David Ross Locke | |
Other Names: | Petroleum V. Nasby |
Birth Date: | 20 September 1833 |
Birth Place: | Vestal, Broome County, New York, U.S. |
Death Place: | Toledo, Ohio, U.S. |
Occupation: | Journalist |
David Ross Locke (also known by his pseudonym Petroleum V. Nasby) (September 20, 1833February 15, 1888) was an American journalist and early political commentator during and after the American Civil War.
Locke was born in Vestal, Broome County, New York,[1] the son of Nathaniel Reed Locke and Hester Locke.[2]
He was apprenticed at age 12 to the newspaper, the Democrat in Cortland County, New York. Following a seven-year apprenticeship, he "tramped around" (meaning he was an itinerant printer)[3] until a protracted stay with the Pittsburgh Chronicle. Around 1855, Locke started, with others, the Plymouth, Ohio Herald.
On March 20, 1856, he became the editor of the Bucyrus Journal. By 1861 he had purchased and was the editor of The Jeffersonian in Findlay, Ohio, where he began writing his Nasby letters.[4] [5] From October 15, 1865 he edited and wrote for the Toledo Blade in Toledo, Ohio,[6] which he purchased in 1867.[7] [8]
Locke's most famous works, the "Nasby Letters", were written in the character of, and over the signature of "Rev. Petroleum V(esuvius) Nasby", a Copperhead and Democrat. They have been described as "the Civil War written in sulphuric acid".
Locke's fictional alter ego, Nasby, loudly champions the cause of the Confederate States of America from Secession onward, but does little to actively help it. After being conscripted into the Union Army he deserts to the Confederates, joining the fictional "Pelican Brigade". However, he finds life in the Confederate Army "tite nippin" and soon deserts again. By the end of the Civil War he is back in civilian life.
The Nasby Letters, although written in the semi-literate spelling used by other humorists of the time, were a sophisticated work of ironic fiction. They were consciously intended to rally support for the Union cause; "Nasby" himself was portrayed as a thoroughly detestable character – a supreme opportunist, bigoted, work-shy, often half-drunk, and willing to say or do anything to get a Postmaster's job. (Locke's own father had served as Postmaster of Virgil, New York.)[9]
At the time the Letters were written, postmaster positions were political plums, offering a guaranteed federal salary for relatively undemanding work. Until the glorious day when he received a "Post Orfis" from Andrew Johnson, Nasby worked, when he worked, most frequently as a preacher. His favorite biblical texts, unsurprisingly, were the ones that were used by Southern ministers to "prove" that slavery was ordained by the Bible.
Abraham Lincoln loved the Nasby Letters, quoting them frequently. Lincoln is reported to have said, "I intend to tell him if he will communicate his talent to me, I will swap places with him!"[10]
After the Civil War, Nasby wrote about Reconstruction. He settled in several different places, most notably "Confedrit X Roads, is in the Stait of Kentucky", a fictional town full of idle, whiskey-loving, scrounging ex-Confederates, and a few hard-working, decent folk, who by an amazing coincidence were all strong Republicans. He traveled frequently, sometimes not entirely voluntarily (Nasby's habit of borrowing money he never repaid, and running up tabs at the local saloon often made him unpopular) and continued to comment on the issues of the day.
Locke discontinued the Nasby Letters a few years before his death, since the times had changed and Nasby was no longer topical. While the semi-literate spelling in which they are written has often discouraged modern readers, it can also be seen as a point of characterizing "Nasby".
Several collections of the Letters came out in book form, some illustrated by Thomas Nast, who was a friend and political ally of Locke.
Locke died on February 15, 1888, in Toledo.[7]