Crosby Stuart Noyes | |
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Crosby Stuart Noyes
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Born |
Minot, Maine |
February 16, 1823
Died | February 21, 1908 Pasadena, California |
(aged 85)
Employer | Washington Evening Star |
Spouse(s) | Elizabeth Selina Williams |
Children |
Theodore W. Noyes Frank Brett Noyes Thomas Clarence Noyes |
Crosby Stuart Noyes (February 16, 1825 – February 21, 1908) was the publisher of the Washington Evening Star.
Noyes was born on February 16, 1825 in Minot, Maine. He was interested in writing from his childhood, publishing his own juvenile newspaper called the Minot Notion when he was fifteen. Maine newspapers later began to print humorous sketches that he had written. One such sketch, a dialect-heavy piece titled "A Yankee in a Cotton Factory" was widely republished.
Having arranged to write letters from Washington for several New England newspapers, he travelled to Washington, D.C. in 1847; his funds running low and unable to afford train fare, he had to walk from Baltimore to Washington. In 1855 he travelled Europe on foot and during that time contributed letters to the Boston Transcript.
For several months, Noyes worked for a bookseller, as an usher in a theatre, and as a route agent for the Baltimore Sun before becoming a writer for a local weekly, the Washington News. He also began writing reports in the form of letters for newspapers in Maine, Boston, and Philadelphia, and became part of the press gallery that covered the United States Congress.
In 1855, Noyes returned to Washington and became a reporter for the Evening Star which had been created only a few years earlier in 1852. It was managed by William Douglas Wallach. Circulation increased in the decade before the American Civil War, and Noyes developed contacts with the Lincoln administration's cabinet such that the Star became an outlet for official announcements. Noyes eventually rose up to the position of assistant editor. In 1867 Noyes became editor-in-chief after Wallach sold the paper to Noyes and two other investors for $110,000.
After the Civil War, Noyes and his newspaper crusaded to improve Washington's buildings and infrastructure, encouraging the efforts of Alexander Robey Shepherd. In 1863, he served on the City Council and for a couple of terms as an alderman. He was active in the establishment of Rock Creek Park.