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John Babsone Lane Soule (1815–1891) was an American publisher, minister, poet and professor. [ 1 ] Originally from Maine, he went to Exeter Academy in New Hampshire and graduated in 1840 from Bowdoin College in Maine.
John Tabor was the publishing director of the El Nicaragüense newspaper in 1854. [39] Tabor accompanied William Walker along with six of the original "immortals" aboard the steamship Fashion headed to Greytown, Nicaragua. [40] Tabor often got into confrontations regarding his right to publish his paper in Central America. [41]
John Soule may refer to: John B. L. Soule (1815–1891), American poet, preacher, and newspaperman, active in Indiana and Illinois John P. Soule (1828–1904), American photographer and publisher, active in Massachusetts and Washington state
Some claim it was first stated by John Babsone Lane Soule in an 1851 editorial in the Terre Haute Express, "Go west young man, and grow up with the country"; and that Greeley later used the quote in his own editorial in 1865. [9] However, the phrase does not appear in the 1851 edition of the Terre Haute Express. [10]
The phrase "Go West, young man" first appears in an editorial by Indiana newspaper writer John B.L. Soule in the Terre Haute Express. The saying is later popularized by Horace Greeley, editor of the New-York Tribune. Western Union is founded as The New York and Mississippi Valley Printing Telegraph Company. Jan 23
To put his youngest daughter to inherit his estate ahead of his eldest son would have been a major humiliation for John Soule. But John must have done well in his father's eyes since after his father's death, he did inherit the Duxbury estate. Twenty years later Patience and her husband sold the Middleboro estate they had received from her ...
Preservation Society of Fall River board president Jim Soule steps through the front door of the John Read House on June Street in January 2023. The society owns the house, restored it, and rents ...
John Wallace Houston (1834), Secretary of State of Delaware (1841–1844), associate judge Delaware Superior Court (1855–1893) [2] John Hubbard Tweedy (1834), delegate to the United States Congress from Wisconsin Territory (1847–1848) [2] William Henry Washington (1834), Whig U.S. Congressman from North Carolina (1841–1843) [2]