Online Encyclopedia

WHITELAW REID (1837- )

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V23, Page 52 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

WHITELAW

REID (1837- )  ,
See also:
American journalist and diplomatist, was born of Scotch parentage, near
See also:
Xenia,
See also:
Ohio, on the 27th of
See also:
October 1837 . He graduated at
See also:
Miami University in 1856, and spoke frequently in behalf of John C . Fremont, the Republican
See also:
candidate for the
See also:
presidency in that
See also:
year; was superintendent of
See also:
schools of South
See also:
Charleston, Ohio, in 1856-58, and in 1858-59 was editor of the Xenia
See also:
News . In 186o he became legislative correspondent at Columbus for several Ohio
See also:
newspapers, including the
See also:
Cincinnati
See also:
Gazette, of which he was made city editor in 1861 . He was war correspondent for the Gazette in 1861-62, serving also as volunteer aide-de-camp (with the rank of captain) to General Thomas A . Morris (1811-1904) and General William S . Rosecrans in West Virginia . He was Washington correspondent of the Gazette in 1862-68, acting incidentally as clerk of the military committee of Congress (1862-63) and as librarian of the House of Representatives (1863-66) . In 1868 he became a leading editorial writer for the New York Tribune, in the following year was made managing editor, and in 1872, upon the
See also:
death of Horace Greeley, became the
See also:
principal proprietor and editor-in-chief . In 1905 Reid relinquished his active editorship of the Tribune, but retained
See also:
financial control . He declined an appointment as
See also:
United States minister to Germany in 1877 and again in 1881, but served as minister to France in 1889-92, and in 1892 was the unsuccessful Republican candidate for
See also:
vice-president on the ticket with Benjamin Harrison . In 1897 he was
See also:
special ambassador of the United States on the occasion of Queen Victoria's jubilee; in 1898 was a member of the commission which arranged the terms of peace between the United States and Spain; in 1902 was special ambassador of the United States at the coronation of King
See also:
Edward VII., and in 1905 became ambassador to
See also:
Great Britain .

He was elected a

See also:
life member of the New York State Board of Regents in 1878; and in 1902 he became vice-chancellor and, in 1904, chancellor of the university of the state of New York . In 1881 he married a daughter of Darius
See also:
Ogden Mills (1825-1910), a prominent financier . His publications include After the War (1867), in which he gives his observations during a journey through the
See also:
Southern States in 1866; Ohio in the War (2 vols., 1868) ; Some Consequences of the Last Treaty of Paris (1899); Our New Duties (1899); Later Aspects of Our New Duties (1899); Problems of Expansion (1900); The Greatest Fact in
See also:
Modern
See also:
History (1906), and How
See also:
America faced its Educational Problem (1906) .

End of Article: WHITELAW REID (1837- )
[back]
THOMAS MAYNE REID (1818-1883)
[next]
REIGATE

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.