Peter Dunne (he later added as his first name Finley, his mother's maiden name) was born in Chicago on July 10, 1867, to Ellen Finley and Peter Dunne, a carpenter, both of whom had been born in Ireland. He was born with his twin brother John, who died in infancy. Peter was the fifth of the seven Dunne children who would survive to adulthood. Ellen Dunne was well-read, and created a bookish environment for her children. The Dunne family had many Catholic priests and one such relative suggested the bright boy be trained as a clergyman, but the elder Peter Dunne refused, saying there would be no children forced to become priests in his family. Recognizing Peter's potential, his parents sent him to high school, the only Dunne boy to attend. His mother had become ill with
tuberculosis as young Peter finished grade school and she died while he was at
West Division High School. Likely due to his loss, Dunne finished last in his class, though he shone in the school's literary society and as a debater. Dunne had taken the college-track curriculum at West Division, but his poor grades scuttled any such plans. He found a job as office boy at the
Chicago Telegram and started work there in 1884, just before his seventeenth birthday. Through his relatives and as a local boy, Dunne was thoroughly familiar with the local police courts and
firehouses. When superiors realized he could write, he was promoted to reporter and sent to cover the
police department. His writing talent became clear to newspaper rivals perusing the pages of the
Telegram, and
Chicago Daily News managing editor
Harry Ten Eyck White lured him away in 1885 at an increase in salary. The
Telegram barely made ends meet; the
Daily News was by far the most successful newspaper in Chicago. Instead of longer
editorials, White preferred pithy comments ranging from sentence to paragraph length, and gave Dunne training in this. Some of the elements of Dunne's experience at the
Daily News may have resonated in his later
Mr. Dooley pieces. Editor White, a humorist of local note and a racing fan, had invented a character, "the horse reporter", who dispensed earthy wisdom to a Chicago newsroom's visitors, and had written a series of sketches about an Irish family living on
Archer Avenue, Dooley's future home. Also on the
Daily News staff was
Eugene Field, a humorist and easily the best-paid journalist in Chicago from the 1880s until his 1895 death. Field's work tended to be noncontroversial, contrasting with the Dooley pieces, but Field's success proved that newspaper humor could pay. Editor White assigned Dunne to general news reporting and tried to allow him to write special features, which he preferred, disliking the need for legwork in general reporting. Sometime before 1886 Dunne had taken his mother's
maiden name as his middle name, and in 1888, reversed the two names, for Finley Peter Dunne. Dunne's city was at this time baseball-mad over the success of the
Chicago White Stockings, and in the spring of 1887, the
Daily News started covering baseball games (rather than merely printing the final score). White assigned Dunne. Both at home games and on the road, Dunne sent commentary, usually of the first six innings or so, the most that could be set in type before the six o'clock edition, the final one for the day (the scores from the later innings were punched into the printing plate). According to James DeMuth in his book on Chicago newspaper humorists, Dunne, together with
Chicago Herald sports reporter
Charles Seymour, "largely shaped the modern forms of American sportswriting". Rather than dry summaries, as had been common to that point, Seymour and Dunne adopted ballplayer slang as technical terms. One term that Dunne is credited with coining is
southpaw to describe a left-handed pitcher; in the White Stockings ballpark, a pitcher faced west as he threw to the plate there; thus he threw with the arm on the south side. Dunne was no baseball fan, and saw that many players were well-muscled, but ignorant; this would cause his most famous literary creation,
Mr. Dooley, to remark of one young player's career, "fractions drove him from school, and the
vagrancy laws drove him to baseball". In January 1888, Dunne was hired away from the
Daily News by the
Chicago Times. That paper had been in decline since the death of its longtime editor,
Wilbur F. Storey and new management was seeking to revitalize its staff by raiding other papers. Dunne saw the potential for further advancement in an election year. Historian
Charles Fanning deemed Dunne's coverage of the
Republican and
Democratic national conventions "brilliant" and
Times management must have agreed, for they made him
city editor, although only aged 21. == More accomplishments ==