Monday, September 20, 2021

EXCLUSIVE : REMAINS OF REINFORCED NELLIE BLY FOUND IN ISOLATED GRAVE

 Strange  Northern  Territory  discovery .


The  rusty remains of  an  oil drum, above,  believed to  have  been  produced by a company once   owned by  an  American  woman who was also  a  famous  journalist   was  found   during  the recent  expedition to the Cape Hotham area ,  outlined  in  the previous post  in  this  blog  from information  supplied  by  Darwin agronomist , Robert Wesley-Smith.

 She was Elizabeth Jane  Cochran Seaman  (1864-1922), who wrote under the   pen name   Nellie Bly. ,

Emulating  the fictional character Phileas Fogg in Jules Verne's Around the World in 80  Days, she actually  went  around the  world  in  72  days, the subject  of  a  book in  1890. 

She also owned Iron Clad Industries which turned out  Nellie Bly Oil Drums ,according  to the American Oil and Gas Historical Society

At  the 1901 Pan-American Exposition in New York  she was promoted as the only  woman in the world who  managed  industries of  such  magnitude .

The drums contained 55 gallons  and were  reinforced in the same way as  the  rusted  one  at  the top of  this  post , photographed  during  the weekend . There is speculation that the steel  drum could have been  from  HMAS Moresby  which  surveyed the area  in  the  l930s. 

 One of 15 children sired by MIchael Cochran  , a self made mill owner, merchant and JP, who went  broke,   she  attracted the attention of  the editor of the  Pittsburg Dispatch  by a letter she wrote , signed An Orphan Girl, responding to a column headed What Girls Are Good For ,  which  stated   they  were  just  to  get married , have children , do domestic work . 

Her letter was so  well written , the editor  asked, through the paper, for  the Orphan Girl to make   contact .  When she came forward, he was  so impressed by  her  that  he gave her a  job,  with  the  pen name  Nellie Bly , inspired by  the character   in   the popular song "Nelly Bly" by Stephen Foster.

The wrong  Nelly 

The editor, however , by error called her Nellie , which  remained. Early in her  writing career she  covered the  topic  of  divorce  and  the effect on women.

Using  early investigative reporting ,she got inside  a mental asylum  and  wrote Ten  Days in a  Mad House in 1887.

.She married  Robert Seaman ,the   millionaire owner  of  the Iron Clad Manufacturing Company ,  which  employed 1500  . He  was  73 and  she   31. 

When her  husband died  , she took over  running the business ,one of its  products  the  Nellie Bly oil drum- churned  out  at  the  rate of 1000 a day for the  oil  industry . It  also  made kitchen ware .

She  designed   a   milk can and   a garbage stacker, taking out patents . Due to shysters in the company  who took advantage of  her lack of  knowledge about  finance , plus legal battles,  the  business  eventually  closed  down.

As a result , well known  in America , she went back to reporting  ,which included   covering   the  1913  Woman Suffrage Procession for the New York Evening Journal.

Voting rights for women 

Her article was headed Suffragists Are Men's Superiors in which she  rightly predicted it  would be 1920 before  women  in the US  would get  the right to vote. She covered  WWl  and was   arrested  as  a  British spy . 

Following her  death from pneumonia, she was inducted into the National Women of  Fame  and was one of four journalists honoured by a postage  stamp  in  the Women in Journalism set  in 2002.

 Over the years she inspired  film and television  shows, plays .The New York Press Club  has   an  annual Nellie Bly Cub Reporter  Award .   

UPCOMING : Another unusual find  and  birdlife   at   Cape  Hotham