New York Tribune
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During the American Civil War (1861-1865) the tribune was a radical republican newspaper, which supported abolition and subjection of the confederacy instead of negotiated peace. during the first few months of the war, the tribune's "on to Richmond" slogan presured Union general Irvin McDowell into advancing on Richmond before his army was ready, resulting the disaster a the First Battle of Manassas (July 21, 1861). after the failure of the Peninsular Campaign(spring 1862), the tribune pressured president Abraham Lincoln into instating John Pope as commander of the army of the Potomac.
Following Greeley's defeat for the Presidency of the United States in 1872, Whitelaw Reid, owner of the New York Herald, assumed control of the Tribune. Greeley checked into Dr. Choate’s Sanitarium where he died a few weeks later. Under Reid's son Ogden Mills Reid the paper acquired the New York Herald to form the New York Herald Tribune, which continued to be run by Ogden M. Reid until his death in 1947.
Copies of The New York Tribune are available on microfilm at many large libraries. The original paper articles from the newspaper's morgue are kept at [The Center for American History] at the University of Texas at Austin.
Trivia
- The New York Tribune building was the first home of Pace University. Today, the site of where the building once stood is now the Pace Plaza complex of Pace University's New York City campus.
- Dr. Choate’s residence and private sanitarium, where Horace Greeley died, is now part of the campus of Pace University in Pleasantville, New York.
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