William Rockhill Nelson

American journalist, editor, and publisher
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Quick Facts
Born:
March 7, 1841, Fort Wayne, Indiana, U.S.
Died:
April 13, 1915, Kansas City, Missouri (aged 74)

William Rockhill Nelson (born March 7, 1841, Fort Wayne, Indiana, U.S.—died April 13, 1915, Kansas City, Missouri) was an American journalist, editor, and publisher who helped found The Kansas City Star (1880). Among American publishers, he was a pioneering advocate of focusing investigative reporting on local municipal corruption instead of merely printing the exposés of nationally famed muckrakers.

Nelson was the headstrong son of a strict Episcopalian father, who sent the boy to Notre Dame College. He was sent home after two years but continued his studies and won admittance to the bar in 1862. Nelson practiced law, made a fortune in road-building contracts, lost much of it, and turned to Democratic Party politics. He managed the Indiana campaign of U.S. presidential candidate Samuel J. Tilden in 1876. With Samuel E. Morss, he bought the Fort Wayne Sentinel in 1878. The partners sold that Indiana paper after a year and a half and moved to Kansas City, Missouri, where they founded the Evening Star.

Under Nelson’s direction the Star became noted for its crusades against municipal corruption and in favor of civic reform. Nelson built the Star into one of the nation’s most successful papers. Selling for two cents initially, the paper increased its circulation from 3,000 in September 1880 to 50,000 in 1893. The paper became The Kansas City Star in 1885. In 1901 Nelson acquired the Kansas City Times, a morning daily, and continued to take an active role in the operations of both newspapers. The papers used the Associated Press news service and increasingly stressed international as well as local news. Nelson remained a political independent, supporting candidates of his personal choice; the editorial policies of his newspapers reflected his independent stance.

Pursuing his interest in civic improvement, Nelson bequeathed his newspapers and fortune—estimated at more than $6 million—to his wife and daughter; on the death of the survivor the remainder was to be used to found an art museum. Partly as a result of the bequest, the William Rockhill Nelson Gallery of Art and Mary Atkins Museum of Fine Arts was opened in 1933.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.