Content-Type: text/html Political Issues Running head: POLITICAL ISSUES IN THE EARLY BLACK PRESS Political Issues in the Early Black Press: Applying Frame Analysis to Historical Contexts Aleen J. Ratzlaff Tabor College Sharon Hartin Iorio Wichita State University Abstract This qualitative study examines political issues that appeared in the Black and mainstream press in Wichita, Kansas during the mid-1890s. Content analysis and interpretative framing packages are used to identify, analyze, and compare issues and frames found in a Black newspaper and a general circulation White paper. Race and political ideology played key roles in framing political issues, which accounts for the similarities and differences between issues and frames used by the newspapers. POLITICAL ISSUES IN THE EARLY BLACK PRESS: Applying Frame Analysis to Historical Contexts Since Freedom's Journal was published in 1827, the Black press has served as a voice for Black Americans who often have been ridiculed, stereotyped or ignored by the mainstream press (Pride, 1956; Kessler, 1984; Dates & Barlow, 1990; Wolseley, 1990).[1] Black editors have used their newspapers as channels to inform and persuade their readers. Frequently, research of the early Black press has focused on how the newspapers functioned for their readership. These studies reveal that early Black newspapers promoted positive individual and community identities, denounced the unjust conditions endured by Blacks, and advocated for social and political change (Krieling, 1977-78; Nordin, 1977-78; O'Kelly, 1982; Kessler, 1984; Klassen & Johnson, 1986; Williams, 1989; Stevens & Johnson, 1990; Wolseley, 1990). During the late-19th century, Black newspapers sought to elevate the Black race and advocated economic and educational opportunities (O'Kelly, 1982). The early Black press framed the social and political life of its readers (Klassen & Johnson, 1986; Stevens & Johnson, 1990). The papers addressed specific issues such as employment, education, discrimination, colonization, and lynching (Nordin, 1977-78; Barrow, 1977-78; Strother, 1978). Particularly in the 1880s and 1890s, Black newspapers responded editorially to the increase in lynching and other violence against blacks. "In general, the black press at the turn of the century was an advocator for civil rights for blacks and a publicizer of issues and events associated with this cause in the United States and abroad" (O'Kelly, 1982, p.4). PURPOSE OF STUDY Although examinations of Black newspapers have shown consistent themes associated with social and political consciousness and found that the publications have functioned to promote change, a void exists. As part of its function to inform constituents, one of the most prominent roles of the Black press has been to present the concerns of the day to its readers. How have political issues been presented in Black newspapers? Little research has addressed the communication of political issues in Black news papers. In particular, researchers have not compared political issues found in early Black and mainstream newspapers or how those specific issues were framed for their readers. This research examines the communication of political issues in Black newspapers by comparing and analyzing the issues found in two weekly publications that were published concurrently -- one mainstream and one Black newspaper. In particular, this study investigates the similarities and differences in the presentation of political issues by Black newspapers and the mainstream press of Wichita, Kansas in the mid-1890s. The goal of this research is to answer the following questions: (a) What political issues were addressed in the Black newspaper, (b) how did the newspaper frame those issues, and (c) how did the issues and frames of reference of the Black newspaper compare with those addressed by a general-circulation White paper? LITERATURE REVIEW Researchers have used frame analysis to study political issues in the media (Gamson & Lasch, 1983; Gamson & Modigliani, 1987; Gamson, 1988; Gamson, & Modigliani; Gamson 1989; Gamson, Croteau, Hoynes, & Sasson, 1992). This orientation of framing was derived from Goffman's (1974) denotation of information. Without some sort of organization, experiences have no meaning (Goffman, 1974). Goffman (1974) coined the term "frame" to denote a method of organization that enables individuals to "locate, perceive, identify, and label a seemingly infinite number of occurrences" into something meaningful (p. 21). According to Goffman (1974), people are often unaware of the framework of everyday life, even though frames of reference are perceptual structures that organize individual interpretations. People use similar processes to frame events -- whether it is a drama, dance, a newspaper story, political cartoon or everyday conversation. Goffman's ideas were adapted by Gitlin (1980) to the analysis of media. Media framing, according to Gitlin, is a way journalists organize and package information and events for their audience. Gitlin (1980) defined media frames as "persistent patterns of cognition, interpretation, presentation, selection, emphasis, and exclusion, by which symbol-handlers routinely organize discourse, whether verbal or visual" (p. 7). Gamson and Lasch (1983) identified interpretive framing packages to analyze issues in the media. The packages were composed of core frames and framing devices that structured the same issue in different ways. Gamson (1988) referred to these cluster of ideas as "issue packages." It is important to note here that frames do not infer whether individuals take a pro or con position on any issue, but, instead, allow