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  • Nellie Bly
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  • Nellie Bly (1867–1922) is a journalist and social activist in the late 19th century working for Joseph Pulitzer at the New York World. Her given name is Elizabeth Cochrane, and she adopted the pen name Nellie Bly after the song of the same name by Stephen Foster. In Martian Dreams (1895), Nellie Bly volunteered to assist in Nikola Tesla's 1895 mission to Mars to attempt to rescue the ill-fated passengers of Percival Lowell's unintended voyage to the red planet in 1893.
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Game
  • Worlds of Ultima: Martian Dreams
Text
  • 6912000.0
Portrait
  • File:Nellie.gif
Description
  • adventurer
Book
  • Time Travel
Location
  • Landing Sites#The 1895 Landing Site1895 Landing Site
abstract
  • Nellie Bly (1867–1922) is a journalist and social activist in the late 19th century working for Joseph Pulitzer at the New York World. Her given name is Elizabeth Cochrane, and she adopted the pen name Nellie Bly after the song of the same name by Stephen Foster. In Martian Dreams (1895), Nellie Bly volunteered to assist in Nikola Tesla's 1895 mission to Mars to attempt to rescue the ill-fated passengers of Percival Lowell's unintended voyage to the red planet in 1893. Speaking with the Avatar, Bly discussed the research she had done eight years earlier for her exposé "Ten Days in a Mad-House," which delved into the inhumane and unsanitary conditions of the Women's Lunatic Asylum on Blackwell's Island. Bly had feigned mental illness in order to gain access to the facility, and had found once institutionalized that patients were subjected to gross abuse and brutality at the hands of their supposed caretakers. As a result of her experiences, she admitted an anxiety regarding psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud, who was also part of the mission to Mars, citing that he reminded her of doctors she'd encountered in the asylum. She had fewer reservations about Dr. C.L. Blood, and stated her relief that the physician was available to treat explorers. Bly kept detailed notes regarding the party's encounters and experiences on Mars. These notes were later entrusted to Dr. Johann Schleimann Spector, who returned with them to his native time (1991 AD). It was intended that they eventually be released to the public at such a time when humanity was ready to know of the reality of the Martian people.