Henry Jarvis Raymond | Founder of The New York Times, Civil War Correspondent | Britannica
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Henry Jarvis Raymond

American journalist
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Henry Jarvis Raymond
Henry Jarvis Raymond
Born:
Jan. 24, 1820, near Lima, N.Y., U.S.
Died:
June 18, 1869, New York City (aged 49)
Founder:
“The New York Times”
Political Affiliation:
Republican Party

Henry Jarvis Raymond (born Jan. 24, 1820, near Lima, N.Y., U.S.—died June 18, 1869, New York City) was a U.S. journalist and politician who, as the first editor and chief proprietor of The New York Times (from 1851), did much to elevate the style and tone of contemporary newspapers and who was prominent in forming the Republican Party.

Raymond worked for Horace Greeley on the weekly New Yorker in 1840 and then from 1841 to 1848 on the daily New York Tribune. As early as 1843 he and George Jones had planned their own newspaper, but lack of capital forced postponement of the project until Sept. 18, 1851, when the first issue of the New York Daily Times (renamed The New York Times in 1857) was published. The paper was largely free from the hyper-emotional writing and the emphasis on extremist personalities that was common in the 1850s, a period of factional and sectional hatreds that were exploited by many journalists and helped bring on the American Civil War (1861–65). During that conflict, as in the war of France and Piedmont against Austria in 1859, Raymond served as a war correspondent.

Although Raymond had been a valued employee of Greeley for several years, they were temperamentally incompatible and became political enemies. Raymond’s nomination over Greeley on the Whig ticket for lieutenant governor of New York and his election in 1854 led to the dissolution of the political alliance of Greeley, Thurlow Weed, and William H. Seward and contributed to the demise of the Whig Party. For the new Republican Party’s convention in Pittsburgh, in February 1856, Raymond wrote a statement of party principles known as the “Address to the People.” He prepared most of Pres. Abraham Lincoln’s platform in 1864 and from that year until 1866 was chairman of the Republican National Committee. Elected to the U.S. House of Representatives for the 1865–67 term, he was criticized for failing to oppose the radical Reconstruction plan of Thaddeus Stevens, the leading foe of Pres. Andrew Johnson. Denied renomination by his party, Raymond returned to active newspaper work.

This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.