for a range of positions concerning a particular issue (Gamson & Lasch, 1983). A viable frame will incorporate and give meaning to events that occur over time. Gamson and Modigliani (1987) analyzed the framing of affirmative action for racial and ethnic minorities over a period of 20 years. The same authors also conducted a longitudinal study of framing packages for nuclear power used in four general audience media (Gamson & Modigliani, 1989). Frame analysis has been applied effectively to the examination of political issues in current media. This theoretical orientation can also be used in the analysis of the historical press. In general, newspapers played a vital role in the life of the political party system in the 1800s (Baldasty & Rutenbeck, 1988). Though the late-19th century mainstream press was becoming more independent and commercial, most mainstream and Black newspapers maintained a political party affiliation (Baldasty & Rutenbeck, 1988, Thornbrough, 1966). These affiliations cast the issues in the papers in terms of political partisanship. Frame analysis allows us to look at the rich social history as presented by the mainstream and Black press in the mid-1890s. The late-1800s was a time of political unrest that included a growing third-party movement, the People's or Populist Party (Nugent, 1963). This grass-roots effort was most popular among agrarian and working-class Americans, who felt trapped by high land mortgages, low crop prices, and the availability of cheap labor that the Populists believed resulted from the increasing number of immigrants arriving in the United States (Nugent, 1963). The political climate of Kansas, in particular, was affected by th is movement. Allocation of public land for settlers, banking reform, free silver, and government ownership of transportation systems became primary issues for Kansas Populists in the 1890s (Clanton, 1969). In 1892, a Populist candidate, Lorenzo Lewelling, was as elected governor of Kansas, a traditionally Republican state (Nugent, 1963). The rise of Populism also affected the political climate of Wichita in the 1890s. In general, Wichitans focused on several political issues. The economy was hit by a recession that followed an economic boom in the 1880s (Miner, 1988). Real estate prices dropped, affecting both private businesses and city government. The construction of city-owned buildings, that began in the 1880s, slowed. This resulted in less demand for construction laborers. City leaders were concerned about freight rates, since rising transportation costs affected Wichita's competition with other cities along the railroad (Miner, 1988). Concern about trade, jobs, and transportation was central to the Populist political agenda. With an incumbent Populist governor running for re-election in 1894, the political climate rose to a crescendo, thus influencing the public debate of political issues in Wichita. METHOD Content analysis is a systematic and objective method that identifies specific characteristics of messages in the communication process (Holsti, 1969). This methodology is a useful tool to describe communication messages in newspapers. Content analysis answers questions such as: What are the messages, e.g., issues; and how are the messages, e.g., issues, presented? Thus, content analysis was used in this study to examine political issues at a one point in time. The primary objective of the research was to discover the communication processes regarding political issues in Wichita's Black community during the 1890s. At least six Black newspapers were published during this era. To keep the research manageable, it was necessary to confine the focus to particular newspapers that were published in a specific time period. The political activity during this time became one of the determining factors in choosing the sample of newspapers for examination. Sampling Historical data were gathered from two newspapers that were published in Wichita during the mid-1890s: (a) The People's Friend, a Republican-affiliated Black newspaper; and (b) The Kansas Star, a Republican general-circulation newspaper.[2] Both were published in 1894, during the height of the Populist movement in Kansas. Extant copies were available on microfilm and accessible to the researchers. Numerous daily and weekly newspapers were published in Wichita during this time, including morning and evening papers. This study was limited to one Black newspaper that was compared with a general-circulation newspaper. The Friend and the Star were chosen for the study because both were published weekly in 1894. This allowed for the comparison of issues that were addressed in different newspapers during the same time period. From May 24, 1894, to Sept. 28, 1894, the Friend and the Star newspapers were published concurrently. Also, both papers had the same political affiliation, the Republican party. Though extant copies of the Star were available from 1890 to 1901, the sampling was limited to the same time period as the extant Black paper. The Friend began publication on May 24, 1894, and published its last issue 17 weeks later. All of the newspaper issues from May 24 to Sept. 29, when the two newspapers published concurrently, were analyzed. This included: 18 issues of the Friend, May 24 to Sept. 28, 1894; and 19 issues of the Star, May 26, 1894, to Sept. 29, 1894. The June 7 issue of the Friend was not available. Coding The data were coded by the identification of interpretive packages, a method used by Gamson and Lasch (1983) in their analysis of the framing of the welfare issue in a variety of media. They approached media framing deductively. Use of Gamson