In 1844, Andrews abandoned religious activities for the next 25 years and turned his attention to publishing secular, commercial newspapers, and other secular endeavors. Andrews shared that he moved to
Columbus, Georgia and undertook to publish a secular newspaper "to escape the penalty adjudged to those who did not provide for their own household."
Democrat Muscogee and Mercantile Advertiser In 1844, Andrews began publishing
The Muscogee Democrat and Mercantile Advertiser in Columbus. Andrews's populism and egalitarianism were on display in the paper's motto, which read, "As little government as possible, that little emanated from and controlled by the people and uniform in its application to all." The paper's title was shortened to the
Muscogee Democrat in 1849 and continued under that title until it became the
Southern Sentinel in 1850. W.H. Chambers then published it.
Alabama Medical Institute In November 1845, while still publishing his paper, Andrews was briefly a faculty member for the newly organized Alabama Medical Institute. The Alabama Legislature recently chartered the school with a curriculum based on
Samuel Thomson's herbalist practices. Located in
Wetumpka, Alabama, eighty miles from Columbus, Andrews taught chemistry and medical botany. In support of this new school or seeking a business opportunity, Andrews proposed publishing the
Southern Medical Expositor, a newspaper covering lectures, reports, botanical sketches, and other related topics from the institute. The paper was never published. The Alabama Medical Institute closed its doors after only a single session.
Georgia Citizen At some time, Andrews relocated his family 100 miles from Columbus to Macon, where, in March 1850, he started publishing the
Georgia Citizen. Like his previous Columbus paper, the ''Georgia Citizen's'' motto, "Independent in all things, neutral in nothing," reflected Andrews's independent spirit. He stressed that he and his paper were "
above the influence of
party or
sect" (italics in original), and he, therefore, had the "largest liberty" to speak unrestrainedly on "all matters, moral, social and political." He pledged to advance the interests of the people of Georgia, oppose monopolies and "every form of tyranny over the mind of man." This weekly paper was a workman-like effort providing a wide selection of classified ads and local, national, and international news with a liberal policy to publish letters to the editor. A policy, in August 1850, resulted in a mob attacking his office, damaging his equipment, and demanding that he leave the city. Sparking this chain of events was a letter published in the
Georgia Citizen dated August 21, 1850, signed as Gabriel from
Atlanta, Georgia. The letter writer recounted, along with other topics, the construction travails of a building designed for the sale of slaves in that city. Heavy rains had destroyed a building wall. The writer opined, "For my part, I am free to say I should rejoice to see it razed to the ground as often as its owner rebuilds it." The letter agitated some to charge Andrews, quite erroneously, that he "savored too strongly"
abolition. A mob formed and ransacked his printing office. Despite the damage, Andrews quickly responded with a single sheet, half-page, two-column Extra edition of the
Georgia Citizen affirming his Southern bona fides, "I am as sound as the next man on the subject of Southern Institution." He offered other motives underlying the attacks, such as his pro-Unionist sentiments in an increasingly hostile successionist South. This attack did not deter Andrews. He continued his Macon paper for several years after this incident. Six years later, in February 1856, Andrews sought to reduce the paper's demands on him. He advertised for either a partner or a new owner of his venture. In October, he realized a unique solution when he sold the "job office," the paper's printing facilities, to his son Lewis H. Andrews. The senior Andrews retained editorial control over the
Georgia Citizen while outsourcing the papers' production to his son. His son printed his father's paper and simultaneously solicited other business such as printing books, pamphlets, posters, handbills, etc. The paper continued in various formats, including daily, bi-weekly, and tri-weekly editions until about 1861. At that time, the "job office" equipment was sold at a sheriff's sale to satisfy unpaid taxes. After the
American Civil War (1861–1865), Andrews revived the
Daily Georgia Citizen in early 1866. A year later, in mid-1867, Andrews moved to
Americus, Georgia, where he published the paper as a tri-weekly journal. Andrews ended his association with paper in 1869 when he sold his interest to O.V. Lamar.
Christian Spiritualist While still publishing the
Georgia Citizen, Andrews began publication of a new semi-monthly journal called the
Christian Spiritualist in October 1858. His publication was the revival of a newspaper of the same name published in New York City by the Society for the Diffusion of Spiritual Knowledge from 1854 to 1857. Andrews's new journal defended and illustrated the "Philosophy of Spiritualism in its Christian aspects." Andrews's conversion to
spiritualism played out in the pages of his
Georgia Citizen. In the spring of 1858, many articles on spiritualism appeared in his paper. The first article was framed as, "Having our curiosity. . .excited . . . we accepted the polite invitation of a friend to visit a Circle" meeting. Andrews described "manifestations" orchestrated by a medium communicating between the living and the spirit world. The living would ask a question, and the medium would interpret the response from the spirit world with raps on the table: one for "no," two for "I don't know," and three for "yes." A "writing medium" communicated the thoughts of spirits through transcription in various handwriting styles. For two months, Andrews wrote a column entitled "Modern Spiritualism," in which he engaged vocal skeptics of spiritualism in a devil's advocate give and take. At the outset of this series, Andrews noted that he was "still a humble enquirer into the hidden mysteries of the spiritual theory," adding he had not yet acquired sufficient information to speak with conviction about the "truth" of the matter. Andrews's remaining reluctance vanished after a July 1858 trip to
New York City and his visit with the editor of the
Spiritual Telegraph. There, he attended several circle meetings where he communicated with departed family members. He shared that the manifestations "were amply sufficient to satisfy my reason and convince my judgment of their truth and deep significance." Among the revelations that moved Andrews was the medium's communication with the afterworld, which confirmed that his mother never called him Lewis but always referred to him by this third name, Wilson. Two years later, Andrews's fervor had not subsided. He hosted
Miss Emma Hardinge, a noted Spiritual, on her visit to Macon in the summer of 1860. It has not been determined how long Andrews published the
Christian Spiritualist, but it appears to have ceased publication along with the
Georgia Citizen in 1861. It is not understood how long Andrews retained his embrace of spiritualist beliefs.
Daily Confederate Two years into the American Civil War (1861–1865), Andrews began publishing another newspaper from Macon called
The Daily Confederate. The first edition appeared in February 1863 and reflected Andrews's other publishing enterprises. It contained an assortment of ads, general news, human interest stories, reports on local Confederate soldiers killed or wounded, and the "latest telegraphic" information." Even Andrews's business acumen honed after many years as a newspaper publisher were challenged by wartime shortages and inflationary pressures. Ten months after commencing the publication, he announced in an article entitled "Startling Announcement" that he was facing stiff increases in the cost of newsprint and ink. Before the war, paper cost $4.00 per ream. Now the cost was $45.00. In response to rising costs and a desire to continue to make his paper affordable, Andrews informed his readers he would reduce the number of pages printed. Andrews was a "newspaper man" who felt he gave people a needed service. Closing his article, he wrote, "The
Press should not be suffered to fail. It is the right arm of the republic in this terrible revolution and as indispensable to its success as an 'army with banners.'" Despite his efforts to continue, Andrews sold the paper to Henry Linden Flash in February 1864, almost a year to the day when he began publishing. Flash was the former editor of the Mobile
Register and was the editor of Andrews's
Daily Confederate. The year 1864 would bring a further setback when, eight months later, Andrews received word that his son John Calhoun had been killed in action. ==Preaching Resumed==