عرض عادي

American datelines : major news stories from colonial times to the present / edited by Ed Cray, Jonathan Kotler, and Miles Beller.

المساهم (المساهمين):نوع المادة : نصنصالناشر:Urbana : University of Illinois Press, 2003الطبعات:1st Ill. pbkوصف:xxiii, 412 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmنوع المحتوى:
  • text
نوع الوسائط:
  • unmediated
نوع الناقل:
  • volume
تدمك:
  • 0252071166
  • 9780252071164
الموضوع:تصنيف مكتبة الكونجرس:
  • PN4726 .A48 2003
المحتويات:
1704 The Boston News-Letter reports pirates off the coast of Rhode Island -- 1734 John Peter Zenger tells the readers of his New York Weekly Journal about his arrest on a charge of seditious libel -- 1735 Nine months later, Zenger uses the pages of The New York Weekly Journal to announce a victory for the principle of freedom of the press -- 1755 The New York Mercury reports the massacre of British and colonial troops at Fort Duquesne, Pennsylvania -- 1771 Writing under the nom de plume "Candidus," John Adams prods the readers of The Boston Gazette and Country Journal to throw off the yoke of the British Parliament -- 1773 The Massachusetts Gazette and Boston News-Letter recounts the "Boston tea party" -- 1775 Isaiah Thomas' Massachusetts Spy reports on the first shots of the Revolutionary War -- 1776 At the nadir of the Continental Army's fortunes, the first of Thomas Paine's "Crisis Papers" appears in Dunlap's Pennsylvania Packet or the General Advertiser -- 1787 The Pennsylvania Mercury reports a local story---the final session of the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia -- Using the pseudonym "Publius," Alexander Hamilton writes the first of The Federalist Papers in which he urges the readers, of The New York Independent Journal to support adoption of the new Constitution -- 1798 The co-editors of The New York Time Piece attack the passage of the Sedition Act.
1803 A young Washington Irving satirizes a troupe of actors in the pages of the New York Morning Chronicle -- 1804 The New York Evening Post tells of the death of its publisher, Alexander Hamilton, following his duel with Aaron Burr -- Five days later, the anti-Federalist New York Morning Chronicle stresses the fairness of the Hamilton-Burr confrontation -- 1812 Using the ship's log as its source, The Boston Gazette breaks the news of the U.S.S. Constitution's defeat of the frigate Guerriere -- 1815 Andrew Jackson tells the readers of Washington, D.C.'s Daily National Intelligencer of the American victory over the British at the Battle of New Orleans -- 1831 Serving as a clearinghouse for reports from Virginia papers on the scene, The Washington Globe describes the grisly slave rebellion led by Nat Turner -- 1833 The first affordable, frankly low-brow "penny press," Benjamin Day's New York Sun, hits the streets of New York, bringing news to the masses -- 1836 The fall of the Alamo, as told nearly three week later by The San Felipe de Austin Telegraph and Texas Register -- 1838 Technology has shrunk the world as the first transatlantic steamship crossing is reported by The New York Morning Herald -- 1840 Edgar Allen Poe analyzes a murder trial for Alexander's Weekly Messenger -- 1844 The Baltimore Patriot and Commercial Gazette informs its readers of the "annihilation of space" with the first use of Samuel Morse's telegraph -- 1848 San Francisco's Californian breaks the news of the discovery of gold at Sutter's Mill near what is now Sacramento, California -- 1849 Life aboard a westward-bound wagon train, as printed in The Cincinnati Argus -- 1855 William LLoyd Garrison, one of the leading abolitionist publishers, rails against the immorality of slavery in the pages of his newspaper, The Liberator.
