[1] Born in Waterbury, Connecticut on March 31, 1774, Enos Bronson was the son-in-law of prominent Episcopal Bishop William White.
Much of Bronson's career was spent in Philadelphia where, as a newspaper editor and publisher, he was also active in community affairs.
From 1804 to 1818, he and his partner Elihu Chauncey published a semiweekly newspaper, The United States' Gazette for the Country.
Allied with the Federalist Party, Bronson was also elected as a member of the American Antiquarian Society in 1815.
[2] Bronson died at the age of 49 in Philadelphia on April 22, 1823, and was buried at the cemetery of that city's Christ Episcopal Church.