The Bagbys’ sold
The Leader in 1885, with Robert Bagby opting to use his goodwill to go into politics and law. He became the first African American to serve on City Council, who went on to run a successful law practice.
The Leader re-emerged in 1886, with editor, Edward Hutchins, rebranding it as a white, four-page weekly, affiliated with the
Greenback Party. Two farmers, Andrew J. Johnson and Lewis H. Johnson, acquired
The Leader the following year, and Thomas J. Sharp took over as editor and publisher in 1888. Sharp rebranded
The Leader as “The great
Union Labor paper of Indiana...chiefly among farmers and the laboring people.” Sharp reported a circulation of 3,200 in 1888, but two years later the figure fell by over 25 percent. Sharp sold
The Leader to John Medert in 1890. However, Sharp returned as editor in 1891, but the newspaper ceased publication later that year. ==References==