1857 The Washington Evening Star covers the Supreme Court's infamous decision in the Dred Scott case -- 1859 The Baltimore Patriot provides its readers with a first-hand look at John Brown's raid at nearby Harper's Ferry -- 1861 With breathless enthusiasm, The Charleston Daily Courier happily follows the opening battle of the Civil War and the shelling of Fort Sumter -- The Richmond Dispatch reports on the rout of the Army the Potomac at the First Battle of Bull Run -- 1863 The siege and eventual fall of Vicksburg, Mississippi, as reported from within the beleaguered city by The Vicksburg Daily Citizen -- The "high tide" of the Confederacy, the Battle of Gettysburg, is chronicled in the pages of Washington, D.C.'s National Intelligencer -- The New York Tribune describes the New York draft riots, the bloodiest ever to occur in the United States -- 1865 The telegraph allows The San Francisco Daily Dramatic Chronicle to bring news of Abraham Lincoln's assassination to west coast readers within hours of John Wilkes Booth's shot being fired -- 1869 A reporter of San Francisco's Alta California paints a picture of a bucolic west doomed to oblivion by the imminent joining of the rails at Promontory, Utah -- But as The Alta California editorialized after the job was done, the United States physically had become one nation, joined from coast to coast by twin ribbons of steel -- 1871 The New York Times exposes the corrupt practices of William M. "Boss" Tweed and his Tammany Ring -- 1876 Samuel Clemens, a former newspaperman, lampoons the long-winded writing style of his contemporaries in the Ventura Free Press -- General George Armstrong Custer's "last stand" is reported by The Bozeman [Montana] Avant Courier and reflected upon by The St. Louis Republican.
1882 The shooting of the outlaw Jesse James is reported by The St. Louis Post-Dispatch -- 1885 The Boston Transcript covers the removal from the shelves of the Concord, Massachusetts, Public Library of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn -- 1886 Labor unrest explodes into the Haymarket Riot as reported in the pages of Chicago's Inter-Ocean -- 1887 Walt Whitman recalls his newspapering days for the New Orleans Picayune -- 1888 The mighty Casey strikes out for the first time in the pages of The San Francisco Examiner -- 1889 The Pittsburgh Dispatch describes the devastation in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, following the collapse of a dam on the Conemaugh River -- 1890 The sponsoring New York World runs the story of Nellie Bly's successful finish to her 'round-the-world journey -- 1898 William Randolph Hearst's New York Evening Journal recounts the mysterious destruction of the U.S.S. Maine in Havana harbor -- Barely noticed by the hometown Detroit Free Press, the first horseless carriage appears on the streets of that Michigan city -- Hearst's east- and west-coast flagships, The New York Evening Journal and The San Francisco Examiner, escribe the Battle of Caney -- 1900 The Jackson [Mississippi] Daily Clarion-Ledger recounts the train wreck which took the life of legendary Illinois Central engineer John Luther "Casey" Jones -- 1903 The Washington Post reports on the creation of the nation of Panama to provide a friendly "host" for a canal joining the Atlantic and Pacific oceans -- Man takes to the skies, as the aptly-named Norfolk Virginian-Pilot describes the adventures of the Wright brothers on the dunes of Kitty Hawk, North Carolina -- The inferno that was Chicago's Iroquois Theatre fire is depicted by that city's Inter-Ocean.
1904 An astonished Boston Daily Globe describes Red Sox pitcher Cy Young's perfect-game victory over the Philadelphia Athletics -- 1905 The socialist weekly, Appeal to Reason, begins serializing The Jungle, social reformer Upton Sinclair's story about the squalor and degradation faced by foreign immigrants to urban America -- 1906 In a unique show of publishing cooperation, three San Francisco dailies, under the name The Call-Chronicle-Examiner, tell a story of a city left in ruins by a massive earthquake and fire -- 1909 The New York Times breaks the story of Robert E. Peary's discovery of the North Pole -- 1910 Writing in The New York Herald, Jack London describes the defeat of "The Great White Hope," Jim Jeffries, at the hands of black boxer Jack Johnson -- 1911 In covering the Supreme Court's decision in the Standard Oil case, The New York Tribune reported on the dawn of legislation by the judiciary -- 1912 The anti-labor Boston Daily Globe shows its bias in describing the bloody workers' strike called against the American Woolen Mills of Lawrence, Massachusetts -- 1913 The New York Times reviews the "Armory Show," a glittering event which forever altered attitudes of Americans toward the world of art -- 1914 The Detroit News reflects the astonishment of local workers over Henry Ford's intention to double the wages of his employees to $5 per day -- 1915 A German U-boat sinks the R.M.S. Lusitania off the coast of Ireland, as told in the pages of The New York Tribune -- The mob-lynching of Leo Frank is reported by The Atlanta Journal -- 1918 The Washington Post covers Woodrow Wilson's famed "fourteen points," as the President informs Congress of American aims in "the war to end all wars" -- Cub reporter Ernest Hemingway contrasts gaiety and gloom at a soldiers' dance for the Kansas City Star -- War correspondent Wilbur Forrest of The New York Tribune covers the carnage of the Battle of Château Thierry on France's River Marne -- With Germany finally defeated, the terms of the Armistice ending the First World War are announced by William Randolph Hearst's Los Angeles Evening Herald.
