In 1896, English
émigré Blackton was moonlighting as a reporter/artist for the
New York Evening World when he was sent to interview
Thomas Edison about his new film projector. The inventor talked the entrepreneurial reporter into buying a set of films and a projector. A year later, Blackton and business partner Smith founded the American Vitagraph Company in direct competition with Edison. A third partner, distributor William "Pop" Rock, joined in 1899. The company's first studio was located on the rooftop of a building on Nassau Street in
Manhattan. Operations were later moved to the
Midwood neighborhood of
Brooklyn, New York. The company's first claim to fame came from newsreels: Vitagraph cameramen were on the scene to film events from the
Spanish–American War of 1898. These shorts were among the first works of motion-picture
propaganda, and a few had studio re-enactments that were passed off as footage of actual events (
The Battle of Santiago Bay was filmed in an improvised bathtub, with the "smoke of battle" provided by Mrs. Blackton's cigar). In 1897, Vitagraph produced
The Humpty Dumpty Circus, which was the first film to use the
stop-motion technique. Vitagraph was not the only company seeking to make money from Edison's motion picture inventions, and Edison's lawyers were very busy in the 1890s and 1900s filing
patents and suing competitors for patent infringement. Blackton did his best to avoid lawsuits by buying a special license from Edison in 1907 and by agreeing to sell many of his most popular films to Edison for distribution. The American Vitagraph Company made many contributions to the history of movie-making. In 1903, the director
Joseph Delmont started his career by producing
westerns; he later became famous by using "wild
carnivores" in his films—a sensation for that time. In 1909, it was one of the original ten production companies included in Edison's attempt to corner movie-making in the United States, the
Motion Picture Patents Company. Due to its extensive European distribution interests, Vitagraph also participated in the
Paris Film Congress in February 1909. This was a failed attempt by European producers to form a cartel similar to the MPPC. ==Stars==