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  1. Horace Greeley (February 3, 1811 – November 29, 1872) was an American newspaper editor and publisher who was the founder and editor of the New-York Tribune. Long active in politics, he served briefly as a congressman from New York and was the unsuccessful candidate of the new Liberal Republican Party in the 1872 presidential election against incumbent President Ulysses S. Grant, who won by a landslide.

  2. Horace Greeley was an American newspaper editor who is known especially for his vigorous articulation of the North’s antislavery sentiments during the 1850s. Greeley was a printer’s apprentice in East Poultney, Vt., until moving to New York City in 1831, where he eventually became a founding editor

  3. Jul 3, 2019 · A Printer in His Youth. Horace Greeley was born on February 3, 1811, in Amherst, New Hampshire. He received irregular schooling, typical of the time, and became an apprentice at a newspaper in Vermont as a teenager. Mastering the skills of a printer, he worked briefly in Pennsylvania and then moved to New York at the age of 20.

  4. Sep 19, 2024 · Newspaper editor Horace Greeley unsuccessfully ran against incumbent Ulysses S. Grant in November 1872. Twenty-four days later, he died of unknown causes at a private mental health facility

  5. May 18, 2018 · Horace Greeley. Born February 3, 1811 Amherst, New Hampshire Died November 29, 1872 New York City, New York. Newspaper publisher and abolitionist. Author Lewis Leary. Horace Greeley was America's leading journalist of the Civil War era. He was the founder and editor of the New York Tribune, America's most popular newspaper of the mid-nineteenth century. Using his newspaper editorials as a tool to comment on American society and politics, Greeley became known as a crusader for a wide range of ...

  6. Apr 11, 2014 · Horace Greeley printed the first edition of his new morning newspaper out of a decaying two-story building in New York City on a leaden, snowy, funereal April morning in 1841. It was a high-minded publication that eschewed sensationalism. There would be no police blotter, no scandal, no quack medicine advertisements, no celebrities. Horace Greeley in the 1840s.

  7. Horace Greeley, (born Feb. 3, 1811, Amherst, N.H., U.S.—died Nov. 29, 1872, New York, N.Y., U.S.), U.S. newspaper editor and political leader. Greeley was a printer’s apprentice in Vermont before moving to New York City, where he edited a literary magazine and weeklies for the Whig Party. In 1841 he founded the highly influential New York Tribune, a daily paper dedicated to reforms, economic progress, and the elevation of the masses. He edited it for the rest of his life, becoming known ...

  8. A portrait of Horace Greeley in the 1860s Thomas Nast cartoon for the 1872 campaign alleging that Greeley was contradicting his earlier positions.. The fight for the presidential nomination of the Liberal Republican Party was heavily contested in 1872. While U.S. Supreme Court Justice David Davis was the initial front-runner for the Liberal Republican nomination, his support weakened after he was relentlessly criticized and attacked in various newspapers.Thus, former United States Minister ...

  9. Mar 6, 2020 · Horace Greeley thought he could fix American newspapers—a medium that had been transformed by the emergence of an urban popular journalism that was bold in its claims, sensational in its content ...

  10. Feb 27, 2023 · Horace Greeley. The illusion that times that were are better than those that are, has probably pervaded all ages. Horace Greeley (3 February 1811 – 29 November 1872) was an American editor of a leading newspaper, New York Tribune, a founder of the Liberal Republican Party, a reformer and a politician.

  11. Horace Greeley (1811-1872) Journalist, Editor, Literary Agent, Politician. Born the third of 7 children to Amherst, NH farmers, Horace Greeley displayed signs of intellectual curiosity and aptitude by the age of 4. Within two years, the boy declared career aspirations of becoming a printer, a desire driven by his passion for reading and learning. Although Greeley’s formal education ended at 13 when his teacher informed Greeley’s parents the child knew more than the educator, the future ...

  12. Horace Greeley (February 3, 1811 – November 29, 1872) was an American newspaper editor, reformer and politician. His New York Tribune was the most influential newspaper of the period 1840 - 1870. Greeley used it to promote the Whig and Republican parties. He is best known for his socially colored journalism. He wanted to convince people of his ideas. He thought that the role of a journalist must be to convince people with sound arguments.