1919 Chicago Daily News reporter Carl Sandberg reflects on the causes of the previous day's race riot -- 1920 The Washington Post carries the Associated Press' roundup of suspected "reds" following the "Palmer Raids." -- The Knoxville Journal and Tribune announces the vote of the Tennessee Legislature that elevates the suffrage rights of American women to constitutional stature -- The "Black Sox Scandal" is reported by hometown Chicago Daily News -- 1924 The most famous opening paragraph in American sports reporting was penned by Grantland Rice of The New York Herald-Tribune following Notre Dame's defeat of Army at the Polo Grounds -- 1925 The "Monkey Trial," matching skilled orator William Jennings Bryan against master litigator Clarence Darrow is reported by The Chattanooga Daily Times -- Ring Lardner offers his views on horses in a sly, slangy letter to the editor of the New York World -- 1926 The Baltimore Sun's H.L. Mencken analyzes the importance of Rudolph Valentino, a week after the silent film star's death -- 1927 No mater that few could receive its flickering image, The New York Times covers the dawning of the age of television -- Damon Runyon covers the Ruth Snyder-Henry Judd Gray murder trial for the New York American -- Edwin L. James of The New York Times is on hand at Le Bourget airfield outside of Paris when Charles Lindbergh's "Spirit of St. Louis" lands -- The Boston Daily Globe reports on the electrocutions of professed anarchists and convicted murderers Nicola Sacco and Barolomeo Vanzetti -- Babe Ruth's record-setting 60th home run is recorded by The New York Times.
1929 The epitome of prohibition-era gangland violence, "The St. Valentine's Day Massacre," is described by The Chicago Herald Examiner -- Oscar's first night, the inaugural presentation of the awards ceremony of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, is reported by The Los Angeles Times -- The Wall Street Journal reassures its readers that the worst is over following the stock market collapse of "Black Tuesday" -- 1931 A New York Time reporter shares his thoughts while standing atop the Empire State Building, shortly after its opening. -- Columnist Walter Lippmann renders a spectacularly wrong assessment of a presidential candidate -- Seventy-two days after the kidnapping, The New York Herald-Tribune announces the body of the son of Charles and Anne Morrow Lindbergh has been found -- 1935 The Los Angeles Illustrated News reports on the air crash that tool the life of America's cowboy philosopher, Will Rogers -- The Christian Science Monitor covers the signing into law of the Social Security Act, the keystone of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's "New Deal." -- Legendary New York Times theater critic Brooks Atkinson attends the opening of "Porgy and Bess," George Gershwin's farewell to Broadway -- 1936 John Steinbeck, freelancing for The San Francisco News, chronicles the plight of migrant farm laborers in California -- 1938 Irving Kolodin of The New York Sun is present when jazz comes of age at the Carnegie Hall concert of the Benny Goodman Quintet -- The one-round mauling of Max Schmeling by "The Brown Bomber," Joe Louis, is reported By The New York Journal and American's Jimmy Cannon -- The San Francisco Chronicle tells of the hysteria that followed the prank broadcast of Orson Welles' "War of the Worlds."
1939 "Building the World of Tomorrow," the opening of the New York World's Fair is reported by The New York Daily News -- Walter Winchell of The New York Daily Mirror describes the surrender to him of public enemy Louis "Lepke" Buchalter -- The Atlanta Constitution depicts the excitement in its home town as Margaret Mitchell's Gone With The Wind premieres -- 1941 Stanley Frank of The New York Post marks the passing of "The Iron Horse," baseball great Lou Gehrig -- Gordon Cobbledick of The Cleveland Plain Dealer reports on th end of the greatest of all baseball records, Joe DiMaggio's 56 game hitting streak -- The Honolulu Star-Bulletin cover "The Day of Infamy," as Japanese warplanes bomb Hawaii -- 1942 The Japanese American Citizen League's Pacific Citizen describes the relocation of Japanese-Americans to concentration camps during World War II -- The turning point in the war in the Pacific, the Battle of Midway, is reported by The San Diego Tribune-Sun, hometown paper of the Pacific Fleet -- 1943 The opening of Oklahoma!, the first Broadway musical to integrate successfully book, music, lyric and dance, is reviewed by The New York Herald-Tribune's Howard Barnes -- 1944 Columnist Ernest Taylor "Ernie" Pyle's most famous piece, chronicling the death of Army Captain Henry T. Waskow, is released by the Scripps-Howard syndicate -- A report of D-Day, the long-promised Allied landings in Normandy, appears in Stars and Stripes, the American military's own newspaper -- The rise of one of America's first "pop" heroes, Frank Sinatra, is recounted in this review of the crooner's Paramount Theater concert by The New York Daily News -- 1945 Before the American flag was firmly planted on Iwo Jima, there was much bloody fighting below, as reported by Pulitzer Prize winner Homer Bigart of The New York Herald-Tribune -- Quietly elegant in its simplicity, this New York Post obituary of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt appeared among the troops of whom he was the Commander-in-Chief -- A month after 60 percent of the Japanese city of Hiroshima was destroyed by a single American atomic bomb, New York Times correspondent W.H. Lawrence describes the devastation.
