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John Addison Porter (Secretary to the President)

John Addison Porter
John Addison Porter Jr.jpg
Born (1856-04-17)April 17, 1856
New Haven, Connecticut
United States
Died December 15, 1900(1900-12-15) (aged 44)
Pomfret, Connecticut
United States
Resting place New Haven, Connecticut
United States
Nationality American
Education Yale College
Russell Military Academy
Hopkins Grammar School
Occupation First "Secretary to the President" (1897-1900)
Journalist
Employer President William McKinley
Rep. William Walter Phelps
Spouse(s) Amy Ellen Betts
Children Josephine Earl Porter Van Name
Parent(s) John Addison Porter and Josephine Earl Sheffield
Relatives Joseph Earl Sheffield (grandfather)
Rep. William Walter Phelps (uncle)

John Addison Porter (April 17, 1856 – December 15, 1900) was an American journalist, and the first person to hold the position of "Secretary to the President". He was born in New Haven, Connecticut and died in Pomfret, Connecticut.

Porter attended Hopkins Grammar School and the Russell Military Academy at New Haven, and graduated from Yale College with an A.B. in 1878. As an undergraduate, he served on the sixth editorial board of The Yale Record. He received an A.M. in American history from Yale in 1881. He studied law with his uncle, William Jarvis Boardman, in Cleveland, Ohio, but never practiced that profession.

In 1880 he joined the staff of the Hartford Observer. He was also a reporter for a brief time on the New Haven Daily Palladium and on the Hartford Courant. In 1882 he became literary editor of the New York Observer. Moving to Washington, D.C., he continued his newspaper work.

In 1884 he served as secretary to his uncle William Walter Phelps, a member of the House of Representatives, and also served as a clerk on the select Senate committee on Indian affairs.

Moving to Pomfret, Connecticut in 1886, he purchased a third interest in the Hartford Evening Post, and became managing editor and editor-in-chief. He sold the paper in 1899.

In 1886, he organized and ran the Oregon Publishing Company, which took over the Portland Evening Telegram newspaper (founded 1877). The Telegram, a Republican-leaning newspaper, merged in 1931 with the Portland News, creating the Portland News-Telegram, which in turn ceased publishing in 1939.

In 1887 illness obliged him to spend the winter in the South; returning north he purchased an estate in Pomfret, Connecticut, which became his final home.

In 1891 he served as a representative from Pomfret in the Connecticut legislature. In 1892 he was a delegate to the Republican national convention in Minneapolis. In 1894, 1896 and 1898 he was considered as a Republican nominee for governor of Connecticut, but was ultimately not chosen. He was influential in persuading the Connecticut delegate to the St. Louis convention to cast their votes for William McKinley.


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