✒️ Heritage Marker Inaccuracy is More Than a Typo
At 10 pm on November 11th, an email landed in our inbox: “The marker in the cemetery has been taken care of. The plaque at the school will be attended to.” The next morning, the head of the Wallingford America250 committee replied to the sender, offering thanks for the initiative. This is one year after WPAA-TV’s effort to engage community members about the accuracy of Mr. Beach’s Heritage Markers. There are two: His gravesite and Moses Yale Beach School. Both had Mr. Beach’s date of birth wrong, but a conversation would have revealed the larger concern about ‘Doing History’.
With my anxious dog, RayRay, in the car, I drove into the S Orchard entrance of the Center Street Cemetery. WPAA-TV is located just 250 feet from the gravesite, but since dogs aren’t allowed, I needed to travel by car to verify exactly what “taken care of” meant.
I found, as I suspected, the inaccurate birth date on the Moses Yale Beach marker was treated as a typo. But when it comes to permanent public history, the solutions are rarely as simple as correcting a typo. Omissions and carefully chosen language shape our collective understanding of our past. That’s particularly true for the other marker placed the same day in November 2024, honoring Wallingford’s highly acclaimed native son, Lyman Hall, with no community connection outside of his birthplace. What we should know of the conditions by which he added his signature to the Declaration of Independence is a story for another day.
The Gravesite Heritage Marker Text
For readers who haven’t seen it, here is the full text of the marker installed near Moses Yale Beach’s gravesite:
📜 Moses Yale Beach
Born on January 15, 1800, in Wallingford, Connecticut, emerged as a transformative force in 19th-century American media and technology. After his apprenticeship, at age 18, he started a cabinet making business in Northampton, MA, but soon moved to Springfield where he developed a gunpowder machine for propelling balloons and a plan for steamboat navigation on the Connecticut River, but neither were a success.
However, his next invention was a rag-cutting machine for the paper mills, the design of which was still being used well into the 20th century. In 1834, after having had success in the paper mill industry, he started working for his brother-in-law Benjamin Day as the business and technical manager of the New York Sun. A year later, he bought out Day’s partner and then bought Day’s share in 1838 for $40,000. Under his business and editorial guidance, the four-page, penny newspaper Sun pioneered sensationalism and innovative business strategies, such as the syndicated story in 1841, becoming one of the most widely circulated newspapers of the era. Beach’s visionary pursuits extended into news gathering to be the first with the news of the day. During the Mexican War he employed boats, post riders, rail and the telegraph to get the news a day ahead of his competitors. In 1846, the Sun teamed up with five other New York City papers to form the New York Associated Press.
After his retirement in 1848 due to health issues, he returned to Wallingford, where he became a benefactor to our schools and students by providing funds for school libraries and awarded prizes to students for educational excellence. At the onset of the Civil War, he donated $100,000, a huge sum on that day to the United States government, in support of the Union forces. Thus, when he passed in 1868, he left behind a legacy of early entrepreneurship, journalistic innovation, and technological foresight that shaped the course of 19th-century American communication.
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Moses Yale Beach (1800–1868) is correctly identified as a “transformative force in 19th-century American media and technology”. However, the Heritage Marker text, while providing a chronological narrative of his life, misses the opportunity to fully celebrate his greatest institutional achievement—the founding of the Associated Press (AP), among other innovations.
The final sentence of the marker does effectively summarize Beach’s importance, noting he left behind a “legacy of dynamic entrepreneurship, journalistic innovation, and technological foresight”.
Doing History
Doing History is a theme of America250| CT Commission. It refers to engaging with the public and telling more inclusive and complex stories. While focused on those historically left out, Affiliate Projects can improve community understanding through questioning how and who interprets our history.
A Heritage Marker is a piece of public history that shapes our collective understanding of our past. If intended to honor a “native son” for passersbys, should the priority be clarity, accuracy, and a clear connection to the community? History is complex, contested, and sometimes contradictory. How we reveal it, represents us collectively.
With the approved language, dense emphasis on a chronological narrative structure, and omissions one could conclude the marker furthers the “nothing remarkable” tone of Mr. Beach’s local contemporaries. Let’s look at the language.
The Omissions That Matter
The chronological narrative structure buries his most impactful achievement—Founder of the Associated Press—and his local philanthropy. But what caught my attention were the phrases chosen, especially since the President of the Wallingford Historical Society later described Beach as the “mover and shaker behind the New York Sun” and the man who “created the News Service” in a podcast ‘Amazing Tales’. (Transcription)
The Missing Title: Founder
The marker states the Sun “teamed up with five other New York City papers to form the New York Associated Press“.
The phrasing—”teamed up”—seems oddly passive for someone whose visionary pursuits extended into news gathering and whose innovation of employing boats, post riders, and rail gave the Sun the news a day ahead of its competitors. The original AP was formed precisely because other papers needed to share the prohibitive cost of Beach’s aggressive news-gathering methods.
Given that the Associated Press itself has acknowledged Moses Yale Beach as the founder, omitting this designation misses an opportunity to celebrate his most enduring contribution to American journalism.
A more accurate, yet still celebratory, text could read: “… led the effort to found the New York Associated Press” or simply, “… founded the New York Associated Press”.
The Misplaced Label: Why “Sensationalism”?
The marker credits the Sun under Beach’s guidance with pioneering “sensationalism and innovative business strategies“. It’s worth noting that “sensationalism” carries a negative connotation in the history of journalism. The height of “Yellow Journalism” came more than a decade after Beach’s death (1890s). While Beach’s Sun did publish hoaxes—like the Moon Hoax (before his full control) and the Balloon Hoax (authored by Edgar Allan Poe)—these were groundbreaking examples of using the newspaper for literary experimentation and mass entertainment. The marker could focus on what was truly innovative: his aggressive news gathering, literary content, and pioneering modern business models, rather than a term that risks simplifying and dismissing his genius.
Accountability in Public History
A public marker is a piece of public history that shapes our collective understanding of the past. While the marker was an Eagle Scout project, the ultimate responsibility for the text’s factual accuracy and historical interpretation rests with the benefiting community organization (like the Wallingford Historical Society).
When historical errors or omissions (like the AP founder status or role in Mexican American War) are identified, the organization would typically be the one to authorize a correction or replacement.
People will see the marker, not hear the Podcast, for decades to come
The approved Heritage Marker text misrepresents Mr. Beach’s accomplishment, tracking more toward the “nothing remarkable” tone of Mr. Beach’s local contemporaries, which the podcast ‘Amazing Tales‘ surprisingly overturns. Mysteriously, after our years of research and publications, an historical society representative tells a version of Mr. Beach’s Story. Notably, in 2017, when WPAA-TV reached out to the Wallingford Historical Society and the Wallingford Public Library, the only records identified in their holdings were pictures of his former mansion on North Main Street. The library had a few weathered news clippings about the controversy over naming a school after him, the benefactor of the land, when using the street name would be more ‘convenient’. They did not even confirm that the document, which is the source of the birthdate error, was among their holdings: The History of Wallingford by Charles Henry Stanley Davis.
WPAA-TV and Community Media is committed to conversation and stories in the public interest. As an CT250 Affiliate, the Moses Yale Beach Revealed Project is ongoing. The earlier story is here. We had hoped conversations would lead to greater clarity and accuracy in honoring Wallingford’s most transformative historical figures. We’re hopeful that ongoing dialogue will create opportunities for collaboration.
Thanks to @america250ct Commission @CThumanities for a framework that embraces all voices.
As told by Volunteer Executive Director, Susan Adele Huizenga

