(1843-1888)
Bartley Thomas Campbell was born in Pittsburgh, where he got his first newspaper job. He worked in various cities as a drama critic, but quit journalism with the production of his 1871 play Through Fire.
He developed his skill as a writer of melodrama at Richard M. Hooley's Theatre in Chicago. When that company toured in San Francisco in 1875, Campbell discovered his affinity for the West, which inspired his best work, notably My Partner (1879) and The White Slave (1882). Campbell was long hailed as a leading playwright, while his ventures as a producer were less successful.
The Historical Dictionary of the American Theater. James Fisher.