready for public visitors. An impossibly harsh winter meant that construction was far behind schedule and several buildings were unfinished. Further, the immense size of the fairgrounds meant that cleaning up the property and surrounding landscape was no easy task. However, visitors knew that Burnham and his team had been hard at work for many months on the fair, and they were sympathetic to their efforts to accomplish a feat as glorious as the White City. Thus, reporters at the time maintained  a careful balance between respectful criticism of the fair’s unfinished state and praise for the momentous grandeur and potential beauty of what was to be.

Front Page of Chicago Daily Tribune on Opening Day

Incomplete Condition of the Fair
Interestingly, most of the articles that came out on opening day of the World’s Columbian Exposition do not discuss the beauty of the White City, nor do they extoll the monumental design of  the fair. This was probably because on May 1, 1893, the majority of the fair was incomplete. Many of the pavilions were not finished with construction, and the fairgrounds were littered with trash and debris.

Map Published Alongside Article in Scientific American
OPENING OF THE WORLD'S COLUMBIAN EXPOSITION, CHICAGO, MAY 1, 1893. (1893, May 06). 
Scientific American (1845-1908), LXVIII., 274.
As reporters wrote about the opening day of the fair, nearly every major newspaper commented on the incomplete state of the fairgrounds. On May 1, 1893, the Chicago Tribute reported that “the public will find the fair still in a somewhat incomplete condition.”[1] Similarly, The New York Times and the Boston Globe mentioned the unfinished nature of the fairgrounds. However, these reporters were generally pretty sensitive to the hard work of Burnham and his team, and were reluctant to blame the fair’s designers for its lack of readiness. The same article in The Tribune continues,  the incomplete nature of the fair is“due more to the tardiness of exhibitors than to any lack of zeal on the part of the management of the exhibition.”[2]

In fact, most newspapers made effort to praise the hard work of the workers and designers despite the unfinished nature of the fair upon opening day. On opening day, the Boston Globe reported: “no praise could be too great for the honest workers who have devoted time, thought, personal nerve and individual industry to the attainment of the desired by hopeless end.”[3]

Similarly, on May 1, 1893, the New York Times made sure to report that despite the unruly appearance of the fair, it was no fault of the fair’s overseers. Their article reads “all the heads of departments were at their desks from morning till night and some of them will not leave the grounds until early in the morning.”[4]

Weather
It seemed that rather than condone the efforts of the fair workers, newspapers were more apt to place the blame of the fair’s unfinished appearance on the terrible weather conditions leading up to opening day. On their report of the opening day of the Exposition, nearly every major newspaper mentioned the difficulty that the weather had posed in the construction and completion of the fairgrounds.

Headline from Boston's Daily Globe on May 1, 1893

The Boston Globe’ s headline read: “World’s Fair Will Open in the Storm or Sunshine.”[5] While the New York Times proclaimed: “The Opening Services To-Day Rain or Shine.”[6] The weather was described in extreme and graphic detail. “It was raining in torrents and blowing a gale from the northeast…this   morning,” one reporter wrote.[7] Another described the “varying degrees of must, deluge, bluster and zephyristic wave.”[8]

These intense descriptions of the terrible weather seemed to serve as excuses for the unfinished condition of the fair itself.    “Providence was against them,” and it was only by their own sheer will power and skill that the fair workers were able to get the fairgrounds ready for opening day.[9]

Even General Davis, one of the chiefs of the fair, is quoted blaming conditions out of his control for the problems surrounding opening day. In an article from the New York Times he says, “we have been delayed by the unprecedentedly bad weather, by labor troubles, by tardy exhibitors, and by a thousand and one things that were unforeseen and could not be guarded against, but after all we have pulled through satisfactorily.” If only it does not rain to-morrow, we shall all be perfectly happy.”[10]

In pitching opening day as a struggle between the fair workers and the rough elements of nature, which God was deliberately thrusting upon the fair in order to prohibit the fair’s opening, these reporters created a melodramatic news story out of what was in reality, poor planning on the part of the fair architects and a few bad days of rain.          

Illustration from the Los Angeles Times

The reporters may have been reluctant to blame the fair’s organizers for the unfinished nature of the fair in order to maintain a sense of national pride in the Exposition. Reports of opening day would be read all around the world, and every major city, from New York to Boston, wanted to portray America as capable of organizing and staging a fair as great as the nations that had done so before.

Most articles end with a distant hope that conditions will improve in the future, fixating again on the excuses for delays rather than on the fair itself. The New York Times concludes its article by turning again to trivial issues of weather and also hope for better conditions in the future “the local weather officer predicts fair weather for this vincinity tomorrow and every one hopes he is right in his guess.”[11]





[1] “ALL WILL BE READY.”
[2] Ibid.
[3] “CHICAGO’S DAY OF DAYS.”
[4] “READY FOR THE GREAT FAIR.”
[5] “CHICAGO’S DAY OF DAYS.”
[6] Rothstein, “Field Museum Looks Back at Chicago’s World’s Fair.”
[7] “READY FOR THE GREAT FAIR.”
[8] “CHICAGO’S DAY OF DAYS.”
[9] Ibid.
[10] “READY FOR THE GREAT FAIR.”
[11] Ibid.