The New Student's Reference Work/Hearst, William Randolph
Hearst, William Randolph, was born
in San Francisco, April 29, 1863. He studied
at Harvard, but did not graduate. In
1886 he gained possession of The Examiner
of San Francisco, a paper that then was on
WILLIAM R. HEARST
the verge of failure,
and quickly made
it a financial
success and a widely
read newspaper. In
1895 he became
proprietor of The
Journal (now The
American) and The
Evening Journal, of
New York City. He
later established
The Chicago
American and The
Examiner, and now
has a chain of eight
daily newspapers
extending from the
Pacific coast to New
England. He
represented the 11th New York Congressional
district in the 58th and 59th Congresses. In 1895
he was nominated for the mayoralty of New
York, but was defeated. In 1896 he was
nominated by the Independence League for
governor of New York, and his candidacy
was endorsed by the Democratic party,
but he failed of election. Under his leadership,
in 1908, a convention of the Independence
League was held in Chicago, and
Thomas L. Hisgen was nominated as its
candidate for the presidency.