Before he was arrested in 1896 and jailed for counterfeiting money in Missouri, Michael Angelo McGinnis had found a way to make his mark on Medford, Ore.
McGinnis had published the first issue of Medford鈥檚 The Monitor newspaper on Feb. 20, 1885. Although the Ashland Tidings and Jacksonville鈥檚 Oregon Sentinel welcomed McGinnis鈥 paper, the Jacksonville Democratic Times accused him of slurring and misrepresenting Jacksonville.
The Monitor established McGinnis as a prominent member of Medford society, holding positions of honor such as the reader of the Declaration of Independence during the Fourth of July celebration in 1885.
McGinnis didn鈥檛 stay in the Rogue Valley for long, leaving many creditors behind when he moved to Colorado to establish a newspaper there.
Convicted in Missouri, McGinnis kept busy in prison by writing an influential book published in 1900 titled 鈥淎lgebra, the Universal Solution for Numerical and Literal Equations鈥. Despite his success as a mathematician, McGinnis committed more crimes and was convicted of forgery in 1906.
McGinnis died in 1914, after a complicated life as newspaper publisher, convict, and respected mathematician.
Source: Truwe, Ben. 鈥淢ichael Angelo McGinnis鈥. October 15, 2015. Southern Oregon History, Revised