and Lasch's method was designed to explicate how the two newspapers packaged political issues. Gamson and Lasch (1983) identified two primary parts of interpretive framing packages. The first one is the core of the frame, which organizes the central idea of the issue; the second part is called signature elements and includes two categories--framing and reasoning devices. Framing elements, as Gamson and Lasch identified them, are metaphors, exemplars, catchphrases, depictions, and visual images. Reasoning devices are underlying roots, consequences, and appeals to principle. By identifying the signature elements of a particular frame, Gamson (1989) noted that it is possible to code data in a reliable way. This research makes use of the rationale of interpretive packages in compiling data dealing with political issues for the prescribed time period. Each newspapers in the sampling was examined. Copy excluded from coding was advertisements, business advertisements in editorial copy, fictional serials, and features. The primary focus of the study was to identify the political issues and compare the issues presented in the Black press with those identified in a mainstream Republican newspaper. Insightful information about the social history of the Black community of Wichita and the political environment/climate of the era also were noted. Operationalizing "political issues" was a two-step process. First, a distinction was made between what constitutes a news "event" and what constitutes an "issue." A clarification of that differentiation was borrowed from a discussion by Rogers and Dearing (1988), who defined events as "discrete happenings that are limited by space and time" (p. 566). Issues, on the other hand, involve "cumulative news coverage of a series of related events that fit together in a broad category" (Rogers & Dearing, 1988, p. 566). For example, the report of Pullman shop strikers breaking ranks in Chicago would be considered an event (The People's Friend, July 20, 1894, p. 2). The frame of this event of laborer unrest, along with strikes by coal miners and butchers, would be analyzed as part of the labor issue. The second step necessitated defining the term "political." Political, according to Pennock and Smith (1964), refers to "...all that has to do with the forces, institutions, and organizational forms in any society that are recognized as having the most inclusive and final authority existing in that society for the establishment and maintenance of order, the effectuation of other conjoint purposes of its members, and the reconciliation of their differences". (p. 9) In essence, "political issues" in this study were defined as the general categorizations of events that relate to and influence societal forces, institutions, and organizational forms that are designated to establish and maintain order, mandate legislation, and resolve differences. A reading of the two newspapers was conducted to identify political issues in the newspapers. A list of the common issues was made. These issues were analyzed according to Gamson and Lasch's (1983) schemata. A matrix of the common political issues was constructed to facilitate the comparison of the frame cores and signature elements. After the matrix was completed, the newspapers were coded by the issue frames. Analysis was conducted by comparing the issues that emerged from the data and how those issues were framed. At question was how the issues and framing of the Wichita Black press compared with the issues and framing of a general circulation paper during the mid-1890s. Validity and Reliability Wimmer and Dominick (1991) cite limitations in the use of content analysis. First, results can be skewed due to small sample size. This study examined only two papers over a period of about four months. One cannot draw definite conclusions that are valid for all Black or mainstream newspapers in Wichita from this sample and no such attempt was made. Analysis was restricted to the material under consideration and conclusions were drawn relative to the issues as presented in the selected texts. Second, there is the potential of researcher bias in the definition and framework of the content categories. In order to mitigate the possibility of subjective interpretation and analysis of the two newspapers, a triangulation of methods was used. In conjunction with content analysis, historical data were investigated, including both primary and secondary sources, to verify results. In addition, intercoder reliability was done by two coders who classified 10 percent of the data independently. The agree ratio equaled .71, meaning that the coders agreed on seven of 10 coding decisions. RESULTS In answering the research questions, the following discussion will focus on the principal political issues addressed by the Friend, a Black newspaper published in Wichita in the mid-1890s, and explain how the Friend presented those issues. The similarities and differences in the presentation and framing of political issues found in the Black newspaper and a general circulation paper of Wichita will be isolated, compared, and analyzed Findings Issues in the Black Newspapers A compilation of the political issues addressed by the Friend from May 24 to Sept. 28, 1894, revealed 15 issues. This list included the following: the tariff on imports to the United States, labor, prohibition, government corruption, women's suffrage, income tax, political party fusion, federal government spending, foreign immigration, monopolies versus growth of private ownership, monetary silver/gold, civil rights, social mobility of blacks, lynching, and emigration by blacks (see Appendix