Benjamin Henry Day (born April 10, 1810, West Springfield, Massachusetts, U.S.—died December 21, 1889, New York, New York) was an American printer and journalist who founded the New York Sun, the first of the “penny” newspapers in the United States.
Starting in 1824 as a printer’s apprentice of the Springfield (Massachusetts) Republican, Day moved to New York City and opened his own printing business in 1831. He launched the Sun partly to create business for his shop. By 1839 the paper’s circulation had climbed to 50,000. To build circulation, Day emphasized the human side of the news, stressing crime and sensation but including elements of pathos and humour. He hired reporter George Wisner to write a column of brief “Police Office” items. Wisner became the first police reporter in the United States. In 1835, Day’s Sun printed a sensational hoax about discoveries of life on the Moon. The “Moon hoax” rapidly increased the Sun’s circulation, but the paper was roundly criticized when its deceit was discovered.
In 1840, having sold the Sun, Day launched the True Sun, another penny paper. In 1842 he started Brother Jonathan, a magazine that reprinted old British novels. He was succeeded as publisher by his son Benjamin, Jr., who invented the Ben Day process for producing a halftone image of printing plates. Another son was the father of Clarence Day, noted for his autobiography, Life with Father.