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Elizabeth Jane Cochran

(Redirected from Nellie Bly)

Elizabeth Jane Cochran (May 5, 1865 - January 27, 1922), born in Cochran's Mills , Pennsylvania, was perhaps better known under her pen name Nellie Bly. An investigative journalist, she pioneered undercover journalism. Apparently she changed her last name to Cochrane (with an added 'e') later.

Nellie Bly, late 1880s
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Nellie Bly, late 1880s

A sexist column in the Pittsburgh Dispatch prompted her to write a venomous rebuttal to the editor. The quality of the letter caused the editor to ask Cochran, who was desperately looking for a job, to join the paper as a reporter. The editor also gave her a pen name, Nellie Bly, after the title character in a popular song by Stephen Foster.

Bly wrote several investigative articles, before she was banished to the women's pages. She then left the Dispatch and went to New York City, where she applied for a job at Joseph Pulitzer's sensationalist newspaper, the New York World. Pulitzer hired her, and her first assignment was to write a story about the Women's Lunatic Asylum on Blackwell's Island. She let herself be committed and exposed the horrible condition under which patients were treated at the asylum.

This form of journalism, going undercover to get a story, would become her trademark.

In 1888, it was suggested that the World should send a reporter on a trip around the world, mimicking Jules Verne's book Around the World in Eighty Days. It was decided that Nellie Bly should be that reporter, and on November 14, 1889 she left New York on her journey. "Seventy-two days, six hours, eleven minutes and fourteen seconds after her Hoboken departure" (January 25, 1890) Nellie arrived in New York.

Nellie Bly married millionaire Robert Seaman in 1895, and retired from journalism for a time. She took over management of his companies after he died in 1904. She returned to filing news stories later in life, covering a women's suffrage convention in 1913 and reporting on World War I from Europe's eastern front.

At the age of 57, Elizabeth "Pink" Cochrane died of pneumonia.

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Last updated: 11-10-2004 16:08:31