William Henry Irwin (Will) (September 14, 1873 - February 24, 1948) was a U.S. author, writer and journalist. He is associated with the muckrakers.
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Irwin was born in Oneida, New York. In his early childhood the Irwin family moved to Clayville, NJ, a farming and mining center south of Utica. In about 1878 his father moved to Leadville, Colorado, establishing himself in the lumber business, and brought his family out. When his business failed Irwin's father moved the family to Twin Lakes, Colorado. A hotel business there failed too, and the family moved back to Leadville, to a bungalow at 125 West Twelfth Street. In 1889 they moved to Denver, where he graduated from high school. He cured himself of a diagnosed bout of tuberculosis by "roughing it" for a year as a cowboy.[1]
With a loan from his high school teacher Irwin entered Stanford University in September 1894. According to journalism historians Clifford Weigle and David Clark in their biographical sketch of Irwin,
Irwin was forced to withdraw for disciplinary reasons but was readmitted and graduated Wednesday, May 24, 1899.[4]
In 1901 Irwin got a job as a reporter on the San Francisco Chronicle, eventually becoming Sunday editor. For the San Francisco-based Bohemian Club, he wrote the Grove Play The Hamadryads in 1904. That same year he moved to New York City to take a reporter's position at The New York Sun, then in its heyday under the editorship of Chester Lord and Selah M. Clark.
Irwin arrived in New York City the same day as a major disaster—the sinking of the General Slocum. A new reporter on The Sun, he was assigned to work the Bellevue morgue, where the more than 1,000 bodies of the victims of fire and drowning were taken.[1][5]
Irwin's biggest story and the feat that made him a professional writer was his absentee coverage for the Sun of the San Francisco earthquake of April 18, 1906 and subsequent days. Weigle and Clark describe his activities as follows:
Irwin was hired by S.S. McClure in 1906 as managing editor of McClure's Magazine. He rose to the position of editor but disliked the work and then moved to Collier's, edited by Norman Hapgood. He wrote investigative stories on the movement for Prohibition and a study of fake spiritual mediums.
Back on the Pacific coast in 1906-1907 to research a story on anti-Japanese racism Irwin returned to San Francisco and found it flourishing. For the San Francisco Call several years later he wrote an article on the city's rebirth entitled "The City That Is".[7] He concluded
Irwin's series on anti-Japanese discrimination appeared in Collier's in September–October 1907 and Pearson's in 1909.[8]
Then came the series "The American Newspaper."
In 1911 Irwin published one of the most famous critical analyses of American journalism ever written. The series titled "The American Newspaper" was researched from September 23, 1909 till late June 1910[1] and published in Colliers magazine from January to June, 1911.
Irwin continued to write articles, some in the muckraking style, until the outbreak of World War I. He sailed to Europe in August 1914 as one of the first American correspondents.
According to media historians Edwin and Michael Emery,
Irwin served on the executive committee of Herbert Hoover's Commission for Relief in Belgium in 1914-1915 and was chief of the foreign department of George Creel's Committee on Public Information in 1918.
During and after the war Irwin wrote 17 more books, including a biography of Herbert Hoover, a history of Paramount Pictures and its founder Adolf Zukor, The House That Shadows Built (1928), and his autobiography, The Making of a Reporter (1942). He also wrote two plays continued magazine writing.
He was married to the feminist author Inez Haynes Irwin, who published under the name Inez Haynes Gilmore, author of The Californiacs.[11]
Will Irwin died on February 24, 1948 at the age of 74.