A Beautiful Magazine and a Missing Hero - Selective History at Work
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A glossy company history can sparkle—and still leave a hole big enough to hide a tragedy. We open a 1981 Western Electric centennial magazine that celebrates a century of innovation yet steps neatly over 1915, the year the Eastland capsized by the Clark Street Bridge and more than 800 lives were lost, many from Western Electric's Hawthorne Works. That missing year isn’t just an editorial quirk; it’s a powerful example of narrative control, memory politics, and how brands shape the stories we inherit.
From there, we shift to a name that deserves to be known: Captain James Jacob Wagner, a Great Lakes navigator who volunteered as a diver for three days and recovered 105 bodies. We trace Wagner’s path from a Dutch immigrant family to licensed master on Lake Michigan, a veteran with a reputation for hard work who showed up when it mattered most. Along the way, we unpack the social world that anchored him—Chicago’s Knights Templar and civic fraternal networks that helped immigrant communities build belonging and purpose.
Together, we question the tidy myth that World War I overshadowed the Eastland story. Archival evidence shows robust coverage in U.S. and European papers, proving the problem wasn’t silence but selection.
We talk about how to push past gatekeeping and restore what was cut: verifying sources, preserving rare images, and insisting on full, sourced complexity. If public history, company archives, genealogy, Great Lakes maritime history, or the Eastland disaster sounds compelling, then this conversation offers tools and names to carry forward.
Resources:
- Western Electric. WE [employee magazine], Sept.–Oct. 1981. New York: Western Electric Co., Inc. Digitized by the Internet Archive.
- Capt. James Jacob Wagner” memorial, Find a Grave, accessed February 26, 2026.
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