Marker Logo HMdb.org THE HISTORICAL
MARKER DATABASE
“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
“Bite-Size Bits of Local, National, and Global History”
Elizabeth City in Pasquotank County, North Carolina — The American South (South Atlantic)
 

W. O. Saunders

1884–1940

 
 
W. O. Saunders Marker image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Laura Troy, October 1, 2007
1. W. O. Saunders Marker
Inscription. Writer and editorialist. In his The Independent, 1908–1937, championed causes, promoted region. Office was 50 yds. E.
 
Erected 2004 by North Carolina Office of Archives and History. (Marker Number A-83.)
 
Topics and series. This historical marker is listed in this topic list: Communications. In addition, it is included in the North Carolina Division of Archives and History series list. A significant historical year for this entry is 1940.
 
Location. 36° 18.06′ N, 76° 13.412′ W. Marker is in Elizabeth City, North Carolina, in Pasquotank County. Marker is at the intersection of South Road Street and East Colonial Ave, on the left when traveling south on South Road Street. Touch for map. Marker is in this post office area: Elizabeth City NC 27909, United States of America. Touch for directions.
 
Other nearby markers. At least 8 other markers are within walking distance of this marker. A Town Divided (within shouting distance of this marker); a different marker also named A Town Divided (within shouting distance of this marker); Pasquotank County Courthouse 1882 (about 400 feet away, measured in a direct line); First School (about 400 feet away); Historic Events in Pasquotank (about 400 feet away); World Wars I and II Memorial (about 400 feet away); Veterans Memorial
Paid Advertisement
Click on the ad for more information.
Please report objectionable advertising to the Editor.
Click or scan to see
this page online
(about 400 feet away); a different marker also named A Town Divided (about 500 feet away). Touch for a list and map of all markers in Elizabeth City.
 
Regarding W. O. Saunders. Few North Carolina newspapermen were as fearless and forthright as William Oscar Saunders, who denounced hypocrisy and advocated progressive causes for almost thirty years in his Elizabeth City paper, The Independent. His style was akin to that of H. L. Mencken who wrote that, if the South had forty editors like Saunders, it could be rid of its problems in five years. Saunders’s brand of personal journalism is largely unseen today.

Saunders did not attend college but became a reporter in Norfolk at seventeen. His break came with the sensational Nell Cropsey murder trial in Elizabeth City, which he covered for the Brooklyn Eagle. In 1908 he started The Independent and ran it until financial difficulties forced its shuttering in 1937. In 1918 he acquired a lot at 110 East Colonial Avenue and built an office. In a single term in the State House in 1919, Saunders advocated abolition of the death penalty.

Sarcastic and witty, he counted the powerful as his antagonists. Most notably, in 1924, he took
Paid Advertisement
Click on the ad for more information.
Please report objectionable advertising to the Editor.
on evangelist Mordecai Ham, in the midst of a seven-week tent crusade in Elizabeth City, for anti-Semitism. Ham, who had accused Sears president Julius Rosenwald of operating biracial brothels, was denounced in The Independent as a “shrewd, vicious and uncompromising demagogue, a careless mouth-artist, an irresponsible bunk-shooter, and a stirrer up of strife, hatred and bigotry.” Scholars have compared the confrontation to that of William Jennings Bryan and Clarence Darrow a year later. Saunders survived the ensuing firestorm but, never popular locally, moved to New York for a year to pursue free-lance writing.

Saunders dreamed big for eastern North Carolina. He is given credit for the idea to build the Wright Brothers Memorial at Kitty Hawk and long advocated modern bridges to the Outer Banks. On a visit to Germany he attended a passion play and was inspired to imagine an outdoor production. He contacted Frederick Koch at the University of North Carolina who convinced Paul Green to write “The Lost Colony.” In 2004 his newspaper office was razed for the construction of a public library addition notwithstanding efforts of local preservationists to save the building.

REFERENCES:
Keith Saunders, The Independent Man: The Story of W. O. Saunders and His Delightfully Different Newspaper (1962)
W. O. Saunders, “Autobiography of a Crank,” American Magazine (January 1922)
William S. Powell, ed., Dictionary of North Carolina Biography, V, 287-288—sketch by B. Culpepper Jennette Jr.
James T. Baker, “The Battle of Elizabeth
City: Christ and Antichrist in NC,” North Carolina Historical Review (October 1977): 393-408
(Raleigh) News and Observer, December 11, 2003

Copied from the North Carolina Department of Cultural Resources
 
 
Credits. This page was last revised on November 29, 2019. It was originally submitted on October 1, 2007, by Laura Troy of Burke, Virginia. This page has been viewed 2,111 times since then and 24 times this year. Photo   1. submitted on October 1, 2007, by Laura Troy of Burke, Virginia. • J. J. Prats was the editor who published this page.

Share this page.  
Share on Tumblr
m=2770

CeraNet Cloud Computing sponsors the Historical Marker Database.
This website earns income from purchases you make after using our links to Amazon.com. We appreciate your support.
Paid Advertisement
Apr. 26, 2024