A, Table 1). Most of the issues that were identified in the Black newspapers were either race-related issues, or issues that were specified in either the Populist, Republican, or Democratic party platforms. The exception that was not party-platform issues or racial concerns was party fusion. The Friend addressed four race-related political issues: civil rights, the social mobility of the Black race, lynching, and the emigration of blacks. No political issue listed on the Republican, Democrat, and Populist party platforms was notably absent in the Friend. Even though the Friend presented issues that were unique to the concerns of their readers, several other issues received significant coverage. The most prominent issues in the Friend focused on the debate over tariffs on U.S. imports, the status of the labor force, and issues of racial concern. Less prominent issues were silver/gold ratio, government corruption and prohibition. Issue Frames Found in the Black Newspaper The frames of five issues that were found in the Friend were examined: the tariff on U.S. imports, labor, lynching, civil rights, and government corruption. The rationale for choosing these five issues was based on a compilation of the issues that were mentioned most frequently in the newspaper (see Appendix A, Table 1). For each issue, signature elements for the interpretative framing packages were identified (see Appendix A, Table 2). Complete explication of an interpretive framing package in this paper has been to one issue--the tariff. To contrast the interpretation of political party issues and issues of racial concern, the civil rights issue also will be discussed. Tariff on U.S. Imports Protectionism package. As stated, the dominant political issue reported by the Friend, based upon number of stories, was the controversy over lifting import tariffs. The particular coverage focused on the Wilson tariff bill passed by Congress in 1894, which established a free-trade list of non-taxed imports. The Wilson bill attempted to reduce the tariffs imposed by the McKinley tariff bill that was passed in 1890. As a partisan issue, the Democratic Party supported free trade, while Republicans supported import taxes that protected American workers and consumers. The overall core frame of the tariff issue was whether taxes on imports to the United States hurt or helped the American economy. Since the Friend's editor, William Jeltz, had pledged his support to the Republican Party, it was not surprising that the newspaper endorsed the Republican position of protectionism. Thus, the position of the core frame stated that lifting tariffs on imports caused serious harm to the American economy. Seven signature elements were identified in the protectionism framing package (see Appendix B for signature matrixes). The package appealed to the principle of Republican Party loyalty. The destruction of protectionism was depicted as unconstitutional because it violated the will of the people (The People's Friend, Aug. 31, 1894, p. 3). The "humbug bill" was a catchphrase that conveyed the disgruntled attitude shared by Republicans over the passage of the Wilson tariff bill. The consequences of free trade were higher prices for consumer goods and lower wages for workers that in turn deprived consumers of their buying power. Cutting off wages necessarily cuts off what the people can buy, and thus necessarily reduces business. Now the one fact which everybody can see is that wages are at present very much lower than they were two years ago, before the people voted for a change of tariff. (The People's Friend, Sept. 28, 1894, p. 3) Rooted in greed and self-interest, free-trade supporters were labeled as fanatics from a "gigantic organization of boodlers [sic]" who were looking out only for themselves (The People's Friend, Aug. 31, 1894, p. 4). Large corporations and organizations, such as the Sugar Trust -- a powerful liaison of sugar-producing companies -- were depicted as beneficiaries of a Democratic free-trade conspiracy against other industries. One cartoon showed Democratic President Grover Cleveland's motto as "In Sugar We Trust" (The People's Friend, Sept. 28, 1894, p. 3). On the other hand, average citizens and smaller businesses were identified as the losers. For example, "It is the workingman who pays, in reduced wages, the cost of democratic tariff reform," and "All the trusts were most liberally provided for in the bill, while a tax was upon the sugar of the peodle [sic] and upon the business men and tee [sic] employes [sic] of labor" (The People's Friend, Aug. 31, 1894, pp. 3, 4). "The price of foreign wool imports is now so low that without protective duties American wool growers cannot successfully compete with them" (The People's Friend, Sept. 14, 1894, p. 3). The consequences of the tariff were not limited to the national economy. Ramifications were identified beyond the U.S.'s national borders. For example, the import taxes on sugar impacted Cuban planters, who were expected to retaliate with increased duties on American exports (The People's Friend, Sept. 21, 1894, p. 2). Several metaphors were used by the Friend to construct the interpretive package for the tariff issue. A tree-planting metaphor illustrated the projected outcome of the tariff bill. Alas, for the death of a barren hobby reared by Democratic husbandry but blasted by the hot waves of pubic opinion. Let our modern thinkers take warning and govern themselves accordingly. The sapling, Mr. Wilson's bill, does not resemble the original trunk to an alarming extent and it was better for the people that the tree of Protection had been let alone as planted by Farmer McKinley (The People's Friend, Sept. 21, 1894, p. 1). A second metaphor characterized the tariff bill as the cause of death of the Democratic Party. In a political graveyard, donkey hooves were exposed from a grave located near the tombstone of the old Whig Party (The People's Friend, Aug. 31, 1894, p. 3). Civil Rights Most weeks, the Friend addressed the civil rights issue. Two interpretive packages were used to frame the different dimensions of this issue: social injustice and the "Negro problem" -- a catchphrase used by both newspapers to designate prejudicial attitudes (see Appendix B for signature matrixes). Using two frames for the civil rights issue enabled Editor Jeltz to distinguish between attitudes and behaviors that violated the principle of equality for all races. The Negro problem frame focused on racial prejudice, and the frame of social injustice was used to identify acts of discrimination, although neither distinction was explicitly stated in the papers. Negro problem package. According to the Friend, the origin of "all our race trouble is fanaticism prejudice" (Aug. 31, 1894, p. 4). While prejudice was traced to the era of slavery, the Populist and Democratic parties were depicted as contributors to the problem (The People's Friend, July 13, 1894, p. 1; Aug. 17, 1894, p. 1; Sept. 7, 1894, p. 1). One metaphor used by the Friend in the Negro problem frame was the "mountain of prejudice" that prevented Black people from being viewed as equal citizens (The People's Friend, June 22, 1894, p. 1). Two exemplars of the Negro problem frame reported in the Friend were speeches by White politicians who had used language that demeaned blacks. There are some men of the [John J.] Ingalls stripe further west who show their contempt for the Negro in congressional speeches and votes...let every Negro in Kansas cast a stone on his [Ingall's] grave that he may be so heavily weighted as to make his resurrection impossible. It is not enough to withold [sic] their support from him, but it is our duty to fight him. (The People's Friend, Sept. 7, 1894, p. 4) and, At the Democratic rally, held at Pertile Springs, Mo. September six, among the noted speakers of the party on this occasion, was David Overmyer, of Kansas the Democratic nominee for Gov. In the course of his remarks said, "Out side [sic] of the Negro, whose ingnorant [sic] voice should not be heard in this Government so far as legislation and voting are concerned, the Democratic party out numbers [sic] all parties and surpases [sic] all in intelligence, might and dignity"....no colored man that has even average common sense pride and dignity for himself and race, but what will hurl the insult in his [Overmyer] face and resent the same at the polls. (The People' Friend, Sept. 14, 1894, p. 1) Social injustice package. The core position for the social injustice frame stated that, even more than 25 years after the Civil War, Black men were treated unjustly. This framing package appealed to the principle that the color of a person's skin should not be the determining factor whether someone in the United States experiences the rights of full citizenship. The Friend depicted Black people as "honorable as the white man and his equal in every respect" (The People's Friend, Sept. 14, 1894, p. 4). Comparison of Issues and Frames between the Black Newspaper and a General-Circulation Paper Specific issue comparisons between the Black and general circulation newspapers revealed that the frames for the more prominent issues, such as the tariff and government corruption, were similar. For other issues, such as labor and lynching, the frames were different. Tariff on U.S. Imports The tariff was the most prominent issue in both the Friend and the Star. Taking the Republican position, the newspapers used the protectionism package to frame the tariff issue. The Star wrote, "The new tariff bill is not worth the effort required to frame and pass it" (Sept. 1, 1894, p. 4). Both the Friend and the Star continued the debate over the impact of this legislation on the national economy by focusing on the short and long-term effects of the tariff on the price of consumer goods, unemployment, and wage earnings. Government Corruption Another prominent issue in the Friend and the Star was the mismanagement of government on the state level by the incumbent Populists. Certain news events injected this issue into the public forum. Lorenzo Lewelling, a Populist, was the incumbent in a heated contest for Kansas governor. The emasculation of several inmates at the Imbecile Asylum in Winfield and the use of rail passes by Governor Lewelling's administration were cited as evidence of the Populists' mismanagement of political power and resources on the state level. Taking out your knife and whetting it on your boot indicates that you are a Populist employe [sic] at the Winfield Imbecile asylum. Showing a card with the word "reform" printed in large letters while you slowly wink the other eye indicates that you have a job in the statehouse (The Kansas Star, Sept. 1, 1894, p. 1) These events were not reported in the Friend. The Friend only made general references to Populist indiscretions. Some of our Colored voters have been almost persuaded to think a change of party was necessary, but the present condition of the country; its state and national administration, convinces us that there never was a better show for the success of the straight Republican ticket than is now presented. (The People's Friend, Sept. 28, 1894, p. 1) Labor Labor, an economic issue that was closely related to the tariff, also was a prominent issue in the Friend and the Star. Accounts of labor strikes by railroad