New York Tribune
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- history of newspaper publishing
- In history of publishing: The United States
…1841 Horace Greeley introduced the New York Tribune. Whereas Bennett was an entertainer, Greeley was a campaigner, the first of the many idealists and crusaders who were to occupy American newspaper offices. Many pieces in the Tribune reflected the proprietor’s fierce opposition to slavery and ultimately influenced opinion well beyond…
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- In history of publishing: The United States
- view of Alaska Purchase
- In Alaska Purchase
>New York Tribune—savaged the decision, variously deeming the new territory “Seward’s Icebox,” “Seward’s Folly,” and “Walrussia.” However, most Americans were ambivalent; some supported the decision as a step toward the annexation of Canada. The treaty was submitted to the Senate for consent on March 30,…
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- In Alaska Purchase
- writings by Marx
- In Karl Marx: Early years in London of Karl Marx
Dana, managing editor of The New York Tribune, he became in 1851 its European correspondent. The newspaper, edited by Horace Greeley, had sympathies for Fourierism, a Utopian socialist system developed by the French theorist Charles Fourier. From 1851 to 1862 Marx contributed close to 500 articles and editorials (Engels providing…
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- In Karl Marx: Early years in London of Karl Marx
contribution by
- Fuller
- In Margaret Fuller
…critic on Greeley’s newspaper, the New York Tribune. She encouraged American writers and crusaded for social reforms but made her greatest contribution, she thought, as an interpreter of modern European literature.
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- In Margaret Fuller
- Greeley
- In Horace Greeley
The New York Tribune, which he founded in 1841 and edited until his death, became a daily Whig paper dedicated to a medley of reforms, economic progress, and the elevation of the masses. The Tribune set a particularly high standard in its news gathering, intellectual interest,…
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- In Horace Greeley
- Pool
- In Maria Louise Pool
…New York (1870–77), for the New York Tribune and the Evening Post. Her sketches focused on New England life, and her travels in Florida and the Carolinas also provided material for her pen. Although they are often clumsily plotted, her tales exhibit a deep and affectionate understanding of human character…
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- In Maria Louise Pool
- Reid
- In Whitelaw Reid
…(until his death) of the New York Tribune, which, during much of that period, was perhaps the most influential newspaper in the United States. He was minister to France from 1889 to 1892, unsuccessful candidate for vice president on the Republican ticket with Benjamin Harrison in 1892, and ambassador to…
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- In Whitelaw Reid
- Rice
- In Grantland Rice
…in 1914 he joined the New York Tribune, later the Herald Tribune. He wrote sports stories for both papers; with the Tribune and the Herald Tribune, he established a reputation as a sports authority. By one estimate, Rice wrote more than 22,000 columns and more than 67,000,000 words. His syndicated…
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- In Grantland Rice