Henry J. W. Dam

Henry Jackson Wells Dam (1856 – April 26, 1906) was a journalist and playwright.[1][2] His story "The Red Mouse" was adapted for the film Her Silent Sacrifice. He wrote the words to the musical comedy The Shop Girl. He had one of the early interviews with Wilhelm Röntgen about his Röntgen rays (X-rays) in 1896. He also interviewed Guglielmo Marconi about his radio telegraph transmitter in 1897.

"Louisiana Lou" sheet music from The Shop Girl

His work was published in McClure's Magazine,[3][4] He was also a playwright.[5] The Black Cat, and The Strand Magazine.

Dam traveled to London the cover the Jack the Ripper murders and has been discussed as a possible author of some of the Jack the Ripper letters.[1]

Guglielmo Marconi and his wireless apparatus in a photograph that accompanied Dam's article

He was born in San Francisco and moved to London where he married stage actress Dorothy Dorr (1866–1940). They had two children, Colby Dorr Dam and Losing Dam. The family returned to the U.S. in the early 20th century.[1]

He died in of cancer in Havana, Cuba.[6]

A heliograph image of him is at The American Vaudeville Museum Archive at the University of Arizona from his musical comedy The Shop Girl (1894).[7]

Work

Plays

Stories

  • "Monsieur Bibi's Boom-Boom", The Strand Magazine (1900)
  • "The Red Mouse"
  • "The Transmogrification of Dan" in The Smart Set magazine (1901)[9]

Articles

  • "The Rontgen Rays in America", McClure's about William Konrad Rontgen's work on X-rays, New York (April, 1896)
  • "The Terrible Vesuvis", Windsor Magazine (1898)
  • The Mystery of Vesuvius (1898)
  • "The New Telegraphy: An interview with Signor Marconi", The Strand Magazine, George Newnes, Ltd., London, Vol. 13, No. 75, March 1897
  • "The tax on moustaches" Strand Magazine, Newnes, London (1899)
  • The Making of the Bible
  • "Practical Penology", North American Review, May 1887, pages 514-523
  • "A Morning with Bret Harte", December 1894 McClure's Magazine

References

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