Hezekiah Niles, Date of Birth, Place of Birth, Date of Death

    

Hezekiah Niles

American editor and publisher

Date of Birth: 10-Oct-1777

Place of Birth: Chester County, Pennsylvania, United States

Date of Death: 02-Apr-1839

Profession: editor, journalist, publisher

Nationality: United States

Zodiac Sign: Libra


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About Hezekiah Niles

  • Hezekiah Niles (October 10, 1777 – April 2, 1839), was an American editor and publisher of the Baltimore-based national weekly news magazine, Niles' Weekly Register (aka Niles' Register) and the Weekly Register.Niles was born in Chester County, Pennsylvania, to a Quaker family, although his father quit the church to fight in the American Revolutionary War.
  • In 1777, the family fled from Wilmington, Delaware, ahead of the British army to the home of James Jefferis on the east side of the Brandywine Creek near Jefferis' Ford.
  • Niles later asserted in the Weekly Register that a Hessian mercenary threatened to bayonet his mother while pregnant with him. The family returned to Wilmington and after the war his father rejoined the Quakers.
  • At 17, Niles apprenticed with a Philadelphia printer for three years.
  • He then worked in Wilmington for several years, attempting to establish a printing business that went bankrupt in 1801.
  • In 1805 he published a short-lived literary magazine called the Apollo.
  • Later in 1805, he moved to Baltimore, where until 1811 he edited a daily broadsheet, the Baltimore Evening Post, associated with the Democratic-Republican Party.
  • In 1811, he issued the prospectus for the Weekly Register and had 1,500 subscribers before the first issue had been published. Niles edited and published the Weekly Register until 1836, making it into one of the most widely circulated magazines in the United States and himself into one of the most influential journalists of his day.
  • The Niles' Weekly Register covered not only politics, but economics, science, technology, art, and literature.
  • In the Register's discourse of politics, Niles used what he called "magnanimous disputation", trying to present the arguments of both sides fairly and objectively, a policy which has made the paper an important source for the history of the period.Later in life, Niles was afflicted by a paralytic condition and retired to Wilmington, Delaware, where he died in 1839.

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