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George D. Prentice | |
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Born | George Dennison Prentice December 18, 1802 Preston, Connecticut, U.S. |
Died | January 22, 1870 | (aged 67)
Resting place | Cave Hill Cemetery Louisville, Kentucky, U.S. |
Occupation | Newspaper editor |
Political party | Whig Know-Nothing Party Constitutional Union Party |
Spouse |
Harriet Benham (m. 1835) |
George Dennison Prentice (December 18, 1802 – January 22, 1870) was an American newspaper editor, writer and poet who built the Louisville Journal into a major newspaper in Louisville, Kentucky, and the Ohio River Valley, in part by the virulence and satire in its editorials, which some blamed for a bloody election day riot in 1855. A slaveholder, Prentice initially supported Unionist candidate John Bell in the 1860 U.S. presidential election, and after the American Civil War, he urged Kentucky to remain neutral. Both of his sons joined the Confederate States Army, one dying in 1862, and Prentice's editorials lampooned Kentucky's military governor, Union General Stephen G. Burbridge. Prentice later opposed Congressional Reconstruction. He wrote a biography of Henry Clay published in 1831, an 1836 poem published in the McGuffey Readers, and a collection of his humorous essays was published in 1859 and revised after his death.[1][2]