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Charles H. Grasty : ウィキペディア英語版 | Charles H. Grasty
Charles Henry Grasty was a well-known American newspaper operator who at one time controlled the ''Baltimore Sun'', and who is named among the great publishers, such as Joseph Pulitzer and William Randolph Hearst. Grasty owned the ''Evening News'', which he ran for a number of years and later sold prior to acquiring the ''Minnesota Dispatch'' and the ''St. Paul Pioneer Press'' in separate transactions and later divesting these newspapers to seek ownership of the ''Sun''. Grasty was one of the developers of the Roland Park development, said to be an early innovation in community planning, including planned shopping centers and other aspects of the community prior to development. ==Early life== Charles H. Grasty was born March 3, 1863 in Fincastle, Virginia, the son of a Presbyterian minister, the Reverend John Sharshall Grasty, and the former Ella Giles Pettus, and as a bright youth taught Latin while in high school. At age 16 he entered University of Missouri to study law, but left before graduating to enter the newspaper business. He stayed on at a summer job reporting for the ''Mexico Intelligencer'' paying $6 a week, and then was offered $7 a week to join the ''Kansas City Star'', where he rose to managing editor within 18 months. In 1890 he married Leota Tootle Perrin, a woman with a daughter from another marriage named Sarah Perrin (Sarah Perrin was married to Lieutenant George de Grasse Catlin in Lake Placid New York August 18, 1909). That same year, Grasty became the general manager of the ''Manufacturers' Record'', a weekly business journal in Baltimore, leaving the ''Kansas City Star''.
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