Slason Thompson
1849-1935
Slason/Slauson Thompson (journalist, playwright, drama critic, railway advertising man) was born on 5 January 1849 in Fredericton, New Brunswick. By 1860 Thompson was enrolled in a local school. He received his first job as a student in the law office of George Botsford. Thompson moved to California in 1873, where he got a job at the Fox and Campbell law firm. On his way there, he met Lewis Morrison who introduced him to theater. He developed such an interest that he got a part-time job with the Era newspaper, where he reviewed plays. He soon partnered with another stage enthusiast (Clay M. Greene) to write plays. Sharps and Flats (1880) and Chispa (1882) were co-authored by Thompson. Later he worked at west-coast papers The Morning Call, The Chronicle, and The Argonaut. He left California in 1878 to work at the New York Times. He soon left for Cincinnati, then Chicago, where he worked at the Chicago Herald, working with Eugene Field. Thompson would eventually write two books about Field: The Study of Eugene Field (1901) and The Life of Eugene Field (1926). Thompson became a railway executive writing books on the railways: Cost Capitalization and Estimated Value of American Railways (1925), The Railway Library (1915), and Railway Statistics (1930). When Thompson turned eighty, he wrote Way Back When: Recollections of an Octogenarian (1931). He died in 1935 in Chicago.
Douthwright, Britanny. “Slason Thompson” New Brunswick Literary Encyclopedia, Winter 2010. Accessed 17 April 2023.
Predominant New Brunswick Residences:
Fredericton
Archival Material
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Thompson Slason correspondence
⌄LocationBrigham Young UniversityWebsite/Catalogue RecordRetrieval NumberMSS SC 1083Date Range of Material1902-1931Extent
2 items
Scope and Content NoteHolograph letter to "Sam" by Slason dated 1902. In this missive, Slason talks about his research that went into his book "Eugene Field: a Study in Heredity and Contradictions" which was published in 1901. Also included is a carbon copy of an unsigned letter to "Thompson." The writer of the missive was a Denver newspaperman and author whose penname was "Old Farmer." The item is largely about the newspaper work of its author.
See the New Brunswick Literary Encyclopedia entry.