1947 The Baltimore Afro-American looks at Jackie Robinson as he becomes the firs black major league baseball player -- 1950 The Wheeling Intelligencer reports on Wisconsin Senator Joseph McCarthy's attempts to foment a "red scare" -- 1953 Developed by a University of Pittsburgh research team led by Dr. Jonas Salk, the announcement of the first polio vaccine made page one news in The Pittsburgh Press -- 1954 Gossip columnist Louella Parsons, writing in The San Francisco Examiner, gushers over the marriage of movies star Marilyn Monroe and baseball idol Joe DiMaggio -- The Topeka Capital Daily explains that the Supreme Court's landmark desegregation decision in Brown v. Board of Education will have "Little Effect on Topeka" -- 1955 Jerry Hulse of the The Los Angeles Times reports on the opening of "The Happiest Place on Earth," Disneyland -- Associated Press reporter Relman Morin's Pulitzer Prize winning story on the integration of Little Rock, Arkansas' Central High School, as it appeared in The Los Angeles Times -- 1960 The regional news page of The Charlotte Observer tells of attempts by student protest to integrate a Greensboro, North Carolina, lunch counter -- The Washington Post covers the admission by the American government that it lied about the flight of Gary Powers's U-2 spy plane over the Soviet Union -- Almost alone among American newspapers, The New York Times ran a small story about the Food and Drug Administration's approval of a drug called " Enovid," the first birth control pill.
1962 During the height of the Cuban missile crisis, Anthony Lewis of The New York Times covers President John F. Kennedy's announcement about an American arms blockade of that Caribbean nation -- 1963 "The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom," which attracted 200,000 civil rights demonstrators to the capital's Mall, is describe by The Washington Post -- United Press International reporter Merriman Smith's Pulitzer Prize-winning coverage of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy conveys the fast-breaking nature of news -- 1964 Tongue in cheek, The Christian Science Monitor warns of a new British invasion, the coming of the Beatles -- The Gulf of Tonkin Incident marking the point of no return for American military involvement in Southeast Asia, is chronicled by Tom Wicker of The New York Time -- 1965 The Montgomery Advertiser reports on the arrival of a civil rights march from Selma, Alabama, led by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. -- 1967 The Green Bay Packers show who's boss in Los Angeles Times sports editor Paul Zimmerman's coverage of the Super Bowl -- 1968 Following the Tet Offensive, The Des Moines Register revealed to its readers that despite repeated promises of "light at the end of the tunnel," no part of South Vietnam was immune from enemy attack -- The assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. by a sniper's bullet is described by The Memphis Commercial Appeal -- 1969 Moon-walker Neil Armstrong's "one giant leap for mankind" reported by The Orlando Sentinel -- Alfred G. Aronowitz of The New York Post tries to put the Woodstock rock concert into perspective -- 1971 The New York Times explains why the Supreme Court ruled in its favor in "The Pentagon Papers' case.
