Born as Ida Minerva Tarbell on a farm in Erie County, PA. Both her parents were teachers, but her father later became an oilman.
In family lore it was said that they were decedents of the first American Episcopalian bishop, Sir Walter Raleigh. Mr. Raleigh was also a member of George Washington’s staff.
Even though she was troublesome in the classroom, Ms. Tarbell graduated high-school at the top of her class.
She attended Allegheny College, studying biology, out of a class of 41, Mr. Tarbell was the only woman.
Wanting to contribute to society, Ms. Tarbell became a teacher at the Poland Union Seminary in Poland, OH. She taught four subjects (trigonometry, geometry, geology, and botany) and four languages (Greek, Latin, German, and French). The job was too hard and the pay was too little, so she returned, exhausted and broke, to Pennsylvania.
Tarbell started writing for TheChautauquan, which focused on home study courses. She moved up to being the managing editor as well as writing longer features.
In 1891 Ms. Tarbell left her secured job at TheChautauquan, and moved to Paris, France supporting herself by tutoring, writing for a bunch of American newspapers and short stories.
McClure also wrote a biographical series on Abraham Lincoln. She tracked sources, leads, interviewed hundreds of people who know Lincoln first hand, and found more than 300 unpublished letters and speeches, while uncovering the true story of Lincoln’s early childhood days. The series boosted McClure’s circulation to over 300,000.
The landmark book The History of Standard Oil Company, also published as a series in McClure’s Magazine, has been hailed by historian J. North Conway as a “masterpiece of investigative journalism”, and called “the single most influential book on business ever published in the United States” by historian Daniel Yergin. The book was instrumental in the dissolution of the monopoly held by Standard Oil, and helped usher in at least three federal legislation, as was as the creation of the Federal Trade Commission.
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Fun Facts Friday: Ida Tarbell
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Ida Tarbell (5 November, 1857 – 6 January, 1944) was an author, biographer, lecturer, educator and an early pioneer of investigative journalist.
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Man of la Book
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Man of la Book - A Bookish Blog
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Man of la Book
A father, husband, avid reader, blogger, software engineer & wood worker who is known the world over as a man of many interests and to his wife as “an idiot”.