About
the book "American Witness" - a publication of Januarius MacGahan’s
coverage of the crushing of the April Uprising of the Bulgarians by the
Ottoman Empire in 1876.
During his short life of only 34 years,
US journalist MacGahan turned into one of the most prominent military
correspondents of the 19th century. He covered Russia’s penetration
into Central Asia, the search for Franklin’s lost expedition in
Antarctica, the French Prussian and the Russo-Turkish wars. As it is
known, the Russo-Turkish war partly a result of the Turkish atrocities
in the crushing of the April Uprising in Bulgaria. MacGahan’s
dispatches spread the truth about the inhuman cruelty of the Turks all
over the world. Archibald Forbes, the great English writer and
correspondent, who rode by his side, in an article on MacGahan pays
this tribute to his great services:
"MacGahan's work in the
exposures of the Turkish atrocities in Bulgaria, which he carried out
so thoroughly and effectively in 1876, produced very remarkable
results. Regarded simply on its literary merits, there is nothing I
know of to excel it in vividness, in pathos, in a burning earnestness,
in a glow of conviction that fires from the heart to the heart. His
letters stirred Mr. Gladstone into a convulsive paroxysm of burning
revolt against the barbarities they described. They moved England to
its very depths, and men travelling in railway carriages were to be
noticed with flushed faces and moistened eyes as they read them. Lord
Beaconsfield tried to whistle down the wind the awful significance of
the disclosures made in those wonderful letters. The master of jeers
jibed at as 'coffee-house babble,' the revelations that were making the
nations to throb with indignant passion."
Januarius MacGahan’s
notes caused an outcry and were published in all big newspapers in the
United Kingdom, France and the US, and later on in Russia as well.
After
the Russo-Turkish war of 1877-78, which resulted in Bulgaria’s
liberation, this country’s big statesman Stefan Stambolov translated
them into Bulgarian and published them in 1880.
During the
Russo-Turkish war, MacGahan visited Bulgaria again and everywhere he
was hailed as a liberator and deliverer; the grateful people ran after
him as he rode through the streets of the towns and villages of this
country, kissing his boots, saddle, bridle, and even the little pet
horse that he rode.
Archibald Forbes, MacGahan’s companion in
his travels says the grateful and affectionate demonstrations of the
people of Bulgaria towards MacGahan, surpassed anything of the kind he
ever saw or imagined.
Shortly after the Russo-Turkish war, MacGahan died of typhus in Istanbul.
Later
his body was taken to the cemetery of Maplewood in New Lexington, Ohio.
The inscription on his tombstone reads: "MacGahan, Liberator of
Bulgaria".