1972 Watergate, the "third-rate burglary" that eventually would lead to the downfall of a presidency, was covered by veteran Washington Post police reporter Alfred E. Lewis -- 1974 Twenty-seven months after the Watergate burglary, Carroll Kilpatrick of The Washington Post describes the final moments of the administration of the first president to resign from office -- 1978 San Francisco Chronicle correspondent Keith Power tells of the horror following the mass suicide at Jonestown, Guyana -- 1979 The Philadelphia Inquirer, which was to earn a Pulitzer Prize for its coverage of the incident, prints its first story about the nuclear accident at Three Mile Island -- 1982 Prior to the word "AIDS" entering the language, Randy Shilts of The San Francisco Chronicle writes the first story of illnesses collectively called "GRID"---Gay-related immuno-deficiency diseases -- The Salt Lake City Tribune covers the implantation of the first mechanical heart into a living human being -- 1984 The Democrats make history by picking Congresswoman Geraldine Ferraro of New York as their vice-presidential candidate, an event reported in her hometown Long Island paper, Newsday -- 1986 The Santa Fe New Mexican appraises the contribution of Georgia O'Keefe to American art -- 1989 In the frigid waters of Alaska's Prince William Sound, the ecological disaster that couldn't happen did, as The Anchorage Daily News reported in its coverage of the Valdez oil spill -- New York Times correspondent Serge Schmemann captures something of the emotional as well as the epochal in his account of the fall of the Berlin Wall. For decades the symbol of tyranny and repression, the wall's demise signaled the end of a once-escalating high-stakes conflict. Perhaps, finally, the cold war and its nuclear fears of superpowers annihilating one another could be consigned to the pages of history.
1990 Obscene and pornographic was the judgment of a grand jury playing art critic in weighing several of Robert Mapplethorpe's photographs on view at Cincinnati's Contemporary Arts Center. The Cincinnati Enquirer's Jane Prendergast reports the grand jury's indictment, a legal finding that would help trigger a "culture war" between government officials and edgy artists invoking such passionate issues as free speech and federal funding of the arts -- 1991 In a heartfelt obituary, San Diego Union-Tribune staff writers John Wilkens and Robert P. Laurence look back on the colorful life of Theodor Geisel, better know to millions of young readers as Dr. Seuss -- 1995 The so-called trial of the century ended with a verdict of "not guilty." After more than 15 months of sensationalistic journalism and an avidly watched televised trial that sometimes seemed more crime fiction than serious legal inquiry, football great O.J. Simpson was free. However, the proceedings had polarized the country, the charge of a racist Los Angeles Police Department a key component in Simpson's winning defense, Jim Newton of the Los Angeles Times examines the verdict in the wake of the long, divisive trial -- 1997 Though more than a few sports pundits predicted that 21-year-old Tiger Woods would buckle under the pressures of competing in golf's classic Masters tournament, Woods proved them wrong. He became the first person of African American descent to capture the Masters, doing it with style and grace. Glenn Sheeley of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution looks at Woods's historic win -- 1998 The battle between Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa to beat Roger Maris's 37-year-old single-season home run record of 61 took on epic proportions from April through September in 1998. Rich Hummel of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch recounts the outcome of this intense yet gentlemanly battle, announcing which man has triumphed as the modern "Sultan of Swat." -- 1999 Controversy was nothing new to the presidency of Bill Clinton. However, his private and personal affairs, fueled by charges of insider trading and extramarital hanky-panky, reached Promethean proportions when he was impeached. Peter Baker and Helen Dewar of the Washington Post report the outcome of President Clinton's trial by the U.S. Senate -- 2000 It was a political cliff-hanger that seemingly would not end, the post-Election Day battle between the Democratic candidate, Vice President Al Gore, and the Republican standard-bearer, Texas governor George W. Bush. The battle ground was Florida, its 25 electoral votes defiantly claimed by both candidates. In the weeks after the polls closed, Americans would become familiar with such formerly arcane terms as "butterfly ballot" and "pregnant chad." Finally, after more than a month without a president-elect, a U.S. Supreme Court ruling effectively handed the victory to Bush.
ملخص:Capturing the kick and stir of history as it unfolded, American Datelines reveals the courage, hope, and grit of the American experience as chronicled in the headlines of the nation's public press from the earliest issue of The Boston News-Letter to the major newspapers of today.ملخص:The original articles in this compelling collection are arranged chronologically and appear as they were first published, providing a lively and unique view of the events that have most influenced politics and culture. Readers can experience the thrill and excitement of breaking news from the real story of Jesse James and the capture of Al Capone to a vibrant portrayal of baseball's first professional African American player and a probing look at the shocking New York Armory show where modern art was born. This first paperback edition features an updated introduction by the editors and several newsworthy additions, including the fall of the Berlin Wall, the O.J. Simpson trial, the Clinton Impeachment trial, the home run race between Mark McGwire and Sammy sosa, and Bush volume Gore.
