He studied law, but practised little, and in 1847 became editor of the "Southern Literary Messenger.
He became editor of "Russell's Magazine" and a contributor to the "Southern Literary Messenger.
He began writing in the Aberdeen Free Press; in 1862 he was appointed to the staff of the Daily Review at Edinburgh, and at twenty-two he became editor of the Northern Daily Express.
Kirchenzeitung, with its supplement the Theologisches Litteraturblatt, and in 1880 became editor of the Zeitschrift fur kirchl.
In 1858 he became editor of the Zeitschrift fur wissenschaftliche Theologie.
The next year he became editor-in-chief to the "Pester Lloyd," raising that paper to a high level of excellence.
In 1842, hebecame editor of "Reinische Zeitung fuer Politik, Handel, und Gewerbe.
In 1819 he became editor of the "Zeitung der Freien Stadt Frankfurt.
In 1828 he became editor of the "Allgemeine Literatur Zeitung," and especially contributed to the "Allgemeine Encyklopaedie" of Ersch and Grueber.
Became editor-in-chief of the Montreal Herald and afterwards one of the proprietors.
In the town of L’Avena he became editor of Le Defrecheur, a journal devoted to political and social reform.
In 1870 he became editor of Every Saturday, a high-class literary weekly, which was founded in Boston and effectively edited, yet only lived four years.
After serving on the staffs of several Chicago papers he became editor of the Journal of that city in 1897.
He disposed of his interest in it, and in 1867 removed to St. Louis, where he became editor of the Westliche Post.
In '77 he became editor of the Dublin University Magazine, in which appeared some studies of the lineage of Christian doctrine and traditions afterwards published under the title of The Fathers of Jesus.
Two years later, at the age of twenty-eight, he turned over his paper to Whittier and removed to Louisville, where he became editor of the Journal.
Later he became editor of the Mobile Register, and Frankfort Yeoman in Kentucky.
In 1831 he became editor of the Cincinnati Mirrow, the fifth or sixth literary journal published in the West.
Bledsoe now took up his residence at Baltimore, and some months later he became editor of a quarterly periodical, The Southern Review, which he conducted for the final years of his life.
In 1827 he became editor of a paper in New London, Connecticut, but in the following year he went to Hartford to take charge of the New England Review, which "was the Louisville Journal, born in Connecticut.
The above list will hopefully provide you with a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "became editor" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this group of words.