Julian Ralph
Julian Ralph (May 27, 1853 in New York City – January 20, 1903) was an author and journalist, most noted for his work on The Sun, a newspaper of New York City.
Julian Ralph | |
---|---|
Biography
At 15 years of age he was a printer's apprentice in New Jersey for the Red Bank Standard where he later became a reporter. He became editor of the Webster, Massachusetts, Times. He returned to his hometown of New York City in 1872 where he was a reporter for The World.[1] He joined the staff of the New York Daily Graphic in 1875, but within a year he left it and was on the staff of the New York Sun until 1895, gaining a world-wide reputation as a correspondent. In 1896 he became London correspondent for the New York Journal, was with the Turkish armies during the Greco-Turkish War in 1897, and in 1899 went to South Africa as war correspondent for the London Daily Mail.[2] He was elected to the Royal Geographical Society in 1898.[1]
In 1876 he married Isabella Mount.[1]
Works
Besides numerous magazine articles, his publications include:[2]
- The Sun's German Barber (1883)[1]
- Dutchman or German (1889)
- On Canada's Frontier (1892)
- Chicago and the World's Fair (1893)
- Our Great West (1893)
- People We Pass (1895)
- Dixie (1896)
- Alone in China (1898)
- A Prince in Georgia (1899)
- Toward Pretoria (1900)
- An American with Lord Roberts (1901)
- War's Brighter Side (1901)
- The Millionairess (a novel, 1902)
- The Making of a Journalist (1903)[1]
Further reading
- Lancaster, Paul, Gentleman of the Press: The Life and Times of an Early Reporter, Julian Ralph of the Sun, Syracuse University Press, 1992.
References
- Willard Grosvenor Bleyer (1935). "Ralph, Julian". Dictionary of American Biography. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons.
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: . New International Encyclopedia. 1905.
External links
- Works by Julian Ralph at Project Gutenberg
- Works by Julian Ralph at Faded Page (Canada)
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Julian Ralph. |