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Locke, David Rose

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Locke, David Rose (1833-1888)

US journalist and writer. As was editor of the Jeffersonian in Findlay, Ohio, he gained popularity by printing the Nasby letters (from 1861). His assumed persona, the Reverend Petroleum Vesuvius Nasby, was an illiterate advocate of slavery and of everything that Locke detested. President Abraham Lincoln enjoyed the letters and was said to read them aloud to his Cabinet. Locke became editor and principal owner of the Toledo Blade (1865-88) and was a popular lecturer. He continued to publish his satiric letters until 1887; they were first collected in 1864 as The Nasby Papers.

Locke was born in Vestal, New York. He had little formal education, but when very young (1843-50), was an apprentice journalist in Cortland, New York. He then worked as an itinerant printer and became a founder of the Plymouth Advertiser in Ohio (1852).


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