and coal workers, in particular, were frequent news events reported by the newspapers. The strikes could be viewed from both a negative or positive perspective, depending on underlying principles of the interpretative package of the labor issue. Two interpretative packages framed the labor issue: One focused on the benefits for striking workers and the other focused on strikes providing an opportunity for the employment of blacks. Benefit strikers. The Star primarily framed the labor strikes as a method utilized to benefit the union workers. Though the violence was denounced by the Star, generally the strikes were endorsed by the Star as a method to improve working conditions. That the trains have been forcibly stopped and destroyed is inexcusable... [yet] if the railroads had been managed honestly, with due regard to the rights of other people, there would have been no strike." (The Kansas Star, Sept. 22, 1894, p. 1). Open jobs. On the other hand, the core position of the frame used primarily by the Friend promoted the positive impact that strikes had for Black Americans. For example, while the costly and damaging economic effects of the rail strike were noted by the Friend, the interpretative package that framed the labor issue appealed to the principle that blacks deserved the same economic opportunities as whites. Implicit in the Friend's coverage was that Black Americans had difficulty securing permanent employment, and the strikes were viewed as one way to improve the employment situation for blacks. The rail strike was said to open jobs for blacks that had been unattainable. "Since the great Debs strike, the U.P. railroad employs colored people in its yards as switchmen, carcleaners and roundhouse men. If Debs will order another strike, we will advance another notch" (The People's Friend, Sept. 14, 1894, p. 4). An underlying principle of the Friend's labor frame was that the work of Black men was no less valuable than that of their White counterparts. This, argued Editor Jeltz, was evidence that Black men should be admitted into the labor unions. "Labor organizations need no longer attempt to debar Negro employes [sic] from their organizations because it is a demonstrative fact that he is coming well prepared in all lines sufficient for the task" (The People's Friend, Sept. 14, 1894, p. 4). Not only were labor unions closed to Black membership, but inventions such as the cotton gin and a cotton-picking machine replaced the manual labor of Black workers (The People's Friend, Aug. 31, 1894, p. 1). While union workers boycotted their employers because of inadequate wages or working conditions, Editor Jeltz argued that those in management were not necessarily corrupt. It was a worthy goal to seek management positions. He appealed to the principle that sound character and hard work would result in economic success and justice. ...The growth of capital carries with it a certain influence for good to society; and there is attached to it at the same time a condition of inevitable redistribution when it assumes the form of large personal estates. Fate always provides shiftless sons or grandsons to scatter wealth, and it goes back to where it came from, in the interest of the whole population. There are only three generations from shirtsleeves to shirtsleeves in this country [sic], in this country [sic], it has been well observed; and that is an assurance which ought to silence all fears of peril to the republic from the architects of big fortunes. (The People's Friend, Aug. 31, 1894, p. 4) Lynching Both newspapers gave attention to the lynching issue, but the Friend interpreted the issue differently than the Star. Mob law. The Friend framed lynching with the "mob law" interpretative package. This frame depicted lynching as a Southern custom that was a great evil. The frame appealed to the principle that courts should determine guilt. For example, the Friend stated that everyone accused of a crime had certain rights, "no matter their color or pedigree" (The People's Friend, Sept. 21, 1894, p. 1). One metaphor regarded lynching "as inevitable as rain" (The People's Friend, Aug. 31, 1894, p. 1). A particularly tragic lynching incident in Tennessee was reported in both newspapers in early September. Six Black men accused of barn burnings were killed by a mob of 50 men who had been led by several law-enforcement officers. The Friend depicted the murdered men as "innocent colored men" and "alleged negro incendiaries" -- family men whose deaths were grieved by wives and children (The People's Friend, Sept. 7, 1894, p. 4; Sept. 21, 1894, p. 1). Brutality. The Star framed lynching as brutal, but did deal with consequences of the crime. While the Star first reported the lynching incident as "alleged negro incendiaries" on one page, on another page the incident was referred to as led by "white ruffians who murdered in a cold-blooded horrible manner six helpless negroes who were under arrest" ( The Kansas Star, Sept. 8, 1894, pp. 2, 4). A commentary followed that stated, "few equals of barbarity [are present] in our country" (The Kansas Star, Sept. 8, 1894, p. 4). The Friend and the Star praised the prompt action that followed in which the mob members in Tennessee were indicted for murder. Both newspapers used distinctive terminology to designate lynching incidents. The term "lynching" was used frequently in the Friend, whether it related to specific incidents or to the anti-lynching campaign of Ida B. Wells, an activist who promoted legislation to curtail lynching. Yet, the word "lynching" was not used when the Tennessee story was first reported in the Star. Implications Overall Comparisons During