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  1. John Roll McLean (September 17, 1848 – June 9, 1916) was the owner and publisher of The Washington Post and The Cincinnati Enquirer. McLean was also a one-time partner in the ownership of the Cincinnati Red Stockings baseball team of the American Association and also the Cincinnati Outlaw Reds of the Union Association. He was born in Cincinnati, to Washington McLean (the owner and publisher ...

  2. In 1898 newspaper publisher John Roll McLean bought 75 acres of the land to build a summer retreat. McLean was a wealthy businessman who owned the Washington Post, the Cincinnati Inquirer, and numerous Washington properties and business interests.

  3. 12 de may. de 2024 · Today I read a little about the life of Edward Beale McLean (1889 – 1941), the last man to buy the famed Hope Diamond. McLean, who was more often known as E.B. or Ned, came from a wealthy family. The city of McLean, Virginia is named for his father, John Roll McLean. He was the heir to the Washington Post and Cincinnati Enquirer fortunes.

  4. The two McLean zip codes – 22101 and 22102 – are among the most expensive ZIP Codes in Virginia and the United States. The community received its name from John Roll McLean, the former publisher and owner of The Washington Post.

  5. During Bar Harbor’s Cottage Era, Briarfield was chiefly associated with the John Roll McLean and Emily Beale McLean family. The McLeans rented the cottage from 1890 through 1902, returning again in 1912. John McLean owned and published the Washington Post and the Cincinnati Enquirer.

  6. McLean encompasses the older settlements of Lewinsville and Langley. Langley is the name of the local high school and as a metonym for the CIA, after the location of its headquarters. The community is named after John Roll McLean, who owned The Washington Post, and was one of the chief investors in the Washington and Old Dominion Railway.

  7. EDWARD BEALE McLEAN, AS A RICH MAN’S ONLY CHILD, was accustomed to having most of the better things in life — and many of the worst — dropped into his lap. He was born in Wash­ington on the last day of January in 1886, the son of John Roll and Emily Beale McLean.