Alfred Cowles, Sr.
Alfred Cowles | |
---|---|
Born |
1832 Mantua, Portage County, Ohio |
Died | 1889 |
Occupation | businessperson |
Known for | Chicago Tribune |
Alfred Cowles, Sr. (1832–1889) was an American businessperson and newspaper publisher. During the 1860s to 1880s he was bookkeeper, treasurer and business manager of the Chicago Tribune of which he was part owner.[1]
His parents were Edwin Weed and Almira Mills Cowles. Another son, Edwin, Jr. (1825–1890), became publisher of the Cleveland Leader newspaper. Edwin married Elizabeth Hutchinson and had two sons: Alfred Hutchinson Cowles and Eugene Hutchinson Cowles (1855–1892).
Alfred Cowles married Sarah Frances Hutchinson, who was born in 1837 in Cayuga, New York. She was the daughter of Moseley and Elizabeth Hutchinson. They had four children: Edwin (1861–1861); Alfred, Jr. (1865–1939); Sarah Frances (1862–1920); and William Hutchinson (1866–1947). William Hutchinson Cowles, Sr., who was married to Harriet Bowen Cheney, became a newspaper publisher in Spokane.
Vassar College has a scholarship named for Sarah Frances Hutchinson Cowles, and the University of Chicago may still have a fellowship named for her.
See also
Notes
- ↑ White, James Terry (1895). The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography: Being the History of the United States. James T. White & Company, via New York Public Library via Google Books full view. Retrieved 2007-10-24. and Robert Norton Smith (10 June 1997). Chapter 1, The Colonel, The Life and Legend of Robert R. McCormick 1880-1955. Houghton Mifflin Co. via The New York Times Company. ISBN 0-395-53379-1. Retrieved 2007-10-24.
- ↑ Book of Chicagoans, published by A.N. Marquis (Chicago), 1911. p. 159
- ↑ The Cheney Genealogy. Edited by Charles Henry Pope, published by Richardson Reprints, 1897. p. 487