Everything about John Peter Zenger totally explained
John Peter Zenger (
October 26,
1697 –
July 28,
1746) was a German-born American
printer,
publisher,
editor and
journalist in
New York City.
His indictment, trial and acquittal on
sedition and
libel charges against the Governor
William Cosby of the
New York Colony in
1735, with the noted lawyer
Andrew Hamilton acting in his defense, were important contributing factors to the development of
freedom of the press in America. The Zenger decision helped clarify the beliefs of early Colonial life and lay the groundwork for the responsibilities of both media and government in a functioning democracy.
Overview
John Peter Zenger was born in 1697 in Germany, and migrated to New York as a child in 1710. His father died during the journey and his mother raised the child alone. He was accepted as an apprentice to New York's only printer,
William Bradford, until 1718. Zenger married in 1719 but his wife died soon after, leaving him with an infant son. He married again in 1722 and fathered five more children. Zenger and Bradford became partners in 1725 until Zenger started his own shop the next year. In 1733, former New York Attorney General,
James Alexander, gave Zenger the opportunity to print America's first party newspaper, the
New York Weekly Journal.
Zenger's paper had been successful until he criticized
William Cosby, Governor of New York, and the governor had him arrested and jailed. Zenger claimed in his apology that even though he was in jail without supplies, he could still publish his paper through a hole in the door with the help of his wife and servants. It is unclear just how seriously Zenger personally took the material published in the
Weekly Journal. It was almost certainly financed by one of the opposition factions in New York politics, possibly by
James Alexander, who along with
William Smith was disbarred for objecting to the two-man court that Cosby had hand-picked. Zenger was most likely a convenient target to use in an attempt to end criticism. His defense attorney,
Andrew Hamilton, was from
Philadelphia, and won a case most local attorneys were confident would be unwinnable, and over which prior attorneys had been disbarred. His success may have resulted in the addition of the expression "" to the language.
A notable aspect of the case is that Hamilton challenged the legality of the crimes for which his client was being prosecuted. It was one of the first times in American history in which a lawyer challenged the laws rather than the innocence of his clients. The jurors were stunned and didn't know how to, or even if they were allowed to, address whether the law itself was "legal."
At the end of the trial on
August 5,
1735, the twelve New York jurors returned a verdict of "not guilty" on the charge of publishing "seditious libels," despite the Governor's hand-picked judges presiding. Hamilton had successfully argued that Zenger's articles were not libelous because they were based on
fact. Zenger published a verbatim account of the trial as
A Brief Narrative of the Case and Trial of John Peter Zenger (1736). "No nation, ancient or modern, ever lost the liberty of speaking freely, writing, or publishing their sentiments, but forthwith lost their liberty in general and became slaves" stated Zenger.
Hamilton had served for free. In gratitude for what he'd done, the
Common Council of New York City awarded him the
freedom of that city, and a group of prominent residents contributed to the production of a 5½-ounce gold box that was presented to him as a lasting mark of their gratitude. The box was preserved as a family heirloom for many years and is now in the possession of the
Atwater Kent Museum near
Independence Hall,
Philadelphia. Each year the Philadelphia Bar Association presents a replica of the box to the outgoing Chancellor of the Association. A Latin motto inscribed on the box, identical to the original, is translated as "Acquired not by money, but by character."
Zenger died in
1746 at 48 years of age.
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