Tag Archives: Steuben Courier-Advocate

Farewell, With Sadness, to the Courier-Advocate

We have come… very sadly… to the end of the Steuben Courier Advocate. Bath will be without a newspaper… THIS newspaper… for the first time in over 200 years. Since 1816. When James Madison was president.
Unfortunately it’s no surprise, for ALL papers have been struggling, and many, especially the smaller ones, have perished, leaving us all much poorer.
The paper started off as The Steuben and Allegany Patriot. America stopped at the Rocky Mountains, Texas and Florida were still Spanish. Charles Darwin and Abraham Lincoln were seven years old. Queen Victoria was not yet born. George III was still King of England, and Napoleon had just finished his first year of exile on St. Helena. Bath became a legally incorporated village in 1816, while pioneer prophetess Jemima Wilkinson still ruled her flock near Penn Yan. Mary Shelly created Frankenstein.
The Courier brought competition in 1843. Papers back then were politically affiliated, and the Courier became the Republican party paper, while the Advocate hustled for the Democrats. In 1958 the two merged as a general-interest newspaper, The Steuben Courier-Advocate. And, in 2022, it closed.
By 1958 the consensus was that newspapers should be neutral and objective, and that everything in them should be verified. There’s an old saying among reporters, “If your mother says she loves you, get confirmation from an independent source.”
Some say that neutrality and objectivity are impossible, so everybody should just put their cards on the table and report according to their biases. I see the point about impossibility, but I also see objectivity, neutrality, and confirmation as goals – things to strive and struggle for.
As papers have lost ground to TV, radio, and the Internet, moment-by-moment information is available. What’s been lost is the local reporter, schlepping out to zoning board meetings and other boring stuff.
Boring, but vital. The reporter learned the issues, and the regulations. He got to know the people. I’ve been a reporter in the Allentown PA area, in the Geneseo area, and here. I always figured that my job was to stand in for the citizens who couldn’t (or didn’t) make the meeting. And having me, or any other reporter in the room, week after week, reminded the officials that someone was watching.
Who’s watching now? And what does that mean when temptation comes in the official’s way, even if it’s “only” the temptation to be a little bit lazy?
The reporters are mostly gone now, even from the smaller daily papers, let alone the weeklies. Also gone are the snippets from the local libraries, churches, schools, clubs, and Scout troops. Yes, some of it’s available on line, but not all in one convenient package – not as a community. You’ve got to hunt and scrabble.
The world changes, and we are changed with it. There’s nothing sacred about the local paper, but there is something sacred about the job they do, assuming they’re not afraid to report the facts and let the chips fall. The Courier won’t be doing it any more, and some will no doubt say that Bath will be no worse once it’s gone. Maybe not. But I can say for sure, that it won’t be better.

Long-Time Editor Made His Mark

Henry O. Elkins was in his glory in 1943. Bath was celebrating its 150th anniversary. He was celebrating his 50th anniversary as editor of the Courier. The Courier was celebrating its 100th anniversary. And since he was a good Presbyterian, he probably also enjoyed the 400th anniversary of the Westminster Assembly.

*The Courier was a Republican party paper back then, but Henry Elkins seems to have seen clearly that requirement for any small-town publisher: you have to boost your town. He attended annual meetings of the Steuben County Society, a convivial gathering of former area residents who’d made it big in New York City. (Glenn Curtiss was also a frequent guest.)

*Mr. Elkins was one of a long list of investors in a short-lived silk mill in Bath. In 1908 Mr. and Mrs. Elkins were founding members of the Monday Club, a literary society meeting in Bath. And he was an original investor when W. W. Babcock wanted to start making wooden churns… a company still in town, with a little change of focus, today. Even while publishing the Courier, he was postmaster for five years — the same year he became postmaster, he was also Master of the Masonic Lodge. He was chairman of the county Republican Committee — AND someplace in there he bought the paper.

*As a professional Republican he probably made sure the paper didn’t carry many flattering reports about Governor (and then President) Franklin D. Roosevelt, but in 1943 FDR sent him hearty congratulations on his golden jubilee anyhow. Roosevelt died two years later and Elkins followed him a year after that, first selling the Courier to Bob and Sterling Cole. Henry O. Elkins worked on the Courier for 55 years, from 1891 to 1946… 53 of those years as editor. He’s buried in Grove Cemetery.