المقتنيات
نوع المادة المكتبة الحالية رقم الطلب رقم النسخة حالة تاريخ الإستحقاق الباركود
كتاب كتاب UAE Federation Library | مكتبة اتحاد الإمارات General Collection | المجموعات العامة PN4726 .A48 2003 (إستعراض الرف(يفتح أدناه)) C.1 Library Use Only | داخل المكتبة فقط 30010011104605
كتاب كتاب UAE Federation Library | مكتبة اتحاد الإمارات General Collection | المجموعات العامة PN4726 .A48 2003 (إستعراض الرف(يفتح أدناه)) C.2 المتاح 30010011104604

Revised edition of: American datelines / by Ed Cray, Jonathan Kotler, Miles Beller, 1990.

Includes index.

1704 The Boston News-Letter reports pirates off the coast of Rhode Island -- 1734 John Peter Zenger tells the readers of his New York Weekly Journal about his arrest on a charge of seditious libel -- 1735 Nine months later, Zenger uses the pages of The New York Weekly Journal to announce a victory for the principle of freedom of the press -- 1755 The New York Mercury reports the massacre of British and colonial troops at Fort Duquesne, Pennsylvania -- 1771 Writing under the nom de plume "Candidus," John Adams prods the readers of The Boston Gazette and Country Journal to throw off the yoke of the British Parliament -- 1773 The Massachusetts Gazette and Boston News-Letter recounts the "Boston tea party" -- 1775 Isaiah Thomas' Massachusetts Spy reports on the first shots of the Revolutionary War -- 1776 At the nadir of the Continental Army's fortunes, the first of Thomas Paine's "Crisis Papers" appears in Dunlap's Pennsylvania Packet or the General Advertiser -- 1787 The Pennsylvania Mercury reports a local story---the final session of the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia -- Using the pseudonym "Publius," Alexander Hamilton writes the first of The Federalist Papers in which he urges the readers, of The New York Independent Journal to support adoption of the new Constitution -- 1798 The co-editors of The New York Time Piece attack the passage of the Sedition Act.

1803 A young Washington Irving satirizes a troupe of actors in the pages of the New York Morning Chronicle -- 1804 The New York Evening Post tells of the death of its publisher, Alexander Hamilton, following his duel with Aaron Burr -- Five days later, the anti-Federalist New York Morning Chronicle stresses the fairness of the Hamilton-Burr confrontation -- 1812 Using the ship's log as its source, The Boston Gazette breaks the news of the U.S.S. Constitution's defeat of the frigate Guerriere -- 1815 Andrew Jackson tells the readers of Washington, D.C.'s Daily National Intelligencer of the American victory over the British at the Battle of New Orleans -- 1831 Serving as a clearinghouse for reports from Virginia papers on the scene, The Washington Globe describes the grisly slave rebellion led by Nat Turner -- 1833 The first affordable, frankly low-brow "penny press," Benjamin Day's New York Sun, hits the streets of New York, bringing news to the masses -- 1836 The fall of the Alamo, as told nearly three week later by The San Felipe de Austin Telegraph and Texas Register -- 1838 Technology has shrunk the world as the first transatlantic steamship crossing is reported by The New York Morning Herald -- 1840 Edgar Allen Poe analyzes a murder trial for Alexander's Weekly Messenger -- 1844 The Baltimore Patriot and Commercial Gazette informs its readers of the "annihilation of space" with the first use of Samuel Morse's telegraph -- 1848 San Francisco's Californian breaks the news of the discovery of gold at Sutter's Mill near what is now Sacramento, California -- 1849 Life aboard a westward-bound wagon train, as printed in The Cincinnati Argus -- 1855 William LLoyd Garrison, one of the leading abolitionist publishers, rails against the immorality of slavery in the pages of his newspaper, The Liberator.

