The Civil War proved to be an important era for print media in the
United States. Thanks to the advent of the electric telegraph,
newspapers were able to receive reports from great distances quickly.
Because of this, newspapers in both the North and South were able to
provide the public with important updates on the war’s political issues,
battle results, large-scale troop movements, and casualty reports.
Perhaps more importantly, newspapers were responsible for editorializing
the war. They were the propaganda machines of the day. Though not
universally true, many newspapers published biased accounts of events,
“factual” testimonials of enemy atrocities, articles proselytizing for
specific political and military goals, and emotionally charged letters
from citizens affected by the conflict. A quiet war for public support
was waged both in the North and the South with the newspapers serving on
the front lines. Issues like conscription, use of slaves as soldiers,
and the validity of total war were hotly debated in the papers. The
newspapers controlled the ebb and flow of public opinion and a
particularly popular circulation could determine the outcomes of city or
state politics.
The disparity between reports of the war in the North and South were,
in some cases, quite striking. Some newspapers were known to falsely
report casualty rates or results of battle to bolster public morale.
Desertion was a particularly galling problem for both the Union and
Confederate armies throughout the war and newspapers often printed
editorials encouraging loyalty and shaming deserters and those who aided
them.
Late in the war, Confederate troops received much of their news through
the papers because commanders refused to relay reports of Union
victories.
The Civil War catapulted the newspaper industry to new heights in the
United States. Newspapers had given the public near-constant access to
news and events from all corners of the new American empire. In
return, newspapers had secured the ability to affect public opinion.
In a democracy, this power translated to the ability to affect politics,
finance, and popular culture at its most basic level. Over the course
of the next century, the newspaper industry would grow exponentially and
assume a place of tremendous power in American society.
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