So complete a system of government never before existed, and it became the admiration of the lovers of liberty throughout the world. The prayers of its founders, as they passed from earth, were for its perpetuity. It was received by their children and cherished as an inheritance above all price. With them the man who dared to lisp of its destruction was branded as a traitor and an enemy of mankind.
John Dougherty Defrees (1810–1882) was an American newspaperman and politician.
Born in Sparta, Tennessee, Defrees moved to Ohio and worked in the law office of Thomas Corwin, who would later serve as Governor of Ohio. In 1831, Defrees and his brother, Joseph, moved to South Bend, Indiana, where they founded the Northwestern Pioneer and St. Joseph Intelligencer, Northern Indiana's first newspaper.
In 1833, Defrees moved to White Pigeon, Michigan, and began publishing the Michigan Statesman and St. Joseph Chronicle, only the third newspaper published in the Michigan Territory and the first published between Chicago and Detroit. Under Defrees, the paper took a radical Democratic line and supported President Andrew Jackson. Defrees sold his interest in the paper in mid-1834 to Henry Gilbert, who later shortened it to the Michigan Statesman. The paper became the Kalamazoo Gazette in 1837 and as of 2010[update] remains in publication.
Defrees returned to South Bend and was admitted to the Indiana bar. Defrees became involved in Indiana state politics and won election to the Indiana Senate as a Whig. In 1846, Defrees bought the Indianapolis Journal (now The Indianapolis Star) which he also edited until he sold the paper in 1854. Defrees sought the Republican nomination for his congressional district in the 1858 election but lost out to Albert G. Porter, who later became Governor of Indiana. Defrees returned to newspapering and founded the Atlas, another pro-Republican newspaper. Under Defrees, the Atlas promoted Edward Bates for the 1860 presidential nomination, although Bates lost to Abraham Lincoln. By 1860 Defrees, along with Henry S. Lane, Schuyler Colfax and Cyrus Allen controlled Republican party politics in Indiana. When Lincoln became President, he named Defrees Public Printer, at which point Defrees sold the Atlas to the Journal.