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  1. Dec 28, 2010 · The story of the rise of Adolph Ochs from a poor Tennessee newspaper boy to publisher and owner of the New York Times.

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  2. May 28, 2024 · In 1896 he obtained control of The New York Times, then in financial difficulties ...He formed the New York Times Co., and became the majority stockholder. Adolph Ochs, father left Bavaria ...

  3. A 360 view of the unveiling of the Adolph Ochs historical plaque at Wall Avenue and Market Square on Thursday, Sept. 28, 2022. The Society of Professional Jo...

    • Beginnings
    • The Newspaper Publisher
    • The Big Deal in The Big Apple
    • Remaking The New York Times
    • Bigger and Better
    • The Later Years
    • A Complex Man
    • His Legacy: The New York Times Today

    Adolph Simon Ochs was born March 12, 1858, in Cincinnati to Julius Ochs and Bertha Levy Ochs. Their first child died young; after that, Adolph and his five successive siblings came along. Julius had come from Germany at the age of nineteen, Bertha at sixteen, and they had met in Nashville. Julius was a thoughtful, educated man who spoke six languag...

    Franc Paul’s chance came in April of 1877 when word arrived that the Chattanooga Dispatchwas in trouble and for sale. Colonel MacGowan agreed to go in with him on the purchase and management of the paper, but not without bringing young Dolph along. Paul and MacGowan put up the money; Dolph was to earn his share with sweat equity. The three men took...

    Dolph Ochs could only see one way out of his predicament: buy a bigger newspaper and make it even more profitable than the Chattanooga Times. While continuing to borrow money and manage the Times, he spent the next few years looking for a candidate. Ever-confident in the future, he set his sights on New York City, where he was barely known and woul...

    Turning the Chattanooga Times over to his brother George, Dolph Ochs became publisher of The New York Times on August 18, 1896. His statement in the paper included these words: This statement, so unusual for the era, was reprinted with accolades in newspapers across the country. Dolph spent morning, noon, and night learning every aspect of the pape...

    In 1902, with circulation exceeding 100,000, Adolph decided that he needed to build a new, monumental headquarters, as he had done in Chattanooga. The major New York newspapers had been based on Newspaper Row, facing City Hall in lower Manhattan. As population and commerce moved northward up the island, Adolph decided to move with them. Failing to ...

    As Adolph Ochs aged into his fifties and sixties, he enjoyed his newfound prestige and wealth. He traveled widely, including annual tours of Europe. He had four grandchildren and dozens of grand-nephews and grand-nieces from his five siblings and took many of them with him on trips. In the United States, he often chartered private railroad cars. As...

    Like most of the others we have profiled in the American Originals series, Adolph Ochs was a complex and sometimes contradictory man. He refused to hire women reporters and opposed suffrage for women, to the consternation of his wife and daughter. Yet he left controlling interest in The Times to an enduring trust controlled by his son-in-law Arthur...

    As the twentieth century proceeded, The New York Times crossed 700,000 in daily circulation and over 1.4 million on Sundays. With the rise of digital media, which has shaken the American newspaper industry, by 2017 The Times was down to 540,000 weekdays and 1,066,000 on Sundays, still remarkable numbers. Including digital-only subscriptions and 173...

  4. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Adolph_OchsAdolph Ochs - Wikipedia

    Adolph Simon Ochs (March 12, 1858 – April 8, 1935) was an American newspaper publisher and former owner of The New York Times and The Chattanooga Times, which is now the Chattanooga Times Free Press.

  5. Apr 4, 2016 · In rescuing the failing New York Times 120 years ago, Adolph S. Ochs did not just spring forth, fully formed, from nowhere.

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  7. OBITUARY. Adolph S. Ochs Dead at 77; Publisher of Times Since 1896. By THE NEW YORK TIMES. The story of Adolph S. Ochs is one of a career which, in poverty and wealth, in obscurity and...

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