David C. Brewster | |
---|---|
Born | September 26, 1939 |
Citizenship | United States |
Education | B.A., M.S. from Yale University |
Title | Founder, Board Chair, Editor-at-Large [1] |
Predecessor | Chuck Taylor |
Board member of | Crosscut.com |
Spouse | Joyce Skaggs (1964–present) |
Children | Kate Eliza Brewster, Anne Olivia Brewster |
Parent(s) | Gaylord Clark Brewster, Marjorie Jane Anderson |
Website | Crosscut.com |
David Clark Brewster (born September 26, 1939) is an American journalist and the founder, editor and publisher of the Seattle Weekly and the Northwest news website Crosscut.com. He is also the founder, creator and former executive director of the nonprofit cultural center Town Hall Seattle.
He was born on September 26, 1939, in Newark, New Jersey, the son of Gaylord Clark Brewster and Marjorie Jane Anderson. [2] [3] [4] His father was a 1930 graduate of the University of Nebraska .[ citation needed ]
He graduated in 1961, Phi Beta Kappa, with a Bachelor of Arts from Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, and he received his master's degree from Yale University in 1963. [5]
In 1964, he married Joyce Skaggs, a 1961 graduate of Smith College. [6] She was a writer for the Office of University Relations in the President's Office, at the University of Washington in Seattle, Washington.[ citation needed ] She retired from that position in 2008.[ citation needed ] She is the daughter of Charles Skaggs [7] and Juanita ("Nita") Allen. David and Joyce are the parents of two daughters, Kate Eliza Brewster and Anne Olivia Brewster.
After graduating from Yale, he moved to Seattle in 1965 to teach English at the University of Washington.[ citation needed ] He left teaching after a couple of years to write for the Seattle Times, Argus magazine, and Seattle Magazine , then an arm of King Broadcasting.[ citation needed ] He was also an assignment editor for KING-TV.[ citation needed ]
Brewster was founding editor of the Seattle Weekly, which first published on March 31, 1976. Attorney Doug Raff and arts patron Bagley Wright were investors (investing $100,000) at start up (The Wright family eventually became the largest, though a minority holding, owners of the Weekly until it was sold in 1997). [8] The free weekly paper focused on covering Seattle arts, culture and politics. He sold the paper 21 years later to Village Voice Publications for an unannounced sum.[ citation needed ]
He also originated the "Best Places" guidebook series covering Northwest (northern California to Alaska) dining, lodging and getaways.[ citation needed ] The series is published by Sasquatch Books.
He also jumped into the local Seattle political scene in the 1977 mayor's race, promoting Paul Schell (he lost that year to Charles Royer).[ citation needed ]
Brewster was involved in the founding of Crosscut.com, [9] [10] which specializes in coverage of the Northwest. He announced in November 2008 that the commercial venture into the world of Web journalism was shifting to nonprofit status, due to slow growth in online advertising and the current low rates for such ads.
Brewster participated in the repurposing and renovation of Fourth Church of Christ Scientist, once a Christian Science church in the First Hill neighborhood in Seattle, into a cultural venue. Now occupied by the nonprofit organization Town Hall Seattle, the site hosts events such as lectures and concerts.
Brewster is a former board member of Folio: The Seattle Anthenaeum, a private independent library in downtown Seattle which was founded in 2014. [11]
Robert Norton Noyce, nicknamed "the Mayor of Silicon Valley", was an American physicist and entrepreneur who co-founded Fairchild Semiconductor in 1957 and Intel Corporation in 1968. He was also credited with the realization of the first monolithic integrated circuit or microchip made with silicon, which fueled the personal computer revolution and gave Silicon Valley its name.
Kingman Brewster Jr. was an American educator, academic and diplomat. He served as the 17th president of Yale University and as United States ambassador to the United Kingdom.
Henry Yates Satterlee was the first Episcopal Bishop of Washington, serving from 1896 to 1908. He established the Cathedral Church of Saint Peter and Saint Paul, popularly known as Washington National Cathedral.
