Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. John Swinton (1829–1901) was a Scottish-American journalist, newspaper publisher, and orator. Although he arguably gained his greatest influence as the chief editorial writer of The New York Times during the decade of the 1860s, Swinton is best remembered as the namesake of John Swinton's Paper , one of the most prominent American labor ...

  2. Attributed to John Swinton on April 12, 1883, at the Twilight Club, New York City. John Swinton reportedly said this in 1883, as a response to the hubristic toast “to the Independent Press” at a dinner for journalists. In fact, his suggestion that local press were more independent than national outlets is also no longer a certainty, given ...

  3. He later served eight years in the same position on the New York Sun and later published a weekly labor sheet, John Swinton's Paper. The remarks were apparently made by Swinton, then the preeminent New York journalist, probably one night in 1880. Swinton was the guest of honour at a banquet given him by the leaders of his craft.

  4. People also ask

  5. en.wikiquote.org › wiki › John_SwintonJohn Swinton - Wikiquote

    Dec 20, 2023 · The journalist's name is disclosed as John Swinton in [Edward Hewes] Gordon Clark's Shylock: as Banker, Bondholder, Corruptionist, Conspirator, Author's Publisher, c/o the American Bimetallic League, Washington D.C. 1894, p. 111 note 4 books.google: On tracing up this extraordinary speech, I find that the moral substance of it was first popped ...

  6. John Swinton (1829-1901) was a journalist, social reformer, and crusader in the field of labor relations. He was born in Scotland and moved with his parents first to Canada and later to New York, N.Y. He was a journeyman printer, manager of the Lawrence, Kan., Republican, 1856-1857, and studied law and medicine before the Civil War.

  7. John Swinton was a Scottish-American journalist, newspaper publisher, and orator. He is noted for his service as chief editorial writer of The New York Times during the 1860s and for establishing of John Swinton's Paper, which became one of the most prominent American labor newspapers of the 1880s.

  8. A respected journalist, reformer, and labor activist, John Swinton knew Whitman and admired the man and his work from their first meeting, probably between 1855 and 1857.

  1. People also search for