Narciso Gener Gonzales

{{short description|American journalist}}

{{Infobox person

| name = Narciso Gonzales

| image= N. G. Gonzales.jpg

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| birth_date = {{birth date|1858|08|05}}

| birth_place = Edisto Island, South Carolina, U.S.

| death_date = {{death date and age|1903|01|19|1858|08|05}}

| death_place = Columbia, South Carolina, U.S.

| education =

| occupation = Newspaper editor

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Narciso Gener Gonzales (August 5, 1858 – January 19, 1903) was an American journalist born in Eddingsville, Edisto Island, South Carolina. He founded The State newspaper in Columbia, South Carolina, with his brother, Ambrose E. Gonzales in 1891. Gonzales was a frequent critic of Tillmanism. He was also a Democratic powerbroker in the state, directing patronage from the second Cleveland administration within South Carolina. Gonzales was murdered in 1903 by South Carolina Lieutenant Governor James H. Tillman, the nephew of Senator Ben Tillman, after Gonzales effectively ended James Tillman's chances of becoming governor with a series of scathing editorials.

Early life and family

Gonzales was the son of Confederate Colonel Ambrosio José Gonzales and Harriet Rutledge Elliott. His father played an instrumental role in the defenses of South Carolina during the American Civil War after he had been a Cuban revolutionary leader with Venezuelan General Narciso López,Simkins 1945 p. 201. who opposed the oppressive Spanish rule in four failed expeditions. His mother was the daughter of a wealthy South Carolina rice planter, state senator, and writer, William Elliott. Gonzales was an uncle of Robert E. Gonzales."[https://infoweb-newsbank-com.rlsc.idm.oclc.org/apps/news/document-view?p=WORLDNEWS&t=favorite%3ASCHC%21South%20Carolina%20Historical%20and%20Current%20Newspapers/pubname%3A11210D30DA68B248%21State/year%3A1916%211916&sort=YMD_date%3AD&hide_duplicates=2&fld-base-0=alltext&maxresults=60&val-base-0=robert%20gonzales&docref=image%2Fv2%3A11210D30DA68B248%40EANX-NB-11405339DC1DCCB8%402421219-11405339E7E5F958%400&origin=image%2Fv2%3A11210D30DA68B248%40EANX-NB-11405339DC1DCCB8%402421219-1140533BD154E7A8%4015-1140533FB08D9890%40Members%2Bof%2BPress%2Bto%2BShow%2BRespect%2BOfficers%2Bof%2BState%2BAssociation%2BNotify%2BEditors%2Bof%2BRobert%2BE ROBERT E. GONZALES DIES OF PNEUMONIA]". The State. December 21, 1916. p. 1. Retrieved March 22, 2025.

Although his formal education ended at 17, he became a telegraph operator in 1875 to help support his extended family. He worked in railroad depots in Varnville, South Carolina, as well as Savannah and Valdosta in Georgia. While he was a telegrapher and handled news reports, he developed an interest in journalism and state politics.

Journalism career

= Joining the ''News and Courier'' =

While Gonzales worked in Varnville in 1876, he wrote a report on a local uprising of plantation workers and telegraphed it to the Charleston Journal of Commerce. The report came to the attention of the editors of a rival newspaper, the News and Courier. Shortly after going to work for the Greenville Daily News in 1880, Gonzales accepted a position as the state capital correspondent for the News and Courier. While employed by the News and Courier, Gonzales extensively covered the rise of Ben Tillman, a white supremacist who led a populist revolt against the state's political establishment.Simkins 1945 pp. 138, 143.

=Founding ''The State''=

In 1891, Gonzales and his brother Ambrose E. Gonzales founded The State, a newspaper in Columbia, South Carolina. Owning his own newspaper allowed the well-known Gonzales to wage war against Governor Ben Tillman unrestrained by the conservatism of his former employer.{{cite book|last=Jones|first=Lewis Pinckney|title=Stormy Petrel: N. G. Gonzales and His State|year=1973|publisher=South Carolina Tricentennial Commission, University of South Carolina Press|location=Columbia, S.C. |pages= 109–285|isbn=0-87249-253-2}} Although Gonzales and Tillman shared similar prejudices, they differed in their comportment. Whereas Tillman utilized the politics of violence, Gonzales railed against dueling, murder, and lynching.Simkins p. 202. Ultimately, while Tillman respected the newly created newspaper for its audacity, he successfully painted the paper as anti-populist during the 1892 gubernatorial election.

Gonzales was a political powerbroker. Tillman was unable to persuade President Grover Cleveland to stop directing state patronage through Gonzales and another man; to the detriment of Tillman.Simkins p. 307. And in 1898, Governor Ellerbe made a deal with Gonzales, who opposed prohibition and the state-run dispensary system, that in return for Gonzales support in the election, Ellerbe would abandon the dispensary system. For the promise, which Ellerbe ultimately broke, Gonzales allegedly returned 2,600 votes.Simkins p. 377.

During Gonzales's life, The State supported a number of progressive causes; its editorials called for an end to lynching, the reform of child labor laws, and women's suffrage.Jones 1973.

File:Principal Characters in the Tillman Trial.jpg

File:GonzalesObelisk.JPG]]

Death

Gonzales was shot on January 15, 1903, by South Carolina Lieutenant Governor James H. Tillman, the nephew of Ben Tillman, and died four days later. Gonzales had waged a veritable crusade against Tillman's personal failings in his newspaper that helped to ensure Tillman's defeat in the 1902 South Carolina gubernatorial race.Simkins p. 383. Tillman had shot Gonzales in broad daylight in the presence of many eyewitnesses but was acquitted, ostensibly on a shaky self-defense theory but really because the jury believed Tillman to have been right in taking justice into his own hands.{{cite book|title=Ben Tillman and the Reconstruction of White Supremacy |first=Stephen |last=Kantrowitz |publisher=UNC Press Books |year=2015}} The assassination effectively ended Jim Tillman's political future and provided an opening for Coleman Livingston Blease to become the next political leader in the state.Simkins, Francis Butler (1944). Pitchfork Ben Tillman, South Carolinian (first paperback ed.). Louisiana State University Press. OCLC 1877696

=Legacy=

A memorial cenotaph for Gonzales was later erected on Senate Street across from the State House in Columbia, purportedly on the route on which Tillman regularly walked home.

See also

References

{{reflist}}

Further reading

  • {{cite book|last=Jones|first=Lewis Pinckney|title=Stormy Petrel: N. G. Gonzales and His State|year=1973|publisher=South Carolina Tricentennial Commission, University of South Carolina Press|location=Columbia, S.C.|isbn=0-87249-253-2}}
  • Manuscripts Department Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
  • {{Cite book|last=Simkins|first=Francis Butler|date=1945|title=Pitchfork Ben Tillman: South Carolinian}}
  • Southern Historical Collection: #1009 Elliot and Gonzalez Family Papers. http://www.lib.unc.edu/mss/inv/e/Elliott_and_Gonzales_Family.html

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Category:1858 births

Category:1903 deaths

Category:American newspaper founders

Category:American people of Cuban descent

Category:Deaths by firearm in South Carolina

Category:Assassinated American journalists

Category:People murdered in South Carolina

Category:People from Colleton County, South Carolina

Category:Journalists from South Carolina

Category:19th-century American journalists

Category:American male journalists

Category:19th-century American male writers

Category:People from Edisto Island, South Carolina

Category:19th-century American businesspeople