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THE LIFE OF HORACE GREELEY, Editor of the New York Tribune.

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THE LIFE OF HORACE GREELEY, Editor of the New York Tribune.

by Parton, James

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  • Hardcover
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About This Item

Mason Brothers, New York: 1855., 1855 442 p. + Plates, engraved on wood and printed on a sepia background + Plus a facsimile of Greely's handwriting. Original full cloth binding. The boards tooled in gold and blind with an illustration showing a large newspaper printing press. Spine slightly chipped at head and tail. 12mo. Contemporary ink autographed ownership of John H. Small. Horace Greeley (1811-1872) was born into a poor farm family at Amherst, New Hampshire. At fourteen he was apprenticed to a newspaper editor in Vermont, and worked as a printer in New York and Pennsylvania. The twenty year old Greeley moved to New York City and found various jobs, which provided some capital, and in 1834, he founded a weekly literary and news journal, the New Yorker. It gained an increasing audience and gave him a wide reputation. However, it failed to make money, and Greeley supplemented his income by writing, especially in support of the Whig party. His connections with Thurlow Weed, William H. Seward, and other Whigs led, in 1840, to his editorship of the campaign weekly, the Log Cabin. The paper's circulation rose to about 90,000, and contributed significantly both to William Henry Harrison's victory and Greeley's influence. Greeley also directly participated in the Whig campaign by giving speeches, sitting on committees, and helping to manage the campaign in New York State. In April 1841, Greeley set himself on the path to national prominence and power when he launched the New York Tribune. The Tribune was multifaceted, devoting space to politics, social reform, literary and intellectual endeavors, and news. It was very much Greeley's personal vehicle. An egalitarian and idealist, Greeley espoused a variety of causes. He popularized the communitarian ideas of Fourier, and invested in a Fourier utopian community at Red Bank, New Jersey. He advocated the homestead principle of distributing free government land to settlers, attacked the exploitation of wage labor, denounced monopolies, and opposed capital punishment. By the eve of the Civil War the Tribune had a total circulation of more than a quarter of a million. This number, however, vastly understated the paper's influence, as each copy often had more than one reader, and it was the preeminent journal in the rural North. Greeley opposed slavery as morally deficient and economically regressive, and during the 1850s, he supported the movement to prevent its extension. He opposed the Mexican War, approved the Wilmot Proviso, which called for the restriction of slavery in territories gained as a result of that war, and denounced the Kansas-Nebraska Act. Greeley's free-soil sentiments brought him quickly into the Republican party's camp. He attended the national organization meeting of the party at Pittsburgh in February 1856 and the Republican Conventions of 1856 and 1860. The secession crisis found Greeley strongly opposed to making concessions to slavery, and once war came, Greeley joined the radical antislavery faction of the Republican party and demanded the early end of slavery. While much admired, Greeley was also regarded as eccentric and odd, in both his personal appearance and his reformist ideas. His behavior during and after the war raised widespread doubts about his judgment. When in 1872, the anti-Grant Liberal Republicans and the Democrats nominated Greeley to challenge Grant, Greeley was attacked as a fool and a crank. So merciless was the assault that Greeley commented later that he sometimes wondered whether he was running for the presidency or the penitentiary. He suffered a tremendous defeat in the election, carrying only six border and southern states. L2/SE 0.0. Hardcover.

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Details

Bookseller
THE FAMILY ALBUM US (US)
Bookseller's Inventory #
004R21
Title
THE LIFE OF HORACE GREELEY, Editor of the New York Tribune.
Author
Parton, James
Format/Binding
Hardcover
Book Condition
Used
Quantity Available
1
Publisher
Mason Brothers, New York: 1855.
Date Published
1855
Keywords
AMERICANA; CIVIL WAR; JOURNALISM; POLITICS; WHIGS; REPUBLICAN; AUTOGRAPH; J OHN H. SMALL; 1855 RAD

Terms of Sale

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About the Seller

THE FAMILY ALBUM

Seller rating:
This seller has earned a 5 of 5 Stars rating from Biblio customers.
Biblio member since 2007
Kinzers, Pennsylvania

About THE FAMILY ALBUM

Ron Lieberman, has been an antiquarian bookseller, rare book appraiser, and library consultant for Fifty years. His firm, The Family Album, has issued a series of exceptional catalogs and bibliographic references in a variety of fields, including: Incunabula; Pennsylvania-Americana; German-Americana; Fine Book Bindings; Early Photographica; Printing History & Typography; Classics from the Great Scholar / Printers; Etc. He was the instructor for a series of valuable workshops and courses in the history, taste, and technique of book collecting. He frequently lectures before professional groups of librarians and archivists on: the book trade; collection and building security; disaster preparedness; appraisals; and preservation, conservation, and binding. He has also often appeared on radio and television popularizing the pleasant hobby of antique book collecting. His expert opinion on the book collecting market; values of archives and manuscripts; collection preservation & security; historic photographs; and the value of rare books has been sought by sources as diverse as: the Historical & Museum Commission of PA; the PA State Library; the Library of Congress; the Smithsonian Institution; the FBI; American Bible Society; Money Magazine; Kipplinger Magazine; Conservation Centers; Warmans Antique Price Guides; U.S.A. Today; as well as Universities, Colleges, and Historical Societies throughout the United States. As one of the organizers of the World Library Fund, Mr. Lieberman provides professional analyses of library collections, and helps plan library development for public and private institutions in the United States and abroad. He was a Member of the Board of Governors of the Antiquarian Booksellers Association of America (A.B.A.A.), and Chairman of the A.B.A.A. Security Committee. He was a long-time regular member of the Security Committee of the Rare Book and Manuscript Section (RBMS) of the American Library Association (ALA); and was the Past President of the Middle Atlantic Chapter, A.B.A.A. Mr. Lieberman was also, for many years, a consulting editor and contributor to the Haworth Press journal: "College & Undergraduate Libraries" American Library Association (ALA); + ACRL/RBMS [For 35 Continuous Years] // PA Library Association (PLA) // Bibliographical Society of America // Middle Atlantic Regional Archives Conference (MARAC) // Society for the History of Authorship, Readership, and Publishing (SHARP) // Philobiblon Club // Etc. Etc.

Glossary

Some terminology that may be used in this description includes:

Facsimile
An exact copy of an original work. In books, it refers to a copy or reproduction, as accurate as possible, of an original...
Cloth
"Cloth-bound" generally refers to a hardcover book with cloth covering the outside of the book covers. The cloth is stretched...
Spine
The outer portion of a book which covers the actual binding. The spine usually faces outward when a book is placed on a shelf....
Poor
A book with significant wear and faults. A poor condition book is still a reading copy with the full text still readable. Any...
New
A new book is a book previously not circulated to a buyer. Although a new book is typically free of any faults or defects, "new"...
Tail
The heel of the spine.
12mo
A duodecimo is a book approximately 7 by 4.5 inches in size, or similar in size to a contemporary mass market paperback. Also...

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