after being shot, August 9, 1910 Chapin was born in upstate
Watertown, New York to Earl Chapin and Cecelia A. Yale, member of the
Yale family. His brother was Frederick Yale Chapin and his grandfather, Aaron Yale, was a California pioneer and the owner of a large
carriage manufacturing business in Pennsylvania. His uncle was Col.
John Wesley Yale of the N.Y. Infantry, son-in-law of Col. John Means of the
War of 1812, and was in the book, wall-paper, and art business in New York. Col. Yale was also Chairman for the Democrats in his county, a friend of Gov.
David B. Hill and
Roswell P. Flower, vestryman of St Paul's
Episcopal Church, and was nominated trustee of
N.Y. State Asylum by Gov.
Teddy Roosevelt. Chapin began his career on a
Kansas newspaper, aged 14, moving later to
Chicago to work for the
Chicago Tribune, where he gained renown as a crime reporter. He excelled sufficiently to be hired in 1898 by the
Evening World, a New York daily, run by the Pulitzer family. Unlike the morning
World, which Pulitzer saw as a reflection of his voice and serious-minded sensibilities, the
Evening World was "a commercial enterprise" with an emphasis on crime and entertainment. It enjoyed one of the largest circulations in the country, thanks in part to Chapin's news instincts and use of large, "startling" headlines. He is said to have fired a total of 108 journalists during his tenure – one of them for daring to use the new-fangled word "questionnaire". The elder Pulitzer backed Chapin's decision, and later sent his son to the
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, where Joseph Pulitzer Jr. helped turn it into "one of the nation's best, most influential and profitable newspapers." According to Chapin's editorial philosophy, "Gathering the news of a great city is a carefully thought-out and systematized piece of human machinery that operates under the personal supervision of the city editor." He considered himself a newspaper man, not a journalist, and stated, "Journalism! How I grew to detest that much abused word. Every brainless mutt I ever met in a newspaper office described himself as a "journalist.” The real men, the men who knew news, knew how to get it and knew how to write it, preferred to be known as newspaper men. One never hears a star reporter along Park Row speak of journalism." Chapin relentlessly insisted on finding breaking news and once after
J. P. Morgan's security detail battered one of his reporters, Chapin allegedly told him, "You go back and tell Morgan he can’t intimidate me!" ==Gaynor photograph==