John R. Briggs Jr., was born in Montague, Massachusetts, about 1822. At age 14, he apprenticed in the printing trade. After five years of apprenticeship, he was employed by Henry L. Dawes as editor of the North Adams, Massachusetts, Transcript newspaper.[1] He then went to work editing and publishing the Whig in Troy, New York.[1]
From Troy, he moved to the new state of Wisconsin in 1848 and settled at Beloit, Wisconsin, in Rock County. There he founded the Beloit Journal of Politics, Literature, and General Intelligence, a weekly newspaper.[1]
In 1854, due to a conflict in the language of the redistricting law versus the language of the Wisconsin Constitution—which specified Senate terms as two years—he claimed he was entitled by his 1852 election to another year as state senator. The issue was debated in the Senate, but they ultimately ruled against his petition.[2]
Later that year, Briggs moved to Keokuk, Iowa, where he became part owner of the Daily Whig newspaper. Briggs was a staunch anti-slavery Whig, and joined the new Republican Party which was then being created. He renamed his paper the Daily Gate City.
John Briggs suffered from tuberculosis for fifteen years before finally succumbing to the disease. He died at his home in Washington, D.C., on December 3, 1872.[5]
He married Emily Pomona Edson in 1854. Emily Edson was a daughter of wealthy blacksmith Robert Edson, who had moved to Chicago from New York. Her father had selected a wealthy man for her husband, but she defied him and married Briggs instead.[6] Emily Briggs assisted her husband with his newspaper, and then became famous as a correspondent for The Philadelphia Press, using the pen-name "Olivia".[4] John and Emily Briggs had two sons, though one died in infancy.[4]
Just a year before his death, they purchased the "Maples" mansion at 619 D Street, S.E. The home later came to be known as Friendship House after being purchased by the Friendship House Association in 1936. It is now listed in the National Register of Historic Places.[7]