Narciso Gener Gonzales


Narciso Gener Gonzales was born in Eddingsville, Edisto Island, South Carolina. He and his brother, Ambrose E. Gonzales, were the founders of The State newspaper in the state capital, Columbia.

Family

Gonzales was the son of Confederate Colonel Ambrosio José Gonzales and Harriet Rutledge Elliott. His father played an instrumental role in the defenses of South Carolina during the American Civil War after he had been a Cuban revolutionary leader with Venezuelan General Narciso López, who opposed the oppressive Spanish rule in four failed expeditions. His mother was the daughter of a wealthy South Carolina rice planter, state senator, and writer, William Elliott.

Early life

Although his formal education ended at 17, he became a telegraph operator in 1875 to help support his extended family. He worked in railroad depots in Varnville, South Carolina, Savannah, Georgia, and Valdosta, Georgia. While he was a telegrapher and handled news reports, he developed an interest in journalism and state politics.
In 1880, he left the telegraph office in Valdosta to become a reporter for the Greenville, South Carolina, Daily News.
While he worked in Varnville in 1876, he had written a report on a local uprising of plantation workers and telegraphed it to the Charleston, South Carolina, Journal of Commerce. That came to the attention of the editors of a rival newspaper, the Charleston News and Courier. Shortly after going to work for the Greenville Daily News, Gonzales accepted a position as the Columbia, South Carolina, correspondent for the News and Courier.

Founding of ''The State''

In 1891, he and his brother Ambrose E. Gonzales founded The State, a newspaper in Columbia, South Carolina. It supported a number of progressive causes; its editorials called for an end to lynching, the reform of child labor laws, and women's suffrage. The paper was also frequently critical of the policies of Benjamin Tillman, who had been elected governor of South Carolina in 1890.

Death

He was shot on January 15, 1903, by South Carolina Lieutenant Governor James H. Tillman, the Lieutenant Governor, and died four days later. Tillman escaped punishment since the jury was considered to be rigged and highly partisan. Tillman had shot Gonzales in broad daylight in the presence of many eyewitnesses but was acquitted, ostensibly on a shaky self-defense theory but really because the jury believed Tillman to have been right in taking justice into his own hands. Gonzales had waged a crusade against Tillman in his newspaper that helped to ensure Tillman's defeat in the 1902 South Carolina governor's race.

Legacy

A memorial cenotaph for Gonzales was later erected on Senate Street across from the State House in Columbia, purportedly on the route on which Tillman regularly walked home.