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  1. Whitelaw Reid (October 27, 1837 – December 15, 1912) was an American politician, diplomat and newspaper editor, as well as the author of Ohio in the War, a popular work of history. After assisting Horace Greeley as editor of the New-York Tribune, Reid purchased the paper after Greeley's death in late 1872 and controlled it until ...

  2. Whitelaw Reid (27 octobre 1837 à Cedarville - 15 décembre 1912 à Londres) fut directeur de publication du New York Tribune, candidat républicain à la vice-présidence des États-Unis en 1892 au côté du président Benjamin Harrison, à la place du titulaire sortant Levi Morton, ambassadeur en France de 1889 à 1892, et enfin ...

  3. Whitelaw Reid was a U.S. journalist, diplomat, and politician, successor to Horace Greeley in 1872 as editor in chief (until 1905) and publisher (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.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. Whitelaw Reid, 1837 – 1912. 1837. Born on October 27, 1837 in Cedarville, Ohio to Robert Charlton Reid (1795–1865) and Marion Whitelaw Ronalds (1804–1895). Attended Xenia Academy in his hometown. His family was poor.

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  5. Whitelaw Reid shares his childhood memories of fishing for steelhead trout with his dad on the San Lorenzo River in Santa Cruz, California. He recounts the sights, sounds, smells and sensations of the river, the ocean, the eucalyptus trees and the roller coaster.

  6. 20 avr. 2009 · Whitelaw Reid, the scion of a prominent New York publishing family who joined The New York Herald Tribune in the late 1930s, became a war correspondent and later the paper’s editor, president and...

  7. Learn about Whitelaw Reid, the influential journalist who edited the New York Tribune for forty years and supported James A. Garfield for president. Read about his Civil War experiences, his views on Reconstruction and African-Americans, and his conflicts with unions and workers.