Washington Times writers and columnists included Arthur Brisbane, Ruth Jones pen name "Jean Eliot", Rilla Engle, Evelyn Hunt, A. Cloyd Gill, Homer Dodge, Avery Marks, humorist Kirk Crothers Miller, William Lenhart McPherson, Robert Halsey Patchin, "dean of the Washington press" Colonel Matthew Fitzimmons Tighe,[4][5] and William Lee Trenholm.[6][7]
Editors
Harry Atwood Colman, Louis Ashley Dougher, Earl Godwin, Ralph A. Graves, Ruth Eleanor Jones, Alonzo T. MacDonald, Arthur D. Marks, Caryll Neil Odell, M. G. Seckendorff, and Edward Dwight Shaw.[6][7]
Subsequent mergers
Cissy Patterson, editor of both The Washington Times and the Washington Herald since 1930, leased them from Hearst in 1937. Patterson bought the two papers in 1939, merging them into the Washington Times-Herald. Patterson ran the merged paper from its creation in 1939 until her death in 1948.[8] It was subsequently purchased by Joseph Medill Patterson and Robert McCormick. In 1954, the Times-Herald was purchased by Phillip L. Graham, owner of The Washington Post. For a time, the combined paper was officially known as The Washington Post and Times-Herald. The Times-Herald portion of the nameplate became less and less prominent on a second line in ensuing years, however, and was dropped entirely in 1973.
^Matthew F. Tighe Dead, New York Times obituary Sept. 18, 1924
^ abDistrict of Columbia: Concise Biographies of its Prominent and Representative Contemporary Citizens, by Henry Brown Floyd Macfarland, The Potomac Press, Washington, DC, 1908.
^ abWho's Who in the Nation's Capitol Consolidated Publishing Company, 1921
^Cissy Ralph G. Martin, Simon and Schuster, New York City, 1979
Roberts, Chalmers McGeagh (1977). The Washington Post: The First 100 Years. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. ISBN978-0-395-25854-5.