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  1. 20 de mai. de 2008 · Horace Greeley,1811-1872 / By Thomas Nast (1840-1902) / Watercolor on paper, 1872 / National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution This post originally appeared May 20, 2008 The Liberal Republican Party—a heterogeneous group of reformers and old-line politicians brought together out of disgust for the cronyism and incompetence of Ulysses S. Grant’s Republican

  2. If you are a graduate and would like to request a copy of your transcript for the purposes of transferring colleges, or for employment requirements, please complete BOTH forms below. During the school year, send requests to Maura Olson. During summer, please send requests to Rita Campana. Please be mindful of deadlines as our office requires 15 ...

  3. Horace Greeley (1811 –1872), a reformer and abolitionist, founded The New York Tribune in 1841. He edited and published what decades later became known affectionately as The Trib and preached ...

  4. Horace Greeley (1811-1872) became one of the most famous American public figures of his day as the editor of the New-York Tribune. Greeley was born in 1811 in Amherst, Vermont, third child of Zaccheus Greeley and Mary Woodburn Greeley. He received little formal education, though he learned to read very young.

  5. Horace Greeley. Horace Greeley, the son of a New England farmer and day laborer, was born in Amherst, New Hampshire in February 1811. The economic struggles of his family meant that Greeley received only irregular schooling, which ended when he was fourteen. He then apprenticed to a newspaper editor in Vermont, and found employment as a printer ...

  6. Horace Greeley (1811-1872) Born the third of 7 children to Amherst, NH farmers, Horace Greeley displayed signs of intellectual curiosity and aptitude by the age of 4. Within two years, the boy declared career aspirations of becoming a printer, a desire driven by his passion for reading and learning. Although Greeley’s formal education ended ...

  7. Horace Greeley, editor of the New York Tribune, wrote this letter in 1871 to R. L. Sanderson, a young correspondent who had requested career advice.Greeley, a great supporter of westward expansion, shared the national conviction that it was the manifest destiny of America to conquer and civilize the land between the Atlantic and the Pacific Oceans.