Wednesday, March 27, 2024

Polly Pry stories helped free "Colorado Cannibal"

"While there, she prevailed on the editor of The New York World, a friend of her father’s, for a job. He rejected her but offered an assignment covering a slum fire. She did such a good job that he hired her full-time."

It was while at the World that she got the name for which she would become well-known after fellow reporters called her “Polly Pry” because she could, it was said, pry information out of anyone.

"Her mother and father moved to Denver in 1898, and she came for a visit. The story goes that on the train ride out she sat next to Frederick Bonfils, co-owner of The Denver Post. He took her to dinner in the dining car, and by the time the train reached Denver, he had hired her, making Polly the paper’s first female reporter," writes Kreck.

Her enduring fame in Denver history comes from an incident that exploded in the shared offices of her bosses, Bonfils and Harry Tammen.

"In 1901, Polly helped win the release of Alfred Packer, serving a life sentence in prison for cannibalizing some of his fellow hikers during a winter expedition in the Rockies. The Post hired a local attorney, W.W. “Plug Hat” Anderson, to help effect his release. When Tammen and Bonfils found out that Anderson was taking money from them and from Packer for the job, they were furious. A showdown in the partners’ office led to Anderson firing his gun at both men, wounding Bonfils seriously and winging Tammen. It could have been worse had Polly not jumped between the combatants, protected her bosses with her body and wrestled the gun away from Anderson," wrote Kreck.

After she left The Post, Polly founded her own newspaper, Polly Pry, and became a strong advocate for woman’s suffrage. When her paper folded, she moved back to New York City, says Kreck.

But according to information Special Collections And Digital Archives, Denver Public Library:

"Nell missed Denver, and was happy to come back when the Denver Times offered her a position as a reporter. Although she was now well past middle age, she accepted a job to go to Mexico and interview Pancho Villa, who had overthrown the Mexican government."

"Villa refused to talk to American reporters, and threatened to have Nell killed when she asked for an interview. Nell responded to his threats by telling jokes until Pancho Villa changed his mind," library information said.

After this, Polly Pry returned to journalism full-time, and covered World War I in Europe even though she was well into her sixties. 

Nell stayed active throughout her life, and only slowed down once she started having heart problems at age eighty-one. Her last words were as she was trying to leave her hospital bed against the nurses' wishes - "I must be up, and..." She passed away before she could finish her sentence. 

"Polly Pry was not only a beloved Colorado celebrity, she paved the way for women writers throughout the country. Although she sometimes faced prejudice because she was a woman, her strong personality and excellent writing won people over. Investigative reporters around the world were inspired by her writing and dedication to getting stories no one else could," says Special Collections And Digital Archives, Denver Public Library.

Mrs. Leonel Ross (Campbell Anthony) O'Bryan, aka "Nell" and "Polly Pry"
 

 


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