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William Bross : ウィキペディア英語版
William Bross

William J. Bross (November 4, 1813 – January 27, 1890) was an American politician and publisher originally from the New Jersey–New York–Pennsylvania tri-state area. He was also the 16th Lieutenant Governor of Illinois. He engaged in the lumber trade with his father before attending Williams College. He taught at schools for ten years, then headed west to Chicago, Illinois. He engaged in book-selling and publishing interests before co-founding the successful ''Democratic Press'' paper. Following the organization of the Republican Party in 1854, he became a staunch supporter of its political candidates. His support for Abraham Lincoln helped win him support for a bid as Lieutenant Governor. In 1865, he accompanied future Vice President of the United States Schuyler Colfax on a trip west to California, later publishing a book about the excursion.
==Biography==
William Bross was born on November 4, 1813, in northwest Sussex County, New Jersey. He was the eldest of eleven children of Deacon Moses Bross and Jane Winfield Bross. He was the eldest because he was born a few minutes before his twin Stephen Decatur Bross. When he was nine, William moved with his family to Milford, Pennsylvania in anticipation of the construction of the Delaware and Hudson Canal. He helped his father furnish lumber for the canal near Shohola. In 1832, he enlisted at Milford Academy, then attended Williams College, rooming with his twin brother. William Bross was one of the founding members of The Social Fraternity at Williams, forerunner to Delta Upsilon. Shortly after graduating in 1838, he became the principal of Ridgebury Academy in Ridgebury, New York. In 1843, he began to teach at a school in Chester, Pennsylvania, teaching for another five years. Starting in 1846, Bross took trips west to identify a better place to settle. He decided on the emerging city of Chicago, Illinois, arriving on May 12, 1848.
Bross quickly formed a partnership with S. C. Griggs and the Newman & Co. publishing house, opening the book-selling firm of Griggs, Bross & Co. The partnership dissolved eighteen months later. In the autumn of 1849, Bross co-published the ''Prairie Herald'', a religious newspaper, with Rev. J. A. Wright. Bross first achieved prosperity in 1852 when he teamed with Chicago postmaster John L. Scripps to start the ''Democratic Press''. The paper espoused Democratic viewpoints, but was generally conservative regarding slavery, notably opposing Stephen A. Douglas' Missouri Compromise. When the Republican Party formed in 1854, Bross became a public speaker on behalf of the cause. He gave the first public endorsement of John C. Frémont for President in the West, speaking at Dearborn Park the night he was nominated. Bross then went on a tour of southern Illinois, generally a pro-slavery area, to extoll the virtues of Frémont.〔 While at the former State House in Vandalia, Illinois, he became acquainted with fellow Frémont campaigner Abraham Lincoln and the two would often speak at the same engagements.
In 1855, Bross was elected to the Chicago City Council, serving for two years. The ''Democratic Press'' struggled to overcome the Panic of 1857. On July 1, 1858, the paper was merged into the ''Tribune'', creating ''The Press and Tribune''. Bross advocated for Abraham Lincoln for President following his nomination. Following the outbreak of the Civil War, Bross helped to raise the 29th Regiment, United States Colored Infantry. It was commanded by his brother, Col. John A. Bross, who was killed during the Siege of Petersburg on July 30, 1864.〔
Bross' support of Lincoln helped him to receive nomination as the Republican candidate for Lieutenant Governor of Illinois under Richard J. Oglesby. He traveled with Speaker of the United States House of Representatives Schuyler Colfax in 1865 to examine the path west to California. He then traveled to Europe with his daughter in 1867.〔

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