(Nov. 8, 18l0-Oct. 19, 1882). Born in Sparta, Tennessee, Defrees was eight years old when his family moved to Ohio. At 13 he was apprenticed to a printer and later studied law in Lebanon, Ohio. Having passed the bar, Defrees moved to South Bend, Indiana, in 1831, where he became a newspaper publisher and represented St. Joseph County in the state legislature during the early 1840s.
After selling his newspaper to Schuyler Colfax, his one-time apprentice, Defrees settled in Indianapolis in 1845 and purchased the
later known as the , a leading morning daily that he owned until 1854. In 1859, he began publishing the , a daily which was absorbed by the in 1861.In 1852, Defrees served as chairman of the Whig state central committee, and four years later he chaired the same committee for the
. In 1855, he helped establish the Central Bank, serving as its president until it closed, and in 1858 he was defeated in the primary in a bid for election to Congress. Defrees left Indiana permanently in 1861 when President Abraham Lincoln named him government printer, a position he held until 1869 when Republican members of Congress ousted him from the office. Reappointed by President Rutherford Hayes, Defrees served a third term as government printer from 1877 until his retirement in April 1882.Although he was a natural politician, ending arguments and uniting antagonisms through arbitration and humor, his first love was the press. As a publisher, he was the first Hoosier to use a caloric press engine, a metallic stretching machine for binding, the Bullock printing press, and the Edison light at a business place. He died in Berkley Springs, West Virginia, and was buried in
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