William H. Huse

William H. Huse was an American newspaper publisher and politician from Newburyport, Massachusetts.

William H. Huse
Mayor of Newburyport, Massachusetts
In office
1888–1888
Preceded byJ. Otis Winkley
Succeeded byAlbert C. Titcomb
Collector of Customs the Newburyport District
In office
1870–1886
Preceded byEnoch G. Currier
Succeeded byGeorge W. Jackman Jr.
Personal details
DiedMarch 28, 1888
Political partyRepublican
OccupationNewspaper publisher

Publishing

On October 7, 1845, Huse, Joseph Bragdon, and Alfred M. Berry began publishing the Newburyport Advertiser, a semi-weekly newspaper. Berry left the paper on January 1, 1847 and Hues and Bragdon continued to publish it until July 10, 1849 when they discontinued the paper in favor of the Daily Evening Union, a daily evening journal published by Huse, Bragdon, Charles Nason, and James C. Peabody. By June 1, 1852, Huse was the sole publisher of the paper. In January 1854, Huse joined the firm of Morss and Brewster, which published the Daily Herald of Newburyport. The firm changed its name to Morss, Brewster & Huse upon the addition of Huse and Huse's paper, the Daily Evening Union, was discontinued. Two years later Joseph B. Morss and William H. Brewster sold the business to Huse, who added new associates and changed the firm's name to William H. Huse & Co. In 1899, the paper was sold to the Newburyport Herald Company.[1]

From 1854 to 1856, Huse also published the Saturday Evening Union and Weekly Family Visitor (renamed the Saturday Evening Union and Essex North Record in February 1855).[1]

Political career

From 1855 to 1856, Huse represented Newburyport in the Massachusetts House of Representatives.[2]

In 1857, Huse and others incorporated the Mechanics Library Association for the purpose of promoting "the instruction and improvement of young men engaged in mechanical pursuits".[3]

From 1861 to 1863, and again in 1866 Huse represented Ward Five on the Newburyport board of aldermen.[4]

From 1870 to 1886, Huse was the Collector of Customs the Newburyport District.[5]

In 1888, Huse was elected Mayor of Newburyport. He died in office on March 28, 1888.[4]

gollark: I would probably need to come up with a suitably vaguely ridiculous name, such as "libpotato".
gollark: Just use a minifier™.
gollark: There are probably a bunch of other utilities which would be neat which I repeat a lot, I think often stuff for fiddling with table formats.
gollark: Including stuff like "read all of handle and then close it" (plus convenience stuff for fs.open/http.get), probably some of potatOS's random vaguely general-purpose stuff like compression, "safe" (de)serialization, map/reduce/filter/other stuff, randomly pick item from list, generate random bytestring, etc.
gollark: But also with other things.

References

  1. Currier, John J. (1906). History of Newburyport, Mass. 1764-1905, Volume 1. John J. Currier. pp. 509–515.
  2. Currier, John J. (1906). History of Newburyport, Mass. 1764-1905, Volume I. John J. Currier. p. 682.
  3. Currier, John J. (1909). History of Newburyport, Mass. 1764-1905, Volume 2. John J. Currier. p. 177.
  4. Currier, John J. (1909). History of Newburyport, Mass. 1764-1905, Volume 2. John J. Currier. pp. 605–609.
  5. Currier, John J. (1906). History of Newburyport, Mass. 1764-1905, Volume 1. John J. Currier. p. 676.
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