See also:DANA, See also:CHARLES See also:- ANDERSON
- ANDERSON, ADAM (1692—1765)
- ANDERSON, ALEXANDER (c. 1582-1620?)
- ANDERSON, ELIZABETH GARRETT (1836— )
- ANDERSON, JAMES (1662—1728)
- ANDERSON, JAMES (1739-1808)
- ANDERSON, JOHN (1726-1796)
- ANDERSON, MARY (1859– )
- ANDERSON, RICHARD HENRY (1821–1879)
- ANDERSON, ROBERT (1750–1830)
- ANDERSON, SIR EDMUND (1530-1605)
ANDERSON (1819–'897) , See also:American journalist, was See also:born in Hinsdale, New See also:Hampshire, on the 8th of See also:August 1819. At the See also:age of twelve he became a clerk in his See also:uncle's See also:general See also:store at See also:Buffalo, which failed in 1837, In 1839 he entered Harvard, but the impairment of his eyesight in 1841 forced him to leave See also:college, and caused him to abandon his intention of entering the See also:ministry and of studying in See also:Germany. From See also:September 1841 until See also:March 1846 he lived at See also:Brook See also:Farm, where he was made one of the trustees of the farm, was See also:head waiter when the farm became a Fourierite See also:phalanx, and was in See also:charge of the phalanstery's finances when its buildings were burned iii 1846. He had previously written for (and managed) the See also:Harbinger, the Brook Farm See also:organ, and had written as See also:early as 1844 for the See also:Boston Chronotype. In 1847 he joined the See also:staff of the New See also:York See also:Tribune, and in 1848 he wrote from See also:Europe letters to it and other papers on the revolutionary movements of that See also:year. Returning to the Tribune in 1849, he became its managing-editor, and in this capacity actively promoted the See also:anti-See also:slavery cause, seeming to shape the See also:paper's policy at a See also:- TIME (0. Eng. Lima, cf. Icel. timi, Swed. timme, hour, Dan. time; from the root also seen in " tide," properly the time of between the flow and ebb of the sea, cf. O. Eng. getidan, to happen, " even-tide," &c.; it is not directly related to Lat. tempus)
- TIME, MEASUREMENT OF
- TIME, STANDARD
time when See also:Greeley was undecided and vacillating. In 1862 his resignation was asked for by the See also:board of managers of the Tribune, apparently because of wide temperamental See also:differences between him and Greeley. Secretary of See also:War See also:Stanton immediately made him a See also:special investigating See also:agent of the war See also:department; in this capa See also:city Dana discovered frauds of quartermasters and contractors, and as the " eyes of the See also:administration," as See also:Lincoln called him, he spent much time at the front, and sent to Stanton frequent reports concerning the capacity and methods of various generals in the See also:- FIELD (a word common to many West German languages, cf. Ger. Feld, Dutch veld, possibly cognate with O.E. f olde, the earth, and ultimately with root of the Gr. irAaror, broad)
- FIELD, CYRUS WEST (1819-1892)
- FIELD, DAVID DUDLEY (18o5-1894)
- FIELD, EUGENE (1850-1895)
- FIELD, FREDERICK (18o1—1885)
- FIELD, HENRY MARTYN (1822-1907)
- FIELD, JOHN (1782—1837)
- FIELD, MARSHALL (183 1906)
- FIELD, NATHAN (1587—1633)
- FIELD, STEPHEN JOHNSON (1816-1899)
- FIELD, WILLIAM VENTRIS FIELD, BARON (1813-1907)
field; he went through the See also:Vicksburg See also:campaign and was at Chickamauga and See also:Chattanooga, and urged the placing of General See also:- GRANT (from A.-Fr. graunter, O. Fr. greanter for creanter, popular Lat. creantare, for credentare, to entrust, Lat. credere, to believe, trust)
- GRANT, ANNE (1755-1838)
- GRANT, CHARLES (1746-1823)
- GRANT, GEORGE MONRO (1835–1902)
- GRANT, JAMES (1822–1887)
- GRANT, JAMES AUGUSTUS (1827–1892)
- GRANT, ROBERT (1814-1892)
- GRANT, SIR ALEXANDER
- GRANT, SIR FRANCIS (1803-1878)
- GRANT, SIR JAMES HOPE (1808–1895)
- GRANT, SIR PATRICK (1804-1895)
- GRANT, U
- GRANT, ULYSSES SIMPSON (1822-1885)
Grant in supreme command of all the armies in the field. Dana was second assistant-secretary of war in 1864–1865, and in 1865–1866 conducted the newly-established and unsuccessful See also:Chicago Republican. He became the editor and See also:part-owner of the New York See also:Sun in 1868, and remained in See also:control of it until his See also:death at Glen See also:Cove, See also:Long See also:Island, New York,
on the 17th of See also:October 1897. Under Dana's control the Sun opposed the See also:impeachment of See also:President See also:- JOHNSON, ANDREW
- JOHNSON, ANDREW (1808–1875)
- JOHNSON, BENJAMIN (c. 1665-1742)
- JOHNSON, EASTMAN (1824–1906)
- JOHNSON, REVERDY (1796–1876)
- JOHNSON, RICHARD (1573–1659 ?)
