Benjamin C. Truman
Benjamin Cummings Truman (October 25, 1835 – July 18, 1916), was an
American journalist and
author; in particular, he was a distinguished
war correspondent during the
American Civil War, and an authority on
duels. Truman could also be described as a
polymath, or at least
peripatetic. Upon his death, the ''New York Times (''where he had worked in the 1850s) wrote, "He became, in his long career, a school principal, a feature writer, a proofreader, war correspondent, dramatic critic, composer of war songs, a playwright, confidential secretary to Andrew Johnson and an officer on his staff, a major in the army, a special agent of the Treasury Department, a paymaster In the army, a Washington correspondent, special agent for the Postoffice Department in charge of the Pacific Coast, an owner of five newspapers, a volunteer fireman, one of Southern California's publicists, a great traveler, a judge of good wines, an expert in food, a noted story teller, and a man of many friends."
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