May 24 to Sept. 29, 1894, the majority of political issues that appeared the mainstream press of Wichita were also present in the city's Black press. The issues of federal spending, civil service reform, agriculture prices, and veterans' pension were present in the Star, but not the Friend. On the other hand, the Black newspapers covered race issues that were not addressed by the mainstream newspaper. The core positions of the frames for race-related issues lynching addressed the problems of rac ial inequality and injustice. The packages also promoted possible solutions to the problem, whether through assimilation into the larger society or emigration. An examination of the Friend reveals that the issues covered in the paper was not limited to issues that primarily concerned Black Wichitans. The tariff and labor issues that focused on economic interests were the most prominent in the Friend and the Star. The planks of the party platforms provided a framework for the public debate of numerous political issues. The Friend shared some of the same dominant issues as its general press counterpart, the Star, including the tariff, labor, government mismanagem ent, and Republican rhetoric. As Republican papers, the Friend and the Star endorsed protectionism and condemned the Populist state administration. The Friend and the Star often used "Republicanism" to frame its political issues. This rhetoric promoted the innate goodness of Republican candidates and the imminent victory of the GOP in November. According to the Friend, the party deserved the Black man's vote because "Republican principles are immutable" (The People's Friend, Aug. 31, 1894, p. 3). One metaphor used by the Friend depicted the life-saving aspects of the party: The republican [sic] party has been the deck and all else the sea. The republican party made us a contraband and gave us a shovel and told us to dig the grave of slavery...Stand by the party that stood by you. (The People's Friend, Sept. 7, 1894, p. 1) This example reflects the partisan rhetoric that was typical of newspapers published during the 19th century. Non-objective journalism was not only accepted, but encouraged. Even though the newspapers focused on many of the same issues, they framed the issues differently. While the frames for the tariff and government mismanagement were similar, the Friend framed the labor issue differently than the Star. The core position for framing the labor issue focused on its effect on Black Americans. The Star addressed only one issue of racial concern--lynching. Though the term "lynching" was not initially used by the Star, the newspaper framed the issue similarly to the Black newspapers, with an emphasis on the illegality and injustice of the acts. Typically, the positions advocated by the Friend and the Star tended to follow party lines. The mission statement of the individual newspapers served as one factor that influenced both the kinds of political issues addressed and how those issues were framed in the newspapers. The Friend explicitly identified itself as a newspaper that published information of particular concern to the Black citizens of Wichita; yet, the Friend also acknowledged its political association with the Republican party. "In po litics we are Republicans...Wichita will have what she deserves, a good Negro Newspaper--published in the interest of the Race" (The People's Friend, May 31, 1894, p. 4). News sources was a second factor that affected the choice of events that the paper printed. On numerous occasions, the same stories were found in more than one newspaper, particularly on the pages that were not locally generated. This also accounts, in part, for the prominence of the tariff and the labor issues, though coverage in the papers was not limited to those pages. Both similarities and differences were found in the presentation and framing of political issues by the Black press and the general press of Wichita in the mid-1890s. Political ideology and race affected the presentation and framing of political issues. DISCUSSION Both similarities and differences existed in the presentation and framing of political issues in the Black press and the general press of Wichita in the mid-1890s. Over a period of four months, from May 24 to Sept. 29, 1894, the Black press of Wichita addressed many of the same issues found in the mainstream press, though in varying amounts of coverage and degrees of editorial support. During an 18-week period, the dominant issues covered in the Black and mainstream press included the tariff on imports to the United States, labor, and civil rights. Though mentioned in both newspapers, the issues of prohibition, monopolies and political party fusion received less emphasis in the Black newspapers than the mainstream paper. In addition to the coverage of partisan issues, the Black newspapers addressed concerns that were ignored or overlooked by the general press, particularly the civil rights and social mobility issues that concerned Wichita's Black citizens. While these results validate previous research that identified the racial advocacy function of the Black press, this research enhances that knowledge by examining how the racial advocacy role of the early Black press influenced the presentation of particular political issues. In the presentation of the labor issue, the mainstream newspaper focused on the benefit of strikes for union workers, while the Black newspapers primarily appealed to the principle of racial equality to frame the issue. The Black press viewed the strikes as providing potential employment for Black workers. Race also influenced the coverage of issues such as civil