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・ John Rambo
・ John R. Phillips
・ John R. Phillips (attorney)
・ John R. Phillips (California state congressman)
・ John R. Phythyon, Jr.
・ John R. Pierce
・ John R. Pillion
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・ John R. Pitt
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John R. Rathom
・ John R. Redman
・ John R. Reilly
・ John R. Rice
・ John R. Rice (computer scientist)
・ John R. Richards
・ John R. Rickford
・ John R. Riordan
・ John R. Roden
・ John R. Rodman Arboretum
・ John R. Rogers High School
・ John R. Rollins School
・ John R. Rosenblatt
・ John R. Ross
・ John R. Ryan


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John R. Rathom : ウィキペディア英語版
John R. Rathom

John R. Rathom (1868–1923) was a journalist, editor, and author based in Rhode Island at the height of his career. In the years before World War I, he was a prominent advocate of American participation in the war against Germany. His claims that his newspaper staff uncovered foreign espionage plots were eventually revealed as largely fraudulent, though his reputation as an heroic anti-German crusader endured. He later engaged in a long public dispute with Franklin Delano Roosevelt early in the future president's career. He cut a large figure in the world of journalism and as a conservative spokesman on such issues as anti-Bolshevism and the League of Nations.
''Time'' magazine described him as a firm believer in the old newspaper saying, "Raise hell and sell papers."〔''TIME'': ("The Press: John R. Rathom," Dec. 24, 1923 ), accessed Dec, 10, 2009〕
==Early years and career in journalism==
The man who called himself John Revelstoke Rathom was probably born John Solomon in Melbourne, Australia, on July 4, 1868. The story he told of his early years is at many points unverifiable, at others questionable, and at others demonstrably false. An exhaustive review of Rathom's accounts by the staff of the ''Providence Journal'', the paper where he gained national notoriety, documents the problems in the historical record.〔Garrett D. Byrnes and Charles H. Spilman, ''The Providence Journal 150 Years'' (Providence, RI: The Providence Journal Company, 1980), 261–301, 469–73. For Rathom's version, see Thomas Williams Bicknell, ''History of the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations: Biographical'' (NY: The American Historical Society, Inc. 1920), 400〕
Rathom did not attend Harrow in England as he claimed. Nor did he report on the British military campaign in the Sudan in 1886 for the ''Melbourne Argus''. His tales of adventures in China, including service in the Chinese Navy, are likely fictions as well. His claim to have joined the Schwatka Expedition to Alaska in 1878–80 can not be verified. He probably arrived in the U.S. in 1889—he provided various dates—and then worked for short periods at several Canadian and American newspapers on the West Coast.
He joined the ''San Francisco Chronicle'' as a staff correspondent in 1896. Two years later, during the Spanish–American War, the ''Chronicle'' sent him to Cuba. In his ensuing adventures, all dubious, he was badly wounded, returned to the U.S. with yellow fever or malaria, and escaped from a medical isolation camp.〔''The Argonaut'': ("In a Yellow-Fever Camp," Aug. 14,1899 ), accessed Dec. 10, 2009. This reports Rathom's letter to the ''Chronicle'' recounting his yellow fever experience in Cuba.〕 He sailed to South Africa, he later said, to cover the Boer War, but no evidence supports him. His claim that he was twice wounded there is equally suspect. His boast that he counted General Kitchener as a friend from that time until the general's death in 1916 has been called "moonshine."〔Byrnes and Spilman, 470〕
By his own account, in his next position as staff correspondent for the ''Chicago Times-Herald'' (later the ''Chicago Record Herald'') he became "one of the best known newspaper men in the country." He covered the 1903 Iroquois Theater Fire with great distinction. Rathom himself called that story "a classic of deadline journalism."〔Thomas Williams Bicknell, ''History of the State of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations: Biographical'' (NY: The American Historical Society, Inc. 1920), 400〕
Rathom became a naturalized American citizen on March 25, 1906, in Chicago. He later claimed that he cherished the congratulatory telegrams he received on that occasion from William McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt. McKinley had died more than four and a half years earlier.
Rathom misrepresented his personal life as well. On July 5, 1890, he married Mary Harriet Crockford in Canada. In 1899, he began an affair with Florence Mildred Campbell in San Francisco. His wife returned home to Canada, ending their relationship. Soon Rathom and Campbell were living together as husband and wife, though no record of their marriage has surfaced. The first Mrs. Rathom only sued for divorce in 1908, naming Campbell as co-respondent, and the marriage was dissolved in 1909. For the previous three years Rathom and Campbell were representing themselves to Providence society as husband and wife. Evidence from family correspondence suggests that Campbell began to style herself Mrs. Rathom in 1903. All Rathom's various biographical accounts omitted his first marriage.
In 1906, Rathom applied for work at the ''Providence Journal'' and won the post of managing editor. In 1912, he became both editor and general manager at the ''Journal'' and its afternoon edition, the ''Evening Bulletin''. Upon his death in 1923, ''Time'' magazine reported that the two newspapers were "said to be one of the most money-making magazine combinations in the U. S."〔

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