Background
Johnson was born on March 11, 1846, in Cherry Valley, New York, United States; the son of Phineas and Eliza (Johnson) Brigham.
editor journalist Librarian author
Johnson was born on March 11, 1846, in Cherry Valley, New York, United States; the son of Phineas and Eliza (Johnson) Brigham.
Johnson attended public schools in Watkins and Elmira, New York, United States.
In September 1862 Johnson tried to enlist, along with his father, in the 153rd New York Volunteer Infantry. He was rejected as too young. From 1864 to 1865 Johnson served in the U.S. Sanitary Commission as a relief agent and high-level clerk.
Brigham spent one year at Hamilton College in Clinton, New York, then entered Cornell University, in 1869. He was the first managing editor of the Cornell Era and won the Goldwin Smith Prize in English history. He left after two semesters and did not graduate. Brigham’s journalism career began at the weekly Watkins Express. In 1872 he bought a Democratic weekly in Brockport, New York, and turned it into a Republican paper. By 1875 he was back at the Watkins Express. That year he married Antoinette Gano. The couple had one daughter, Anna, but soon divorced. From 1877 to 1881 Brigham was editor and publisher of the Hornellsville Daily Times.
Brigham came to Iowa, in 1881. He had accompanied some newspapermen on a trip to Dakota Territory and spent some months writing editorials for the Fargo Daily Republican. At a chance meeting in Madison, Wisconsin, he learned that the Cedar Rapids Daily Republican was for sale. He was editor and part owner of that paper, from 1882 until 1892. In his editorials, Brigham espoused protectionism, railroad regulation, and prohibition. In 1888 he was a delegate to the Republican National Convention. In 1892 he was president of the Republican League of Iowa.
In the summer of 1892 Brigham met Lucy Walker, daughter of a prominent Cedar Rapids banker, on a trip to the West Coast. They became engaged on the train somewhere in Colorado and were married on December 20, 1892. The couple eventually had two daughters, Ida and Mary. Brigham’s first book, An Old Man’s Idyl, published in 1905 under the pseudonym Wolcott Johnson, was a veiled fictional account of his courtship and home life with Lucy. Brigham sold his interest in the Cedar Rapids Daily Republican in late 1892 to accept an appointment as consul at Aix La Chapelle (Aachen), Germany. The appointment only lasted from January to September 1893 due to the change in presidential administrations.
Brigham moved to Des Moines in late 1893 and launched the Midland Monthly in January 1894. The Midland was a regional literary magazine featuring fiction from midwestern authors such as Hamlin Garland and Alice French, poetry, history, travel accounts, book reviews, and Brigham’s critical and eclectic “Editorial Comment,” in which he advocated traveling libraries and support for public libraries, among other things. Brigham, a supporter of woman suffrage, included a section for “Women’s Club Notes” that was edited by Harriet Towner. Brigham published the magazine until 1898, when he sold it to a St. Louis syndicate.
On May 1, 1898, Governor Leslie M. Shaw appointed Brigham the State Librarian of Iowa, a position he would hold until his death. In 1900 he became chair of the newly created Iowa State Library Commission. Early in his tenure Brigham established the Iowa Traveling Library. He made a priority of building a large collection of 19th-century newspapers and periodicals. New quarters for the State Library were completed, in 1910. Brigham was active in the American Library Association, president of the Iowa Library Association in 1903 and 1927, president of the National Association of State Librarians in 1904, and president of the Iowa Society of the Archaeological Institute of America, from 1914 to 1926.
Brigham’s career as an author coincided with his library career. In addition to many articles in a wide range of publications, he wrote or edited at least 13 books, including a history of Des Moines and Polk County (1911); a history of Iowa (1915); a biography of James Harlan (1913); Prairie Gold (1917), a regional literary anthology; A Book of Iowa Authors (1930); and The Youth of Old Age (1934).
The Brighams took a trip around the world in 1926. Lucy died in 1930. Johnson died of a stroke in Des Moines, Iowa, United States, on October 8, 1936. He had still been on the job as State Librarian at age 90. He was buried in Oak Hill Cemetery in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, United States. Johnson Brigham was a partisan journalist, a progressive on some issues, a literary critic, a historian, and a scholar-librarian.
Johnson was a member of Des Moines Chamber of Qommerce, Bureau of Municipal Research, Des Moines, Archaeological American Institute (Des Moines Chapter). Clubs, Grant, University (Des Moines).
On September 1, 1875 Johnson married Nettie Gano. They had a daughter Anna Brigham. Later, he married Lucy Hitchcock Walker, on December 20, 1892. They had two children, Ida Brigham Storms, Mary Brigham Johnson.