Joseph Nathan Kane

Joseph Nathan Kane
Born (1899-01-23)January 23, 1899
New York City, New York[1]
Died September 22, 2002(2002-09-22) (aged 103)
West Palm Beach, Florida[1]
Occupation Author
Known for Reference books
Spouse(s) Bertha Roche (m. 1932)
Parent(s) Albert Norman Kane
Hulda (Ascheim) Kane

Joseph Nathan Kane (January 23, 1899 – September 22, 2002) was an American non-fiction writer and journalist,[1][2][3] who wrote what the Chronicle of Higher Education calls "some of the most widely used reference works in publishing history." [4]

Early life

Kane was the oldest of three children born to Jewish parents.[1][3] His father was Albert Kane and his mother was Hulda Ascheim.[1][3] He grew up on the Upper West Side in New York City.[1][3] He had a brother called Albert and a sister called Ann.[2] Kane's grandfather on his mother's side was a wholesaler of woollens while his paternal grandfather was a composer.[2][3] He in turn followed his father's father's steps playing musical instruments. As a young boy he learned to play the mandolin as well as the violin and banjo.[3]

Education

Kane attended Public School 10 in New York City where he was very interested in world geography. The school was conveniently located directly across the street from his home.[2][3] Other alumni included Bennett Cerf (the publisher of Random House) and Richard Rodgers (the composer). It also educated many high court justices.[2] Kane attended Townsend Harris High School, one of New York City's elite public secondary schools.[2] Kane went up to Columbia University at age 18 in 1917.[1] He dropped out without graduating.[1] There he had taken courses in theatre and journalism. Off campus he studied foreign languages.[2] He then went to Columbia School of Engineering and earned a certificate in electrical engineering. He became a Morse Code operator. He enlisted in the army expecting to use his engineering skills in the First World War, however he never saw active service, having contracted influenza in the 1918 epidemic, which nearly killed him.[2][3]

Career

Kane was first an editor for Academic Herald at Townsend Harris. There he interviewed many important people including John Wanamaker.[2] Later he worked for the Jewish Press where he interviewed prominent people like H. G. Wells, Lord Balfour and Vicente Blasco-Ibanez.[2] Kane then began working at confectionery manager D. Auerbach & Sons of New York City at the end of the First World War as their export department manager.[3] They took advantage of Kane's knowledge of world geography, world currency, and his language abilities in French, German, and Spanish.[2][3] He worked for Auerbach for only a year and then moved to Universal Export Corporation as their export manager for two years.[1][2]

Kane began writing monthly articles on export matters and created Kane Feature News Syndicate about 1920.[2][3] For some 20 years he syndicated hundreds of articles to more than twenty publications. Among his clients were the New York Times, American Hebrew, Underwear and Hosiery Review, Advertising Age, Cracker Baker, American Magazine, Printers' Ink, Nation's Business, National Costumer, American Hatter, Fur Age, and Playthings.[3] He additionally sold his articles to Exporters' Digest and International Trade Review where he was editor for several years.[1][2]

Kane received a handsome amount from Simon & Schuster in 1921 to write a book on the history of inventions.[2] He was to write on things like the Wright brothers and their first aeroplane, Thomas Edison and his electric light bulb invention, Alexander Graham Bell and the telephone, and Samuel F. B. Morse's invention of the telegraph.[2] Starting in 1922 and lasting until 1932, Kane spent about eleven months out of every year traveling around the United States as a freelance, self-syndicated journalist. Kane sought out who invented what in the United States.[2] He did much research on this project only to realize that often a lot of people appeared responsible for the same invention.[2]

In the late 1920s Kane decided to write a book on the achievers of "firsts" whom history had forgotten.[3] He limited his scope of establishing "firsts" to the United States where he could find proof of the claims in recorded documents.[2][3] In his travels throughout the states Kane gathered information from historical societies, used-book stores, museums and libraries.[2] He researched through recorded public documents in state and county records.[2] Kane sought information from sales records, newspaper files, and filed patents.[2] Additionally he obtained information from government departments and private organizations.[2]

Consultant

Famous First Facts

Main article: Famous First Facts

After Kane collected all this information he decided to publish his material in a large reference book that could be used by libraries and others. Kane first tried to publish his lengthy detailed manuscript but was rejected by eleven publishers.[3] On his twelfth approach he contacted Halsey W. Wilson, the founder and president of the publishing company H. W. Wilson Company.[2][3]

Wilson was also hesitant. He was not sure there would be a market for this type of information. Kane then decided to mail or deliver in person a copy of portions of his manuscript to reference librarians across the United States. H. W. Wilson Company then received numerous letters requesting the book. Based on this they then published Kane's book Famous First Facts: A Record of First Happenings, Discoveries, and Inventions in the United States in 1933.[2]

Kane's book was 757 pages long. It catalogued 3,000 facts arranged alphabetically according to subject and indexed chronologically and geographically.[2] Some of the entries were

