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THIS IS THE DIARY JUNCTION - DATA AND LINKS FOR OVER 500 HISTORICAL AND LITERARY DIARISTS
PLEASE TAKE A MOMENT ALSO TO LOOK AT KIP FENN, A MAJOR NOVEL ABOUT THE 21st CENTURY - freely available on this site

Hay, John Milton ___ 1838-1905 ___ American ___ writer diplomat

BIOGRAPHICAL SUMMARY
Hay was born in Salem, Indiana, and studied at Brown University. He began practicing law at the office of Milton Hay in Springfield, Illinois. During the Civil War he fought with the Union, achieved the rank of colonel, and served as private secretary to Abraham Lincoln. After the war, Hay was given various diplomatic posts in Europe - in Paris, Vienna and Madrid. The, in the first half the 1870s, he was an editorial writer with the New York Tribune (a newspaper he went on to edit after 1981). In 1874, he married Clara Louise. Between 1879 and 1881, he served as Assistant Secretary of State. When his friend William McKinley was elected President, Hay was named Ambassador to Great Britain. He stayed in that post two years before being appointed Secretary of State, an office he held between 1898 and 1905 under Presidents McKinley and Roosevelt.
One biography link

DIARY DATES, CONTENT DESCRIPTORS
1861-1870 ___ political people historyeye

WEB TEXT LINKS
some pages
about

ORIGINAL MANUSCRIPT LINKS
Manuscript Division, Library of Congress ___ possibly

SOME PUBLISHED TITLES
Lincoln and the Civil War in the Diaries and Letters of John Hay
Letters of John Hay and Extracts from the Diary

November 2005
THIS IS THE DIARY JUNCTION - DATA AND LINKS FOR OVER 500 HISTORICAL AND LITERARY DIARISTS
Please email if you have any corrections, additions or comments.

IMPORTANT NOTES AND CAUTIONS:
1) The first line of basic information may be incomplete in several ways: some historical figures have different names (titles, pen-names); their birth and death dates may be unknown or uncertain (g - guess, c - circa); similarly, their occupations may be unknown, or they may have had other jobs; and, for early diarists, I've used 'British' a bit too freely. 2) The biographical summary may not be accurate. It was compiled quickly from various sources, mostly on the internet, and the facts were not checked anywhere near as rigorously as they would have been if they'd been intended for publication in a printed form. 3) The journal dates and descriptors (which are in no particular order) must be treated with caution: since I have not examined the diaries myself, the descriptors are only guesses based on bibliographies, anthologies and internet biographies. 4) For the biography and etext links, I have ignored any sites with charges, and I have avoided, wherever possible, those with pop-ups or too much advertising. I have limited myself to providing three etext links where there is some variety between them. 5) For the original manuscript links, I have limited myself to providing a maximum of two (although, for a few diarists, their original diaries are held in more than two places). 6) I have provided the titles - chosen randomly - for up to three printed editions of the diaries.

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