Jump to content

The Compiler

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Compiler
Truth is Mighty and will Prevail
Front page
The Compiler's front page on November 23, 1863
TypeWeekly Newspaper
Owner(s)Henry Stahle
EditorHenry Stahle
M. E. Doll
Founded1857 (1857)
Political alignmentDemocratic
LanguageEnglish
Ceased publication1866 (1866)
HeadquartersGettysburg, Pennsylvania
CountryUnited States
Sister newspapersThe Republican Compiler
The Gettysburg Compiler
OCLC number10153007

The Compiler was a newspaper founded in 1857 in Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, that also serviced the wider Adams County. The successor to The Republican Compiler, the newspaper's owner, publisher, and editor, Henry Stahle, rebranded the newspaper after the advent of the Republican Party, due to the newspaper catering to local Democrats.[1][2]

History

[edit]

The newspaper would play a prominent role in the American Civil War, namely by being the main voice in Adams County opposing the war. Stahle was vehemently against a war with the south, and had his newspaper often ran pro-Democrat, anti-Black, and anti-War material. On May 4, 1863, the newspaper moved to a larger building and sought to take a more prominent role in state politics, hosting a conference of Democratic newspapers in Harrisburg on June 1, 1863.[3]

The Compiler missed their first ever edition the week of July 7, 1863, the week after Gettysburg was under occupation of Confederate troops during the Battle of Gettysburg, two weeks later the newspaper reported the arrest of its own owner, Henry Stahle, by a U.S. Marshal who sent him to be detained in Fort McHenry in Baltimore under accusation of aiding the Confederates during the occupation. He would be released two weeks later without being formally charged of any crime. During Stahle's imprisonment his cousin, M. E. Doll, acted as owner, editor, and publisher in his place.[3]

Despite weekly articles attacking the local Black community in Gettysburg, the newspaper still reported on the creation of Black Regiments in the Union Army, and printed abolitionist declarations sent to the newspaper. However, the newspaper strongly attacked the Gettysburg Address, calling it the "Relief of the Contrabands," and "The Negro Proclamation," warning their readers that the millions of freed slaves will move to the north and flood major U.S. cities.[3]

After the Civil War in 1866, the newspaper ceased publication as Stahle rebranded The Compiler into The Gettysburg Compiler.[4]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Rada Jr, James. "1961: Gettysburg loses two newspapers". The Gettysburg Times. Retrieved 28 October 2023.
  2. ^ "The compiler". Pennsylvania Newspaper Archive. Pennsylvania State University. Retrieved 29 October 2023.
  3. ^ a b c Shelley, Brendan M. (Fall 2005). "5 An Analysis of Media Perceptions Regarding African Americans in Gettysburg Throughout 1863". The Gettysburg Historical Journal. IV: 7–45. Retrieved 29 October 2023.
  4. ^ "Gettysburg Compiler (Gettysburg, Pa.) 1866–1961". Library of Congress. Retrieved 6 November 2023.