It was reviewed in various newspapers nationwide as |....something new under the sun", "...a book more fascinating than the dictionary", "...a very valuable tool for the reference library", "...patient plugging away at dry statistics", "... a happy inspiration that set Joseph Nathan Kane at the task of producing so intriguing a volume."[2] The New York Times on May 14, 1933, in an article wrote "a dogged resolution of almost superhuman force that kept him at work so incessantly grilling until it was finished".[2]

Kane then published a supplement called More First Facts in 1935.[2] It featured an index showing the various firsts occurring on each day of the year.[2] The second edition of Famous First Facts was published fifteen years later. It included with its new entries material from both the original volume and the supplement. The book has been republished a further five times.[2]

In 1959, Kane decided to focus his attention on the White House and wrote Facts about the Presidents.[1] In this reference book Kane provided biographical information about the United States presidents.[1]

Kane followed this up in 1989 with Facts about the States.[1] The book provides information on each state's geography, demographics, economics, politics, culture, climate, history, education, and finances. It includes all fifty states, the District of Columbia and Puerto Rico.[1]

Radio and television

Kane hosted a weekly national radio program called Famous First Facts from 1938 to 1939 on the Mutual Broadcasting System.[1][3] Each of his radio programs opened with a dramatised first fact followed by an interview with the subject of the first or one of their descendants.[2] They included:

Kane supplied many of the questions for radio and television programs of the 1950s and 1960s like The $64,000 Question" and Double or Nothing.[1][3] He supplied all the questions for the popular television program Break the Bank.[1][3] The contestants for the program were at first drawn from the local studio audience.[2] They competed for sums up to $10,000 - an exorbitant amount at the time. From October 1956 to January 1957, the program was later reintroduced and renamed Break the $250,000 Bank. This time it featured outside "experts" instead of studio audience contestants.[2]

Interviews and reports

Kane passed on some of his philosophy to an interviewer for Current Biography who was gathering information for his article. He told the interviewer that at elementary school he would often ask a teacher when they had made a "factual" statement, "How do you know? And that was usually the end of the discussion."[2][3] Kane pointed out to the interviewer that when he worked for the Jewish Press he interviewed famous people because he was, "trying to shed light on facts generally unknown".[2]

Kane told another reporter that while getting his higher education the professors would assign certain books for the students to read. He would read something else, "I did not like to play follow-the-leader in education. If everyone was forced to read The Merchant of Venice, I would read Twelfth Night. Those professors were wrong when quoting facts and, besides that, I had read most of the books at the Columbia University Library before I entered Columbia." [2]

Kane once told a reporter for The Associated Press, "I'm stupid enough not to believe anything until I see the proof." [3]

Kane interviewing for an article for Liberty (December 1938) told the interviewer that, "Nobody knew who did it first. The credit always seemed to go to the inventor with the best publicity agent. The little man, too engrossed in his beloved work to advertise his exploits, was simply lost in the shuffle.[2]

Kane pointed out in publishing his books that he was not attempting, "to remold public conceptions, but merely to present impartial facts and thus to replace romantic history with commonplace truth. Whenever rival claims have been put forth the one best substantiated has been given credence. Only those 'firsts' for which there are definite records are included; it is possible that further research into hitherto unpublished records may disclose additional data." [2]

A reporter for The Times wrote, "The doyen of trivialists, factualists and know-it-alls. Kane regarded himself as a debunker, a campaigner against myth and historical complacency. [1]

End of life

Kane spent his last years in West Palm Beach, Florida, near his sister, Ann Madier.[1] He suffered a broken hip at age 97, however he continued his work gathering facts.[1] His last project was Necessity's Child: The Story of Walter Hunt, America's Forgotten Inventor. Kane figured Walter Hunt was really the true inventor of the sewing machine, the fountain pen, and the American safety pin.[1]

Kane told Myrna Olive, a reporter for the Los Angeles Times, on his 100th birthday celebration in 1999 that he attributed his long life to the fact that "I did nothing wrong." [1]

Kane died on September 22, 2002, at the age of 103.[1]

Points of interest

Invention number 6281

Works

Kane wrote a total of 46 books including:

References

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 Contemporary Authors
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 Current Biography
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 Severo, Richard (September 27, 2002). "New York Times article - Joseph Nathan Kane Dies; Master of Minutiae Was 103". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-08-08.
  4. February 12, 2012 Donald Altschiller, "In Praise of Reference-Book Authors." The Chronicle of Higher Education,
  5. 1 2 3 Famous First Facts, p. 149, Item # 2781, George Washington was not the first president to be known as the president of the United States. After the adoption of the Articles of Confederation in 1781, the presidents of the sessions of the Continental Congress signed themselves "President of the United States in Congress Assembled." The first to do so was Thomas McKean of Delaware. George Washington was inaugurated in the Federal Building on Wall Street in New York City and served from April 30, 1789, to March 4, 1797.
  6. Severo, Richard (September 27, 2002). "New York Times article Sept 27, 2002 - Joseph Nathan Kane Dies; Master of Minutiae Was 103". The New York Times. Retrieved 2008-08-08.

Bibliography

Obituaries

Further reading

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