Stevens was born to A.A. Stevens and Mary Bristol Stevens on July 25, 1848, in Meriden, Connecticut, and spent his early life in Illinois. He had five siblings.[1][2]
He died at the age of 91 in Georgetown on August 28, 1939, and was buried in Georgetown Cemetery, South Carolina. He was survived by his wife and brothers M.P. Stevens of Los Angeles and E.A. Stevens of New York.[1][3]
Professional life
Journalism
Stevens began work as a reporter for the St. Louis Times in 1870[1] and by 1877 was its chief editor.[4] He worked for the St. Louis Globe-Democrat in 1875.[5] He was city editor of the Times in July 1878 when he was overcome by a heatstroke during exceedingly hot weather.[6] He was still working for the Times when it went out of business in 1880.[7]
He moved to the St. Louis Globe-Democrat in 1881, becoming city editor and leaving that position in 1883. He was then made correspondent in Washington, D.C., and the Globe sent him on assignment through Missouri, Canada, Mexico, Cuba, Jamaica, and Panama; his articles, signed W.B.S., brought him recognition as a writer.[1][8][9][10]
^Stevens, Walter Barlow (1915). Missouri The Center State: 1821-1915. Chicago - St. Louis: The S. J. Clarke Publishing Company.
^Stevens, Walter Barlow (1921). Centennial History of Missouri (The Center State): One Hundred Years in the Union 1820-1921. Chicago - St. Louis: The S. J. Clarke Publishing Company.