Eugene Le Moyne Connelly

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Eugene Le Moyne Connelly's Geni Profile

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Eugene Le Moyne Connelly

Birthdate:
Birthplace: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Death:
Immediate Family:

Son of William Cavin Connelly and Elizabeth Sterrett Gammel (BROWN) Connelly
Husband of Minnie Allyn (Leonard) Connelly
Father of Elizabeth Leonard Connelly
Brother of Allen Brown Connelly; Colonel William Cavin Connelly, Jr.; Egbet W. Connelly; Frank Connelly and Robert Connelly

Occupation: Noted figure in the arts
Managed by: Lani Dickson McCoy
Last Updated:

About Eugene Le Moyne Connelly

Eugene was educated in the public schools and under the tutelage of his mother. At an early age, with a natural tendency to literary pursuits, he obtained a minor position on the staff of the Pittsburg Chronicle, and thereafter for several years he spent the afternoon of each school day at a desk in the newspaper office. After leaving school he obtained a permanent position in the service of the Western Union Telegraph Company. He was first assigned to work at the old Oil Exchange, situated where the market-house now stands. Later he was transferred to the Pittsburg Petroleum, Stock, and Metal Exchange, where he kept the books and handled the accounts of several large brokerage firms, in addition to his work as book-keeper for the telegraph company. Although he mastered the business of a telegraph operator in this employment, he has not at any time followed it as a vocation. During the few years that he was employed in the oil and stock mart, he continued to scribble a little, doing special assignments for the Sportsman and Dramatic Critic; also for the Sportsman and Referee, in which two of his brothers were interested.

In his seventeenth year Mr. Connelly became a reporter on the staff of the Pittsburgh Leader. With this paper he has since been connected, serving it in the capacities of religious reporter, police court reporter, sporting editor, special writer, editorial paragrapher, and city editor. He is now editor of the Sunday Leader. Perhaps his best work was performed at Johnstown, immediately after the great flood of May 31, 1889. Mr. Connelly was one of the first newspaper men to enter the Conemaugh valley after the warring waters had wrought desolation and death throughout the whoe stretch of territory lying between South Fork and Latrobe on the Pennsylvania Railroad. Besides sending reports of the great catastrophe to the Leader, he despatched a graphic description of the course of the flood to the New York Journal, on the staff of which he was then serving. He collaborated with Frank Connelly and George C. Jenks in the compilation of the "Official History of the Johnstown Flood." He was also one of the first men on the field in the summer of 1892, when Oil City and Titusville were swept by flood and fire; and in the same year he helped to report the Homestead riots for the New York World and his own paper. He has also done special work for the New York Tribune, Boston Herald, Boston Globe, Cincinnati Enquirer, and Chicago Times, and has written short stories for some of the periodicals. At one period a predilection for theatrical work led him to accept positions as press representative from Jefferson, Klaw & Erlanger, Rich & Harris, and the late Colonel Joel, the impresario; but he soon tired of this sort of employment, and got back to active newspaper work. The family residence is 332 Ward Street, Oakland.

An editor at 30 yrs old / 1900 US Census.

Art critic, newspaperman, promoter of the arts. In Pittsburgh social register of 1910.

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Eugene Le Moyne Connelly's Timeline

1870
August 18, 1870
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
1894
March 4, 1894
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