Ann Arbor Forteana

[archive trans­fer from the old site]

Some years ago I started brows­ing the news­pa­per micro­films at our local library for the news­pa­pers from 1830–1900. Regard­less of the fact that Nicholas Baker is right, and they’re mainly illeg­i­ble and hon­estly sad repli­cas of what must have been beau­ti­ful tac­tile news­pa­pers full of char­ac­ter, there’s still a great deal in there that’s interesting.

In par­tic­u­lar, I started to col­lect and stash away a number—a book-​​full, actually—of odd­i­ties and fringe mate­ri­als, which I’m going to start tran­scrib­ing and pub­lish­ing here as time allows.

Do I believe this stuff is true? God, no. Don’t be ridicu­lous. And nei­ther should you.

As Forteana, though, these arti­cles are quite inter­est­ing. They’re anom­alies, folk­lore, crack­pot mate­r­ial, jokes… hard to say how best to describe them. Indeed, I think the most inter­est­ing thing about them is that they war­ranted pub­li­ca­tion in the news­pa­per of a mod­er­ately small col­lege town in the first place. They’re pretty dense in the stacks, too; I’ve accu­mu­lated well over a hun­dred in a mere three hours or so of brows­ing the micro­film archives at our local library. I’m sure you can find sim­i­lar items in your own local library (assum­ing they have copies of the 19th cen­tury news­pa­pers there).

A deeper ques­tion, of course, is how real these sto­ries are. By “real” I don’t mean whether they’re fac­tual accounts of ghosts and other strange occur­rences (I said that; weren’t you pay­ing atten­tion?), but rather whether the sto­ries them­selves were really sto­ries. They always seem to be located at the end of a col­umn on the last cou­ple of pages of a daily or weekly paper, and you never know… did this story come in over the wire, or was it merely said to have done so? Was in con­cocted to fill the column?

It’s an inter­est­ing and unan­swered ques­tion about jour­nal­ism and enter­tain­ment, frankly.

I’d be very happy to hear about sim­i­lar arti­cles from your own local news­pa­pers. Many pub­lic libraries can pro­vide access to either the orig­i­nal news­pa­pers (in which case you’re a very lucky per­son) or micro­film copies. It’s great fun to look them over and find things. If you send links or con­tent, I’d be happy to include it here!

This entry was posted in Uncategorized by Tozier. Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>