rights and social mobility by the Black press. Political ideology influenced other issues, such as the tariff and government corruption. Both papers aligned themselves against the Populist party position. The Black newspapers did not identify Black Americans as people encompassed within the Populist's concern for the common people. Gamson and Lasch's (1983) interpretative package model used to identify framing elements was useful in explicating the frames of political issues found in 19th-century newspapers. Most of the signature elements were applicable, except for visual images. The few political cartoons found in this study were limited to the Friend newspaper. In the 19th century, journalistic objectivity was not valued by the press or the public. Though Gamson and Lasch's (1983) method has been used primarily to analyze pres ent-day media that value objectivity, the model also is useful in analyzing political issues of the partisan press era. The lack of objectivity criteria by the editors of the 1890s newspapers did not limit the usefulness of the model. While historical analysis has been a primary method used to study historical artifacts of a particular era, this study confirms the usefulness of the signature matrix in the empirical study of popular culture in the past. Use of both methods, historical analysis and content analysis, allows for a triangulation that permits the researcher to see more clearly issues addressed by popular culture as defined by mass media of a particular time period. The early Black newspapers of Wichita played an important role in raising issues of political and social concern. Clearly, the Friend served as a forum for the discussion of issues that were ignored by the mainstream newspapers. One can deduce that the four main issues -- civil rights, the social mobility of the Black race, lynching, and the emigration of blacks -- were of particular concern to Wichita's Black citizens in 1894. Yet, the role of the Friend was not limited to racial advocacy. The newspapers also raised other current issues for their readers. While most of the same issues were presented in both the Black and mainstream papers, a number of the issues were framed differently in the Black newspapers. As Armistead Pride (1956) stated nearly 40 years ago, Black newspapers present news stories from the angle determined by the concern and interest of its Black readership; yet, the Black press also has framed political issues in a similar manner to the mainstream press. Gamson and Lasch's (1983) method of identifying the core frames and the signature elements of interpretative framing packages provided clear direction in isolating similarities and differences in the presentation of the issues. The small number of extant copies of the newspapers limits the time frame for analysis and thus provides no more than a snapshot in time. Further research needs to be done to apply this process to the analysis of issues of other early newspapers of Wichita. Examining other newsp apers that were publishing during this time would provide other dimensions or perspectives of Wichita's political climate. In particular, analyzing Populist, Democratic, and other weekly papers would be insightful. This research project has examined the issues of Wichita's political climate during the mid-1890s. Both race and political and religious ideology played key roles in the framing of political issues. 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Table 1A (continued) Issues in the Friend and the Star from May 24-Sept. 29, 1894 Newspapers FRIEND STAR ISSUES Political party fusion 2 11 Federal government spending -- 9 Civil service reform -- 1 Agricultural prices/irrigation -- 8 Pension for veterans -- 3 Foreign Trade -- 1 Table 2A Prominent Issues in the Friend and the Star from May 24-Sept. 29, 1894 Issues Frequency Newspapers FRIEND Tariff 97 Labor 69 Lynching 24 Civil Rights 19 STAR Tariff 126 Labor 117 Gov't Corruption 31 APPENDIX B Chart 1B Signature Matrix for Tariff Issue: "Protectionism" Package PROTECTIONISM PACKAGE CORE FRAME CORE POSITION METAPHOR EXEMPLARS CATCHPHRASES The issue is how tariffs affect US economy. Protectionism benefits industry and people. Tree of Protection, political cemetery Tariff inequities Humbug bill, free-trade conspiracy DEPICTIONS ROOTS CONSEQUENCES APPEALS TO PRINCIPLE Free-trade, fanatics, boodlers Greed, self-interest, incompetence High prices, low wages Republican party loyalty Chart 2B Signature Matrixes for Civil Rights Issue: " Negro Problem" and "Social Injustice" Packages NEGRO PROBLEM PACKAGE CORE FRAME CORE POSITION METAPHOR EXEMPLARS CATCHPHRASES The issue is how prejudice dehumanizes Blacks. Blacks deserve respect. Mountain of prejudice Racial slurs Colorphobia SOCIAL INJUSTICE PACKAGE CORE FRAME CORE POSITION METAPHOR EXEMPLARS CATCHPHRASES The issue is how Blacks are victims of discrimination. Blacks deserve equal treatment and opportunity. Refusal of serve at drugstore DEPICTIONS ROOTS CONSEQUENCES APPEALS TO PRINCIPLE Blacks treated less than men. Blacks viewed as second-class citizens Unemployment, idle young people Discrimination is unchristian [1] In order to provide continuity throughout this paper, the term "Black " is used to be inclusive of all references to African A merican, Afro-American, Negro, and colored as connotative terms . I have chosen this form to follow the precedent of historian Roland Wo lseley (1990) in The Black Press, U.S.A., a survey of the Bla ck press. The term "mainstream" designates general circulati on newspapers. [2] Henceforth, The People's Friend and The Kansas Star, wi ll be referred to as the Friend and the Star.