1857 The Washington Evening Star covers the Supreme Court's infamous decision in the Dred Scott case -- 1859 The Baltimore Patriot provides its readers with a first-hand look at John Brown's raid at nearby Harper's Ferry -- 1861 With breathless enthusiasm, The Charleston Daily Courier happily follows the opening battle of the Civil War and the shelling of Fort Sumter -- The Richmond Dispatch reports on the rout of the Army the Potomac at the First Battle of Bull Run -- 1863 The siege and eventual fall of Vicksburg, Mississippi, as reported from within the beleaguered city by The Vicksburg Daily Citizen -- The "high tide" of the Confederacy, the Battle of Gettysburg, is chronicled in the pages of Washington, D.C.'s National Intelligencer -- The New York Tribune describes the New York draft riots, the bloodiest ever to occur in the United States -- 1865 The telegraph allows The San Francisco Daily Dramatic Chronicle to bring news of Abraham Lincoln's assassination to west coast readers within hours of John Wilkes Booth's shot being fired -- 1869 A reporter of San Francisco's Alta California paints a picture of a bucolic west doomed to oblivion by the imminent joining of the rails at Promontory, Utah -- But as The Alta California editorialized after the job was done, the United States physically had become one nation, joined from coast to coast by twin ribbons of steel -- 1871 The New York Times exposes the corrupt practices of William M. "Boss" Tweed and his Tammany Ring -- 1876 Samuel Clemens, a former newspaperman, lampoons the long-winded writing style of his contemporaries in the Ventura Free Press -- General George Armstrong Custer's "last stand" is reported by The Bozeman [Montana] Avant Courier and reflected upon by The St. Louis Republican.

1882 The shooting of the outlaw Jesse James is reported by The St. Louis Post-Dispatch -- 1885 The Boston Transcript covers the removal from the shelves of the Concord, Massachusetts, Public Library of The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn -- 1886 Labor unrest explodes into the Haymarket Riot as reported in the pages of Chicago's Inter-Ocean -- 1887 Walt Whitman recalls his newspapering days for the New Orleans Picayune -- 1888 The mighty Casey strikes out for the first time in the pages of The San Francisco Examiner -- 1889 The Pittsburgh Dispatch describes the devastation in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, following the collapse of a dam on the Conemaugh River -- 1890 The sponsoring New York World runs the story of Nellie Bly's successful finish to her 'round-the-world journey -- 1898 William Randolph Hearst's New York Evening Journal recounts the mysterious destruction of the U.S.S. Maine in Havana harbor -- Barely noticed by the hometown Detroit Free Press, the first horseless carriage appears on the streets of that Michigan city -- Hearst's east- and west-coast flagships, The New York Evening Journal and The San Francisco Examiner, escribe the Battle of Caney -- 1900 The Jackson [Mississippi] Daily Clarion-Ledger recounts the train wreck which took the life of legendary Illinois Central engineer John Luther "Casey" Jones -- 1903 The Washington Post reports on the creation of the nation of Panama to provide a friendly "host" for a canal joining the Atlantic and Pacific oceans -- Man takes to the skies, as the aptly-named Norfolk Virginian-Pilot describes the adventures of the Wright brothers on the dunes of Kitty Hawk, North Carolina -- The inferno that was Chicago's Iroquois Theatre fire is depicted by that city's Inter-Ocean.

1904 An astonished Boston Daily Globe describes Red Sox pitcher Cy Young's perfect-game victory over the Philadelphia Athletics -- 1905 The socialist weekly, Appeal to Reason, begins serializing The Jungle, social reformer Upton Sinclair's story about the squalor and degradation faced by foreign immigrants to urban America -- 1906 In a unique show of publishing cooperation, three San Francisco dailies, under the name The Call-Chronicle-Examiner, tell a story of a city left in ruins by a massive earthquake and fire -- 1909 The New York Times breaks the story of Robert E. Peary's discovery of the North Pole -- 1910 Writing in The New York Herald, Jack London describes the defeat of "The Great White Hope," Jim Jeffries, at the hands of black boxer Jack Johnson -- 1911 In covering the Supreme Court's decision in the Standard Oil case, The New York Tribune reported on the dawn of legislation by the judiciary -- 1912 The anti-labor Boston Daily Globe shows its bias in describing the bloody workers' strike called against the American Woolen Mills of Lawrence, Massachusetts -- 1913 The New York Times reviews the "Armory Show," a glittering event which forever altered attitudes of Americans toward the world of art -- 1914 The Detroit News reflects the astonishment of local workers over Henry Ford's intention to double the wages of his employees to $5 per day -- 1915 A German U-boat sinks the R.M.S. Lusitania off the coast of Ireland, as told in the pages of The New York Tribune -- The mob-lynching of Leo Frank is reported by The Atlanta Journal -- 1918 The Washington Post covers Woodrow Wilson's famed "fourteen points," as the President informs Congress of American aims in "the war to end all wars" -- Cub reporter Ernest Hemingway contrasts gaiety and gloom at a soldiers' dance for the Kansas City Star -- War correspondent Wilbur Forrest of The New York Tribune covers the carnage of the Battle of Château Thierry on France's River Marne -- With Germany finally defeated, the terms of the Armistice ending the First World War are announced by William Randolph Hearst's Los Angeles Evening Herald.

