Joseph Pulitzer was one of the most prominent US journalists and publisher of his times
@Journalists, Timeline and Childhood
Joseph Pulitzer was one of the most prominent US journalists and publisher of his times
Joseph Pulitzer born at
In 1878, Joseph Pulitzer married Kate Davis, a woman quite prominent in her own accord. The couple had seven children, of whom five survived till adulthood.
He died on October 29, 1911, in his yacht, in South Carolina
Joseph Pulitzer was born on April 10, 1847, in Mako, Hungary, in a prominent Jewish family. He was initially tutored by private teachers and learnt French and German at an early age. When his father retired and settled in Budapest, Joseph went to school there.
At the age of 17, Joseph wanted to enlist in the Austrian Army, but he was rejected because of his weak health and poor eyesight. It was in Hamburg, that he came in contact with a bounty hunter for the US Army. The recruiter enlisted Joseph as a substitute for a draftee; this process was permitted under the Civil War draft system and eventually Joseph got absorbed in Lincoln Cavalry.
After a short military career, Joseph came back to New York. But there were too many war veterans and lesser vacancies. In order to support himself, Joseph went to Missouri and took up odds jobs. He worked as a waiter, deckhand, grave digger, taxi driver and even a caretaker for mules.
Thereafter Joseph was hired to maintain the land records in Atlantic and Pacific Railroad. This experience prompted him to study law. He became a naturalized American citizen in 1867
Joseph’s career started in 1868, a fascinating manner. Watching a game of chess in a library, Joseph made a strategic move and the players started conversing with him. The players were editors of ‘Westliche Post’, a leading German language daily, and Joseph got a job offer in the newspaper.
He joined the Republican Party in 1869 and was asked by the party to fight for a seat in State Legislature. It was difficult to win, because he fought the election from a Democratic-populated region. But Joseph’s relentless campaigns paid off and he won.
By 1872, Joseph was known as an enterprising journalist, and was offered a controlling interest in the Westliche Post, which was nearly bankrupt at the time. Thus, Joseph Pulitzer became a publisher at the age of 25.
What followed next was the acquisition of a German newspaper which he sold at a twenty thousand dollar profit. The money helped him to support his law studies and also some of his political endeavours.
In 1876, Joseph started practising law, but left it in 1878 and bought the newspaper ‘St. Louis Dispatch’. With two newspapers aiding him to voice his opinion, Joseph along with his talented editor John Cockerill, protested against gambling, tax dodges and lotteries, civic corruptions and gambling circuits.
He used his newspaper as an instrument to raise concern against corruption, fraud, monopolies, gambling rings and ill practices by elected officials. He also made innovation such as comics, sports coverage, women’s fashion coverage into his newspapers and introduced the entertainment quotient in the newspapers.