- JOHNSON, RICHARD MENTOR (1781–1850)
- JOHNSON, SAMUEL (1709-1784)
- JOHNSON, SIR THOMAS (1664-1729)
- JOHNSON, SIR WILLIAM (1715–1774)
- JOHNSON, THOMAS
Johnson; it supported Grant for the See also:presidency in 1868; it was a See also:sharp critic of Grant as president; and in 1872 took part in the Liberal Republican revolt and urged Greeley's nomination. It favoured See also:Tilden, the Democratic See also:candidate for the presidency, in 1876, opposed the Electoral See also:Commission and continually referred to See also:Hayes as the " See also:fraud president." In 1884 it supported See also:Benjamin F. See also:- BUTLER
- BUTLER (or BOTELER), SAMUEL (1612–168o)
- BUTLER (through the O. Fr. bouteillier, from the Late Lat. buticularius, buticula, a bottle)
- BUTLER, ALBAN (1710-1773)
- BUTLER, BENJAMIN FRANKLIN (1818-1893)
- BUTLER, CHARLES (1750–1832)
- BUTLER, GEORGE (1774-1853)
- BUTLER, JOSEPH (1692-1752)
- BUTLER, NICHOLAS MURRAY (1862– )
- BUTLER, SAMUEL (1774-1839)
- BUTLER, SAMUEL (1835-1902)
- BUTLER, SIR WILLIAM FRANCIS (1838– )
- BUTLER, WILLIAM ARCHER (1814-1848)
Butler, the candidate of Greenback-Labor and Anti-Monopolist parties, for the presidency, and opposed See also:Blaine (Republican) and even more bitterly See also:Cleveland (Democrat); it supported Cleveland and opposed See also:Harrison in 1888, although it had bitterly criticized Cleveland's first administration, and was to criticize nearly every detail of his second, with the exception of Federal interference in the See also:Pullman strike of 1894; and in 1896, on the See also:free-See also:silver issue, it opposed See also:Bryan, the Democratic candidate for the presidency. Dana's See also:literary See also:style came to be the style of the Sun—simple, strong, clear, " boiled down." The See also:Art of Newspaper Making, containing three lectures which he wrote on journalism, was published in 1900. With See also:George See also:Ripley he edited The New American Cyclopaedia (15 vols., 1857-1863), reissued as the American Cyclopaedia in 1873-1876. He had excellent See also:taste in the See also:fine arts and edited an See also:anthology, The See also:Household See also:Book of See also:Poetry (1857). He was a very See also:good linguist, published several versions from the See also:German, and read the See also:Romance and Scandinavian See also:languages; he was an art connoisseur and See also:left a remarkable collection of See also:Chinese See also:porcelain. Dana's Reminiscences of the See also:Civil War was published in 1898, as was his Eastern Journeys, Notes of Travel. He also edited a campaign See also:Life of U. S. Grant, published over his name and that of General See also:- JAMES
- JAMES (Gr. 'IlrKw,l3or, the Heb. Ya`akob or Jacob)
- JAMES (JAMES FRANCIS EDWARD STUART) (1688-1766)
- JAMES, 2ND EARL OF DOUGLAS AND MAR(c. 1358–1388)
- JAMES, DAVID (1839-1893)
- JAMES, EPISTLE OF
- JAMES, GEORGE PAYNE RAINSFOP
- JAMES, HENRY (1843— )
- JAMES, JOHN ANGELL (1785-1859)
- JAMES, THOMAS (c. 1573–1629)
- JAMES, WILLIAM (1842–1910)
- JAMES, WILLIAM (d. 1827)
James H. See also:- WILSON, ALEXANDER (1766-1813)
- WILSON, HENRY (1812–1875)
- WILSON, HORACE HAYMAN (1786–1860)
- WILSON, JAMES (1742—1798)
- WILSON, JAMES (1835— )
- WILSON, JAMES HARRISON (1837– )
- WILSON, JOHN (1627-1696)
- WILSON, JOHN (178 1854)
- WILSON, ROBERT (d. 1600)
- WILSON, SIR DANIEL (1816–1892)
- WILSON, SIR ROBERT THOMAS (1777—1849)
- WILSON, SIR WILLIAM JAMES ERASMUS
- WILSON, THOMAS (1663-1755)
- WILSON, THOMAS (c. 1525-1581)
- WILSON, WOODROW (1856— )
Wilson in 1868.
See James Wilson, The Life of Charles A. Dana (New York, 1907).
End of Article: DANA, CHARLES ANDERSON (1819–'897)
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