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Republican and editor
Benjamin Franklin Bache was editor of the Aurora, a Republican newspaper.
In 1872, it supported Horace Greeley, a former Republican Party newspaper editor, and in 1912 the paper endorsed Theodore Roosevelt, who ran on the Progressive Party slate against Republican President William Howard Taft.
* Lafayette Young ( 1848-1926 ), newspaper reporter and editor, and briefly Republican Senator from Iowa
He was a member of the state legislature between 1841 and 1852, and was owner and editor of the Boston Republican from 1848 to 1851.
The candidates were: Republican John Lasley, President of the Lebanon City-Council, Democrat Roger Neal, Lebanon Community School Corporation School Board member and former Lebanon Parks and Recreation Director, and independent candidate George Piper who formerly was an editor at The Lebanon Reporter, which is Boone County's largest newspaper.
The Grant County Republican constitutes the predecessor of the current day The Ulysses News, which claims to be Grant County, Kansas's oldest surviving business, although it has operated under numerous names, editor / publishers, and management.
* Horace Greeley ( 1811 – 1872 ), editor, founder of the Liberal Republican Party
* Edwin Cowles ( 1825 – 1890 ), born in Austinburg, publisher and editor of the Cleveland Leader and one of the founders of the Republican Party
Norland, the home of Republican politician and editor Alexander McClure, was burned even though it was well north of the main fire.
Horace Greeley ( February 3, 1811 – November 29, 1872 ) was an American newspaper editor, a founder of the Liberal Republican Party, a reformer, a politician, and an outspoken opponent of slavery.
After Ross McWhirter's assassination by the Provisional Irish Republican Army ( IRA ), Norris McWhirter carried on alone as editor.
His service to the Republican party was such, that he was offered several nominations to office, and might have been sent as minister to England ; but he refused all such offers, preferring to serve the country as editor and public speaker.
In 1856-57 he was editor, and for part of the time was proprietor of the Racine Volksblatt, in which he advocated the election of presidential candidate John C. Frémont of the newly-founded Republican Party.
At age 21 he moved to Red Wing, Minnesota with an old hand-operated printing press and some type ; within two months, he was publisher and editor of the Red Wing Republican, in which he promoted his strong political views.
* Thurlow Weed, ( 1797 – 1882 ), born in Cairo, was a newspaper editor and political boss, who promoted, by turns ( and sometimes simultaneously ), the National Republican, Anti-Masonic, Whig and Republican parties.
He has maintained a working relationship with Paul over the years, as a contributing editor to " The Ron Paul Investment Letter "; as a consultant to Paul's 1988 Libertarian Party campaign for President of the United States ; and as vice-chair of the exploratory committee for Paul's run for the 1992 Republican Party nomination for president.
In May 1997, Joe Galli of the College Republican National Committee wrote a letter to the editor accusing Glass of fabrications in " Spring Breakdown ", his lurid tale of drinking and debauchery at the 1997 Conservative Political Action Conference.
In 1870, William Rule, a former Whig editor, launched the Knoxville Chronicle, which continued the Whigs Republican leanings.
From 1906 to 1928, he worked as a newspaper reporter, editor, and publisher at the Grand Rapids Herald, which was owned by William Alden Smith, who served as a Republican in the U. S. Senate from 1907 to 1919.
Raymond was both editor of the New York Times and also a chairman of the Republican National Committee.
On July 27, 1812, Lee received grave injuries while helping to resist an attack on his friend, Alexander Contee Hanson, editor of the Baltimore newspaper, The Federal Republican.
He was a newspaper editor and postmaster, and the family was active in local politics and staunchly Republican.

Republican and Horace
The Whig Party's 1852 convention in New York City saw the historic meeting between Alvan E. Bovay and The New York Tribune's Horace Greeley, a meeting which led to correspondence between the men as the early Republican Party meetings in 1854 began to take place.
* Downey, Matthew T. " Horace Greeley and the Politicians: The Liberal Republican Convention in 1872 ," The Journal of American History, Vol.
During the presidential election of 1872, the Democrats supported and subsequently nominated the Liberal Republican candidate, Horace Greeley.
* Downey, Matthew T. " Horace Greeley and the Politicians: The Liberal Republican Convention in 1872 ," The Journal of American History, Vol.
" Horace Greeley: Reformer as Republican ".
In 1872, he was a delegate to the Cincinnati convention of the Liberal Republican Party which nominated Horace Greeley for the presidency.
In the Republican primary, she faced incumbent Governor Horace A. Hildreth, former Governor Sumner Sewall, and Reverend Albion Beverage.
He opposed Grant's reelection by supporting the Liberal Republican candidate Horace Greeley in 1872 and lost his power inside the Republican party.
In 1872, he joined the Liberal Republican Party which had been started by reformist Republicans such as Horace Greeley.
* Isely, Jeter A. Horace Greeley and the Republican Party, 1853-1861: A study of the New York Tribune ( 1947 )
The Tribune, founded by Horace Greeley, was a Whig ( and later Republican ) newspaper sold as a sober alternative to some of the excesses of the penny press.
Conservatives at the Republican 1860 nominating convention in Chicago were able to block the nomination of William Seward, who had an earlier reputation as a radical ( but by 1860 had been criticized by Horace Greeley as being too moderate ).
As it turned out, the Tweed scandals wrecked Hoffman's chances and the nomination eventually was split between those Democrats supporting liberal Republican Horace Greeley and those supporting the " pure " Democrat, New York attorney Charles O ' Conor.
Brown was one of the contenders for the Liberal Republican presidential nomination, but lost to newspaper editor Horace Greeley.
The Liberal Republican party's candidate was Horace Greeley, longtime publisher of the New York Tribune.
It had strong support from powerful Republican newspaper editors such as Murat Halstead of the Cincinnati Commercial, Horace White of the Chicago Tribune, Henry Watterson of the Louisville Courier-Journal, Samuel Bowles of the Springfield Republican and especially Whitelaw Reid and Horace Greeley of the New York Tribune.

Republican and Greeley
" Greeley used it to promote the Whig and Republican parties, as well as opposition to slavery and a host of reforms ranging from vegetarianism to socialism.
When the new Republican Party was founded in 1854, Greeley made the Tribune its unofficial national organ, and fought slavery extension and the slave power on many pages.
However, the attempt at electing Greeley as president failed, the party collapsed, and Pulitzer, disillusioned with the corruption in the Republican Party, switched to the Democratic Party.
In 1854 the paper joined the newly formed Republican Party -- Greeley chose the party's name -- and emphasized opposition to slavery.
Brown was the vice presidential candidate under Greeley in the presidential election of 1872 for the Liberal Republican and Democratic parties.

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