Frank Brett Noyes (July 7, 1863 - December 1, 1948) was president of the Washington Evening Star, a daily afternoon newspaper published in Washington, D.C., and a founder of the Associated Press.
Instead, in 1881 he began to work in the Evening Star's business department full time, though he had already worked for the Star in his spare time during high school and college.
From 1901 to 1910 he lived in Chicago and edited the Chicago Recorder-Herald while remaining a director of the Evening Star, and moved back to Washington in 1910 to become president of the Evening Star Newspaper Company.
[3] Beginning in 1893, Noyes became involved with the formation of the Associated Press and was elected its president in 1900, retiring only in 1938.
Quoted in Time magazine,[4] explaining why he didn't offer opinions on public issues.