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Where did the saying “Gordon Bennett” come from?

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Where did the saying “Gordon Bennett” come from?

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It is commonly thought that this refers to James Gordon Bennett. JGB was a real person. In fact, with the expansiveness that is appropriate for this story, two real people. The elder James Gordon Bennett was born in Banffshire, Scotland in 1795 and emigrated to the USA, eventually becoming a journalist and founding the New York Herald in 1835. Bennett had a natural talent for journalism and the paper flourished. An editorial in Harper’s at the time expressed the opinion that “It is impossible any longer to deny that the [city’s] chief newspaper is the New York Herald”. Other rivals, while accepting Bennett’s nose for a story, weren’t impressed with what they saw as his ‘gutter press’ methods. In 1836, in a pre-cursor to the chequebook/kiss-and-tell journalism now so popular with tabloid newspapers, he published a notice offering to reward any woman who “will set a trap for a Presbyterian parson, and catch one of them flagrante delicito [sic]”. He was unblushing in what was then seen as

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