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Book Review
| Asa Shinn Mercer: Western Promoter and Newspaperman, 1839–1917. By Lawrence M. Woods. (Spokane: Arthur H. Clark, 2003. 238 pp. Notes, bibliography, index. $32.50.)
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Lawrence Woods has written a meticulous biography of Asa Shinn Mercer, pioneer promoter and journalist of the Pacific Northwest. Mercer's story is one of repeated failure and longstanding debt, and very early in this biography the reader learns that the subject is not to be trusted. Mercer claimed to have been in Lafayette College at the time of the Civil War and that the whole college volunteered as a regiment with its president as their colonel. Lawrence Woods finds no evidence that Asa ever attended Lafayette College. |
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Asa Mercer is best known for his two expeditions to import marriageable women to Washington Territory, one in 1863, when he brought eleven and again in 1865, when he brought back forty-six single women from the East to attempt to correct the 9 to 1 imbalance of men to women. The women were known as "Mercer's Belles." They made scant impression on the women shortage, but the publicity was impressive. Certainly Asa was guilty of hyperbole when he talked of how many Belles he transported from the East, but without him there would not have been any. |
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