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Karl Marx schrieb für die New York Tribune des Horace Greeley.
Deren Mitarbeiter Albert Brisbane und Charles Dana waren am 13. September auf der Rheinwiesenkundgebung von Marx, Engels und Lasalle anwesend.
Horace Greeley, 3.2.1811 - 29.11.1872.
Die Eltern arme Farmer, mit 14 Jahren die Schule verlassen, Lehrling als Drucker beim "The Northern Star"!
Dort lernt Greeley mit George Jones einen weiteren Lehrling kennen, der in seinem Alter ist und mit dem er später zu tun hat.
Leicht andere Darstellung:
Von seiner Frau kann er das Geld für die Zeitungen nicht bekommen haben.
Wer hat den Greeley finanziert und warum ihn?
Die offiziellen Erklärungen kann man in der Pfeife rauchen. Danach wären seine Zeitungen halt so gut und so innovativ gewesen und so weiter blablabla...
.
Deren Mitarbeiter Albert Brisbane und Charles Dana waren am 13. September auf der Rheinwiesenkundgebung von Marx, Engels und Lasalle anwesend.
Horace Greeley, 3.2.1811 - 29.11.1872.
Die Eltern arme Farmer, mit 14 Jahren die Schule verlassen, Lehrling als Drucker beim "The Northern Star"!
Dort lernt Greeley mit George Jones einen weiteren Lehrling kennen, der in seinem Alter ist und mit dem er später zu tun hat.
Leicht andere Darstellung:
Quelle: http://www.poultneyhistoricalsociety.org/about/the-two-editors/Horace Greeley was born in Amherst, New Hampshire, in 1811. He came to Poultney to apprentice himself at the Northern Spectator newspaper in East Poultney from 1826 to 1830. The paper was published in a print shop built on the green in 1823. This building, commonly known as the Horace Greeley House, now houses Picket Fence Antiques.
Though Greeley worked in this house, he never lived there. During his time in Poultney he boarded first at the home of the paper’s editor E.G. Stone and later at the Eagle Tavern, owned by Harlow Hosford. He was well regarded for his intelligence, his factual knowledge of current events and his debating skills. He quite probably wrote the obituary for former Poultney resident Jeffrey Brace in 1827.
Greeley left Poultney at the age of 19 for New York City, where he became editor of several publications and in 1841 founded the New York Tribune.
Quelle: http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/Horace_GreeleyIn 1834 he founded the weekly the New Yorker, which was mostly comprised of clippings from other magazines.
In 1836 Greeley married Mary Cheney Greeley; they spent little time together; Out of their seven children, only two lived.
Von seiner Frau kann er das Geld für die Zeitungen nicht bekommen haben.
Wer hat den Greeley finanziert und warum ihn?
Quelle: http://en.citizendium.org/wiki/Horace_GreeleyWhig: New York Tribune
In 1838 leading Whig politicians selected him to edit a major national campaign newspaper, the Jeffersonian, which reached 15,000 circulation. Whig leader William Seward found him, "rather unmindful of social usages, yet singularly clear, original, and decided, in his political views and theories" In 1840 he edited a major campaign newspaper, the Log Cabin which reached 90,000 subscribers nationwide, and helped elect William Henry Harrison president on the Whig ticket. In 1841 he merged his papers into the New York Tribune. It soon was a success as the leading Whig paper in the metropolis; its weekly edition reached tens of thousands of subscribers across the country. Greeley was editor of the Tribune for the rest of his life, using it as a platform for advocacy of all his causes.
...
Republican: New York Tribune
November 16, 1864 issue of the New York TribuneWhen the new Republican Party was founded in 1854, Greeley suggested the name (as an echo of the Jeffersonian Republicans) and made the Tribune its unofficial national organ. He fought slavery extension and the slave power on every page. On the eve of the Civil War circulation nationwide approached 300,000.
Die offiziellen Erklärungen kann man in der Pfeife rauchen. Danach wären seine Zeitungen halt so gut und so innovativ gewesen und so weiter blablabla...
.