  13. Horace Greeley was born on February 3, 1811, in Amherst, New Hampshire, the son of a poor farmer. He declined a scholarship to Phillips Exeter Academy and left school at age 14. He then apprenticed as a printer in Vermont, moving to New York City in 1831, at age 20. Greeley served a stint as editor of the New Yorker in 1834. In 1836, Greeley married Mary Cheney, a schoolteacher and sometime suffragette.

  14. Horace Greeley (1811-1872) 1811, Feb. 3. Born, Amherst, N.H., son of Zaccheus Greeley (1782-1866) and Mary Woodburn Greeley (1788-1856). His siblings included Nathan Barnes Greeley (1812-1894), Arminda Greeley (1813-1890), Esther Center Greeley Cleveland (1817-1890), and Margaret Woodburn Greeley Bush (1822-1906). 1821. Moved to Vermont with his family following his father’s bankruptcy.

  15. Jul 2, 2006 · Horace Greeley was America’s most famous editor and, with his Tribune, a defining voice in mid-nineteenth-century politics.He was an early promoter of Thoreau, lent money to Poe, and employed as ...

  16. The papers of journalist Horace Greeley (1811-1872) consist of 2,000 items (4,958 images) in seven containers, and span the years 1812 to 1928, with the bulk dating from 1860 to 1872. The collection includes correspondence, typescripts and transcripts of Greeley’s letters and writings; articles, notes, lectures, and speeches by and about Greeley; scrapbooks of newspaper clippings and other printed matter; and miscellaneous material. Incidents of Greeley’s boyhood, his early struggle in ...

  17. Horace Greeley, editor of the New York Tribune, wrote this letter in 1871 to R. L. Sanderson, a young correspondent who had requested career advice.Greeley, a great supporter of westward expansion, shared the national conviction that it was the manifest destiny of America to conquer and civilize the land between the Atlantic and the Pacific Oceans.

  18. Horace Greeley, to whom the saying is attributed "Go West, young man" is a phrase, the origin of which is often credited to the American author and newspaper editor Horace Greeley, concerning America's expansion westward as related to the concept of Manifest destiny.No one has yet proven who first used this phrase in print. Washington [D.C.] is not a place to live in. The rents are high, the food is bad, the dust is disgusting and the morals are deplorable.

  19. Horace Greeley (1811 –1872), a reformer and abolitionist, founded The New York Tribune in 1841. He edited and published what decades later became known affectionately as The Trib and preached ...

  20. Horace Greeley, nado o 3 de febreiro de 1811 e finado o 29 de novembro de 1872, foi un xornalista estadounidense, fundador do New-York Tribune e cofundador do Partido Republicano. [1] Traxectoria. Foi un acérrimo ...

  21. Horace Greeley (ur. 3 lutego 1811 w Amherst, zm. 29 listopada 1872 w pobliżu Nowego Jorku) – amerykański polityk, kongresmen, zecer, dziennikarz, wydawca prasowy, abolicjonista, kandydat na Prezydenta USA w 1872 roku. Życiorys. Początkowo był zecerem. W 1841 założył „New York Tribune”. Na łamach tego tytułu propagował koncepcje Fouriera. Przyczynił się do ...

  22. Jun 29, 2024 · On June 25, India entered the fiftieth year of the imposition of the Emergency, an extraordinary 21-month period from 1975 to 1977, which saw the suspension of civil liberties, curtailment of press freedom, mass arrests, the cancellation of elections, and rule by decree. The Emergency, which was vigorously opposed by The Indian Express, was a dark chapter in modern Indian history that left a wide-ranging and lasting impact on Indian politics.

  23. Jun 24, 2024 · Mohammed Mujahid, a 20-year-old who hails from Sanjak village of Uttar Pradesh’s (UP) Muzaffarnagar district had never imagined that a person whom he trusted the most would deceptively get his genitals removed by making him undergo a sex change surgery at a local medical college.

  24. Jul 24, 2024 · On July 2, police in Muzaffarnagar mandated restaurants and roadside vendors to prominently display their names to help Hindu devotees decide which food outlets to avoid as they observe the holy ...

  25. Read Today Dainik Jagran Online EPaper Daily - Dainik Jagran, Hindi newspaper known worldwide for its largest readership, is available now online at epaper.jagran.com, a hindi Epaper where you enjoy the Jagran Newspaper of your city/region online on your mobile and desktop devices.