55
YEARS OF NEWSPAPER PRINTING
Colonel
John Woolsey Wharton Johnson, age 65, died at his Georgetown home ,
Sunday,
February 24, 1924 of a cancer he attributed to a head injury
received in a railroad excursion accident at Harrington, fifteen
years ago, where he had gone to hear William Jennings Bryan speak
at a political meeting. Johnson was born July 30, 1858 at Doe Bridge
Mill, near Millsboro, to Benjamin B and Hannah Kollock Johnson. On
October 14, 1883, at age 25, he married Ella S Simpler, age 18, in
Sussex County. They had a daughter Julia born in 1884.
Johnson
had for fifty five years, starting at age eight at the Sussex Journal
as a 'printers devil' , been in the newspaper printing business in
lower Delaware until 1922 when he was 'placed on pension' at the
Sussex Printing and Publishing Company in Georgetown. At the Sussex
Journal he worked with Colonel W. Fisk Townsend, who left, as a
legacy, the title Colonel to Johnson.
After
his employment with Townsend he went to work with the Delaware
Inquirer of Robert T. Hart and William Pride, then returned to the
Sussex Journal of David Marvel and McKendree Downham.
He was with the Milford Chronicle, the Breakwater Light at Lewes,
edited by Issac Knowles, which later became Delaware Pilot. Back to
Georgetown with the Delaware Democrat, the owner Lawyer Edwin
Paynter of Sussex County.
1906,
the Delaware Democrat and Sussex Journal merged , the Lewes Delaware
Pilot, moved it's printing plant to Georgetown and the Sussex
Printing and Publishing Company was formed. Throughout all the
mergers, buying and selling , of lower Delaware newspapers,
Colonel Johnson, retained his affiliation with printing newspapers.
The Sussex Printing & Publishing Company owners in 1921 were
Willard Saulsbury and Andrew Lynch who pensioned John Woolsey Wharton
Johnson for keeps.
SOURCE: Wilmington Evening Journal 25 February 1924
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