In 1838, Ottendorfer married Jacob Uhl, a
printer. In 1845, her husband purchased the
New Yorker Staats-Zeitung, an influential and growing tri-weekly German-language newspaper owned and edited by
Gustav Adolph Neumann. Jacob Uhl's young wife helped him constantly, and, after a brief period, they were able to issue the publication daily. When, in 1852, Jacob Uhl died, leaving Anna Uhl with six children and a daily paper, she assumed the management of the paper. She declined several offers for the
Staats-Zeitung, and, by her own energy and sagacity and the co-operation of
Oswald Ottendorfer, who became editor in 1858 and whom Anna married in 1859, made it one of the chief papers in the United States. By the 1870s, its circulation was comparable to
English-language newspapers like the
New York Tribune and
The New York Times. Anna Ottendorfer took an active part in the management of the paper until almost the time of her death. In 1879, the property of the company was changed into a stock company. At Anna Ottendorfer's suggestion, the employees were provided with a 10% dividend on their annual salary. Later this was increased to 15%. ==Philanthropy==