Financial History Issue 122 (Summer 2017) | Page 27
Kiernan and His Wall Street
Financial News Bureau
Kiernan’s Wall Street Financial News
Bureau distributed breaking news on ship-
ping, railroad and construction, as well as
information from the New York Stock
Exchange, to clients around the country.
Kiernan launched the business using his
own savings and borrowing from family
and friends. The news agency’s office was
in the heart of the Financial District at
12 Broad Street and known as “Kiernan’s
Corner,” a hub of socializing and gossip-
ing for journalists and brokers.
“John J. Kiernan was one of the best
known men in Wall Street, and one of the
most popular. He knew every bank presi-
dent, every trust company official and
every member of the Stock Exchange,”
noted The (New York) World, which also
provided this description of Kiernan:
Kiernan was born on February 1, 1845,
and was the eldest of six children. Prior
to starting his news bureau, he worked in
all aspects of the business. As a teenager,
he was a messenger boy for the Magnetic
Telegraph Company and then worked in
the foreign news division of The Associ-
ated Press, where he rowed out in the har-
bor to greet ships arriving from Europe.
Once on board, Kiernan reviewed Euro-
pean newspapers, interviewed passengers
and crew and was able to deliver news
to the AP’s subscribers a day before the
competition. He also worked in financial
advertising with the Albery Frank & Co.
Kiernan’s news business at first distrib-
uted handwritten financial news bulletins,
known as “flimsies;” they were produced
with a stylus written on books of tis-
sue paper sheets and carbon paper that
would produce about 24 copies simulta-
neously. These bulletins, generally 200
words or less, were rushed to brokerage
offices by a small army of messenger boys.
News developments drove the production
schedule, and the Kiernan bulletins were
sent out “hourly, half-hourly or oftener, as
the development of financial news might
dictate.”
The Kiernan bulletins included items
such as London stock quotations an hour
ahead of the New York Stock Exchange
opening, a weekly statement of bank-
ing financial conditions, railway company
earnings and changes in freight rates.
With this method in hand, the Kiernan
News Agency was known as the leading
financial news provider. “For years, his
Wall street news agency was