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  1. Charles Bergstresser. Charles Milford Bergstresser (June 25, 1858 – September 20, 1923) was an American journalist [1] and, with Charles Dow and Edward Jones, one of the founders of Dow Jones & Company at 15 Wall Street in 1882.

  2. Apr 14, 2024 · The courtier at the centre of the extraordin­ary bust-up is Garter King Of Arms David White, who is understood to have been on the receiving end of a severe dressing-down. Mr White is accused of ignoring long-establishe­d court procedure and instead using ‘back channels’ to secure the King’s signature on his preferred choice for a senior appointmen­t at his department, the College of ...

  3. The company’s big competitive advantage was a special stylus developed by a third, and now-forgotten, founder, one Charles M. Bergstresser (I think of him as the third tenor of Dow Jones), which could produce more than two-dozen copies with a single impression. Then, as now, speed meant the difference between relevance and the lack of it.

  4. The two journalists started a small financial news service along with another partner, Charles Bergstresser. Bergstresser was the one with the deep pockets to bankroll the new company, but was unfortunately cursed with a name too long for the letterhead. So Dow Jones it became. Charles Dow's roots were far from the world of high finance.

  5. Mar 24, 1999 · Meet Charles M. Bergstresser, a forgotten figure alongside Charles Dow and Edward Jones as one of the three founders of Dow Jones & Company. He was there beside his partners when they first began ...

  6. Who was Charles Bergstresser? Charles Milford Bergstresser was an American journalist and, with Charles Dow and Edward Jones, one of the founders of Dow Jones & Company at 15 Wall Street in 1882. A native of Berrysburg, Pennsylvania, Bergstresser was born on June 25, 1858. Bergstresser graduated from Lafayette College, where he took a ...

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  8. Nov 10, 2022 · Charles Bergstresser was already working at Kiernan when they arrived. Bergstresser didn’t feel like Kiernan treated him fairly. In 1882 he convinced Dow and Jones to leave Kiernan and found their own financial news agency. It couldn’t have happened without Bergstresser. “Buggy,” as they called him, was the most important partner.