Alfred Holman

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Alfred H. Holman (c. 1857 – 1930) was a prominent newspaper owner and editor in the western United States in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Both of Holman's grandfathers were pioneers of the Oregon Country, settling in Yamhill County in the 1840s. Holman was hired by The Oregonian in 1869-70, and he was associated with that newspaper's editor, Harvey W. Scott, for 40 years hence. He published an obituary for Scott in the Oregon Historical Quarterly in 1913.[1] Holman had one daughter, Helen.[2] Oregon Supreme Court justice Thomas A. McBride was his uncle.

Holman worked as a newspaper editor in Seattle, San Jose, and Sacramento prior to purchasing The Argonaut, a highly regarded San Francisco newspaper, in 1907. He served as the Argonaut's editor until he sold it in 1924.[3][4][5][6] With several associates, he purchased the San Francisco Bulletin that year.[7] He edited the Bulletin and the Oakland Tribune prior to his death in 1930.[8] He served on the advisory board of the Columbia School of Journalism in New York, and on in that capacity made recommendations for the Pulitzer Prize.[9] He wrote a number of articles for the New York Times in the 1920s as that newspaper's "Pacific States correspondent."[3]

Prosecutor Francis J. Heney singled out Holman and the Argonaut in 1908 in his criticism of San Francisco newspapers in the context of the Oregon land fraud trials. Heney charged that Holman compromised his reporting in order to protect the wealthy.[10]

Holman served on the committee for the 1915 Panama Pacific Exposition.[11]

Holman was invited in 1918 by the British Government to join an American delegation to view the World War I front.[12] The delegation witnessed the "probably destruction" of a German U Boat by an American warship.[13] He described his visit to Paris in an Argonaut column that was republished in his native Yamhill County.[14] In 1922 Holman was offered a position as minister to Greece in the Warren G. Harding administration.[15][16]

Holman died of a heart attack while visiting Bolinas, California in 1930.[17]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Holman, Alfred (1913). "Harvey W. Scott, Editor—review of his half-century and estimate of his work" . Oregon Historical Quarterly.
  2. ^ "Morning Press 15 January 1921 — California Digital Newspaper Collection".
  3. ^ a b "ALFRED HOLMAN DIES; SAN FRANCISCO WRITER: Editor and Publisher of The Argonaut From 1907 to 1924-On Board of Pulitzer School". New York Times. December 15, 1930.
  4. ^ "Argonaut Sold to Alfred Holman". San Francisco Call. January 11, 1907.
  5. ^ "Alfred Holman to Buy Argonaut: Former Editor and Proprietor of Sacramento Union To Enter New Field". January 4, 1907.
  6. ^ Turnbull, George Stanley (1939). "Trail of the Reporters" . History of Oregon Newspapers .
  7. ^ "Bulletin Purchase Formally Announced". Healdsburg Tribune. June 9, 1924.
  8. ^ "Alfred Holman, Editor, Is Dead". The Colusa Herald. December 15, 1930.
  9. ^ "PULITZER AWARDS MAY 3: Recommendations of Board to Be Confirmed by Columbia Trustees". New York Times. April 24, 1926.
  10. ^ "Heney Grills Defenders of the Higherups: Styles Editor Holman of the Argonaut Sycophant and Parasite Upon the Rich". San Francisco Call. April 14, 1908.
  11. ^ "San Francisco Call 27 December 1909 — California Digital Newspaper Collection".
  12. ^ "Holman to Visit War Front and Study Conditions". Santa Barbara Morning Press. August 15, 1918.
  13. ^ "San Diego Union and Daily Bee 28 October 1918 — California Digital Newspaper Collection".
  14. ^ "Newberg graphic. (Newberg, Or.) 1888-1993, January 30, 1919, Image 1 « Historic Oregon Newspapers".
  15. ^ "Editor Considered for Appointment as Minister to Greece". San Diego Union. April 6, 1922.
  16. ^ "Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937, April 07, 1922, Image 1 « Historic Oregon Newspapers".
  17. ^ "Sausalito News 19 December 1930 — California Digital Newspaper Collection".