Fame is a vapor. -- Horace Greeley In case you missed it last week, we reported that Augusta State University is raising cash by letting people buy naming rights...
Horace Greeley told a generation of adventurers in the mid-19th century to "go west."That advice is still being followed in Augusta, although...
...sifted through the numbers and discovered an obvious direction: Go west, to Columbia County. Following the famous Horace Greeley aphorism, University is studying whether to build a new $12 million, 55,000-square-foot medical office building...
...fact, a siege that lasted over three months ... Then, Mr. Gresham selectively quotes Mr. Lincoln's letter to Horace Greeley. The actual quote is as follows: "My paramount objective in this struggle is to save the Union, and is not either...
...the Union! President Lincoln himself stated what the War of Northern Aggression was about when he wrote a letter to Horace Greeley, the New York Tribune editor, in 1862: "My paramount object is to save the Union, and not either destroy or save...
...at Fort Monroe, several abolitionists from the North aided in securing his release. One of these individuals was Horace Greeley. He was afraid that Mr. Davis' poor health would cause him to die in prison. This would create terrible news abroad...
...hit that thing, I'll hit it hard."But after becoming president, an influential Northern newspaper columnist, Horace Greeley, attacked Lincoln for procrastinating on the slavery issue, to which the president responded, "My paramount object...
...confinement at Fort Monroe, Va. His failing health became a major concern for his captors. Even the noted abolitionist Horace Greeley befriended him and sought Davis' release. A distant admirer, Pope Pius IX, sent him a crown of thorns he had personally...
CHAPPAQUA, N.Y. -- Horace Greeley, the 19th-century journalist and presidential candidate, is getting a good look at why he's no longer Chappaqua's favorite...