Talcott Williams

Talcott Williams (1849–1928) was an American journalist and educator.

Portrait of Talcott Williams.

Biography

Williams was born at Abeih, Ottoman Turkey, the son of Congregational missionaries. He graduated from Amherst in 1873. Afterwards. he was employed at the New York World, and as a correspondent for the New York Sun and the San Francisco Chronicle. He was an editorial writer for the Springfield (Mass.) Republican in 1879–81. He worked as an editor of the Philadelphia Press for 30 years, until 1912, when he became director of the new School of Journalism at Columbia University, built and endowed by Joseph Pulitzer. With F. M. Colby, he was editor of the New International Encyclopedia. In 1913, he served as president of the American Conference of Teachers of Journalism.[1]

Williams was a good friend of artist Thomas Eakins. Eakins included a depiction of Williams in The Swimming Hole.[2]

The University of Delaware preserves a collection of Talcott Williams's papers in the Special Collections Department of its library.[3]

Works

  • (1896). The Surroundings and Site of Raleigh's Colony.
  • (1898). Tammany Hall.
  • (1904). Organized labor and capital; the William L. Bull lectures for the year 1904 , with Washington Gladden, George Hodges, and Francis Greenwood Peabody
  • (1905). Organized Labor and Capital.
  • (1912). Appreciations of Horace Howard Furness: Our Great Shakespeare Critic.
  • (1917). The Disposition of Constantinople.
  • (1921). Turkey: A World Problem Today.
  • (1922). The Newspaperman.

Further reading

  • Dunbar, Elizabeth (1936). Talcott Williams, Gentleman of the Fourth Estate. Brooklyn: G.E. Stechert & Company.
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References

  1. Social Networks and Archival Context (SNAC) (2020). "Williams, Talcott, 1849-1928". SNAC. Archived from the original on 2020. Retrieved March 23, 2020.
  2. Berger, Martin A. (1997). ""Modernity and Gender in Thomas Eakins' "Swimming"". American Art. 11:3: 33–47.
  3. "University of Delaware: TALCOTT WILLIAMS PAPERS". www.lib.udel.edu. Retrieved 2020-03-24.


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