Locke's Life
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David Ross Locke was born in Vestal, New York on September 20, 1833.  He was born into a lower-middle class family and spent much of his youth working in print shops in order to help provide for his impoverished family.  

He traveled to New York to work for a printer.  Little is known of his whereabouts for nearly thirty years after his initial work in New York.  Some biographers have assumed that he traveled the country working for various newspapers and printers.  This nomadic lifestyle gave him the knowledge of the country that would later be represented in the Nasby Letters.  

Locke eventually settled in Ohio.  He has published in newspapers in Plymouth, Mansfield, Bucyrus, and Findlay.  It is during this time that Locke met Martha H. Bodine.  They married and started a family.  

The Locke and his young family moved to Toledo where he began working for the Toledo Weekly Blade on March 21, 1861.  This large paper was distributed to hundreds of residences and businesses.  It was on this date that Locke made himself a permanent entertainer with the publication of the first of the Nasby letters.   

The infamous Nasby letters were humorist editorials on political subjects of the Civil War era.  These short essays poked fun at all aspects of the War, political figures, and himself.  He used the pseudonym of Petroleum Vesuvius Nasby in order to depict a humorous portrayal of the normal man of this time.  This aided in the acceptance of these harsh satirical works, and to improve the confidences of those enjoying these pieces.  Scholars believe Locke to have created this character in order to make readers feel better about themselves by viewing Nasby as inferior.  Nasby was everything that Locke was not.  Locke used the character of Nasby to satirize the racial injustices and corruptive nature of men during the period surrounding the Civil War.  Locke, in fact, fought for the reformation of many social policies.  African American rights, women’s rights, and the improvement of working conditions were all important elements of the political agenda for Locke.  The African Americans that Nasby would speak of in his letters would repeatedly show their intellectual superiority to Nasby.  These letters enabled Locke to shape the opinions of many listeners, viewers, and readers of the time.

The Nasby letters were published in Locke’s own newspaper the Weekly Blade from March 21, 1861 until 1887.  The most popular of these publications were: Confedrit X Roads (Wich is in the Stait of Kentucky,), Prefis, Southern Classikle, Theologikle, and Military Institoot, Laying the Conerstone of the College Edifice and Followed by a Dream.  During this time his popularity grew, as did his fortune.  Locke toured the lyceum circuit among known humorists such as Mark Twain and Josh Billings.   

Locke gained the recognition of Abraham Lincoln who professed his admiration of Nasby in his statement, “For the genius to write like Nasby, I would gladly give up my office.”  Lincoln was known to postpone the meetings of his cabinet in order to read the letters aloud.  Furthermore, Locke was offered several appointments with President Lincoln and President Grant.  However, he quickly turned these down.  The only governmental service that Locke desired was to become the Third Ward Alderman in Toledo.  Ironically it took several elections for Locke to be elected to this relatively insignificant office.  

In 1865 Locke held the position of editor for the Weekly Blade.  After his tours on the lyceum stage he was able to purchase controlling interest in the paper, and soon became its president.  In order to diversify his interest in the newspaper industry Locke managed the New York periodical The Evening Mail beginning in the early 1870s, and an advertising agency in 1873. During this time Locke was constantly lecturing as Nasby, and as himself, and publishing editions of the Nasby letters making him one of the most well known humorists of his time.  
Locke retired to Toledo in the early 1880s where he began to concentrate on his life as a father and husband.  During this time he also continued work in the newspaper industry.  He consulted his Weekly Blade and managed the Advertiser.  He also continued to publish his famous Nasby Letters during the Reconstruction.  The last of these works was published in the latter part of 1887, just months before his death on February 15, 1888.