William Brewster was an English official and Mayflower passenger in 1620. He became senior elder and the leader of Plymouth Colony, by virtue of his education and existing stature with those immigrating from the Netherlands, being a Brownist.
John Bartlett was an American writer and publisher and the editor of Bartlett's Familiar Quotations, which he revised continuously and published in several editions. Since Bartlett's death in 1905, the book has continued to be published in multiple editions, most recently in 2022.
George Trumbull Ladd was an American philosopher, educator and psychologist.
Benjamin Brewster was the Episcopal bishop of Maine and Missionary Bishop of Western Colorado.
Janet Huntington Brewster was an American philanthropist, writer, radio broadcaster and relief worker during World War II in London. She was the wife of broadcaster Edward R. Murrow.
Matthew Laflin was an American manufacturer of gunpowder, businessman, philanthropist, and an early pioneer of Chicago, Illinois.
Col. Isaac Allerton Jr. was planter, military officer, politician and merchant in colonial America. Like his father, he first traded in New England, and after his father's death, in Virginia. There, he served on the Governor's Council (1687-1691) and for many years in the House of Burgesses, representing Northumberland County and later Westmoreland County.
Seattle Rep is a major regional theater located in Seattle, Washington, at the Seattle Center. It is a member of Theatre Puget Sound and Theatre Communications Group. Founded in 1963, it is led by Artistic Director Dámaso Rodríguez and Managing Director Jeffrey Herrmann. It received the 1990 Regional Theatre Tony Award.
Charles Yates was a Brigadier-General during the American Civil War in command of the volunteer depot of New York City in 1861.
Mary Brewster was a Pilgrim and one of the women on the Mayflower. She was the wife of Elder William Brewster. She was one of only five adult women from the Mayflower to survive the first winter in the New World, and one of only four such to survive to the "first Thanksgiving" in 1621, which she helped cook. As such, she is included in Plimoth Plantation's reenactment of that Thanksgiving.
Henry Farnham Perkins (1877–1956) was an American zoologist and eugenicist.
Bagley Wright was an American real estate developer and philanthropist. He was president of Bagley Wright Investments, was a developer of Seattle's landmark Space Needle and chair of Physio Control Corp. from 1968 until its acquisition by Eli Lilly and Company in 1980. Wright and his wife Virginia were well known art patrons and philanthropists.
The Cascade PBS newsroom, formerly Crosscut.com, is an American nonprofit news website based in Seattle. In contrast to traditional news organizations, the website mainly engages in analytic journalism. It merged with local PBS member station KCTS-TV in 2015, with both unifying under the Cascade PBS name in 2024.
Martha Wadsworth Brewster was an 18th-century American poet and writer. She is one of only four colonial women who published volumes of their verse before the American Revolution and was the first American-born woman to publish under her own name.
Love Brewster was an early American settler, the son of Elder William Brewster and his wife, Mary Brewster. He traveled with his father, mother and brother, Wrestling, on the Mayflower reaching what became the Plymouth Colony in Massachusetts in 1620. Brewster had two sisters, Patience and Fear, and two brothers, Jonathan and Wrestling, along with an unnamed sister who died young. He was a founder of the town of Bridgewater, Plymouth County, Massachusetts.
Ralph Owen Brewster was an American politician from Maine. Brewster, a Republican, served as the 54th Governor of Maine from 1925 to 1929, in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1935 to 1941 and in the U.S. Senate from 1941 to 1952. Brewster was a close confidant of Joseph McCarthy of Wisconsin and an antagonist of Howard Hughes. He was defeated by Frederick G. Payne, whose campaign was heavily funded by Hughes, in the 1952 Republican primary.
Ethel H. Brewster was an American college professor and philologist. She was Dean of Women and taught Greek and Latin at Swarthmore College, where she was a member of the faculty from 1916 to 1947.