1919 Chicago Daily News reporter Carl Sandberg reflects on the causes of the previous day's race riot -- 1920 The Washington Post carries the Associated Press' roundup of suspected "reds" following the "Palmer Raids." -- The Knoxville Journal and Tribune announces the vote of the Tennessee Legislature that elevates the suffrage rights of American women to constitutional stature -- The "Black Sox Scandal" is reported by hometown Chicago Daily News -- 1924 The most famous opening paragraph in American sports reporting was penned by Grantland Rice of The New York Herald-Tribune following Notre Dame's defeat of Army at the Polo Grounds -- 1925 The "Monkey Trial," matching skilled orator William Jennings Bryan against master litigator Clarence Darrow is reported by The Chattanooga Daily Times -- Ring Lardner offers his views on horses in a sly, slangy letter to the editor of the New York World -- 1926 The Baltimore Sun's H.L. Mencken analyzes the importance of Rudolph Valentino, a week after the silent film star's death -- 1927 No mater that few could receive its flickering image, The New York Times covers the dawning of the age of television -- Damon Runyon covers the Ruth Snyder-Henry Judd Gray murder trial for the New York American -- Edwin L. James of The New York Times is on hand at Le Bourget airfield outside of Paris when Charles Lindbergh's "Spirit of St. Louis" lands -- The Boston Daily Globe reports on the electrocutions of professed anarchists and convicted murderers Nicola Sacco and Barolomeo Vanzetti -- Babe Ruth's record-setting 60th home run is recorded by The New York Times.

1929 The epitome of prohibition-era gangland violence, "The St. Valentine's Day Massacre," is described by The Chicago Herald Examiner -- Oscar's first night, the inaugural presentation of the awards ceremony of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, is reported by The Los Angeles Times -- The Wall Street Journal reassures its readers that the worst is over following the stock market collapse of "Black Tuesday" -- 1931 A New York Time reporter shares his thoughts while standing atop the Empire State Building, shortly after its opening. -- Columnist Walter Lippmann renders a spectacularly wrong assessment of a presidential candidate -- Seventy-two days after the kidnapping, The New York Herald-Tribune announces the body of the son of Charles and Anne Morrow Lindbergh has been found -- 1935 The Los Angeles Illustrated News reports on the air crash that tool the life of America's cowboy philosopher, Will Rogers -- The Christian Science Monitor covers the signing into law of the Social Security Act, the keystone of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's "New Deal." -- Legendary New York Times theater critic Brooks Atkinson attends the opening of "Porgy and Bess," George Gershwin's farewell to Broadway -- 1936 John Steinbeck, freelancing for The San Francisco News, chronicles the plight of migrant farm laborers in California -- 1938 Irving Kolodin of The New York Sun is present when jazz comes of age at the Carnegie Hall concert of the Benny Goodman Quintet -- The one-round mauling of Max Schmeling by "The Brown Bomber," Joe Louis, is reported By The New York Journal and American's Jimmy Cannon -- The San Francisco Chronicle tells of the hysteria that followed the prank broadcast of Orson Welles' "War of the Worlds."

1939 "Building the World of Tomorrow," the opening of the New York World's Fair is reported by The New York Daily News -- Walter Winchell of The New York Daily Mirror describes the surrender to him of public enemy Louis "Lepke" Buchalter -- The Atlanta Constitution depicts the excitement in its home town as Margaret Mitchell's Gone With The Wind premieres -- 1941 Stanley Frank of The New York Post marks the passing of "The Iron Horse," baseball great Lou Gehrig -- Gordon Cobbledick of The Cleveland Plain Dealer reports on th end of the greatest of all baseball records, Joe DiMaggio's 56 game hitting streak -- The Honolulu Star-Bulletin cover "The Day of Infamy," as Japanese warplanes bomb Hawaii -- 1942 The Japanese American Citizen League's Pacific Citizen describes the relocation of Japanese-Americans to concentration camps during World War II -- The turning point in the war in the Pacific, the Battle of Midway, is reported by The San Diego Tribune-Sun, hometown paper of the Pacific Fleet -- 1943 The opening of Oklahoma!, the first Broadway musical to integrate successfully book, music, lyric and dance, is reviewed by The New York Herald-Tribune's Howard Barnes -- 1944 Columnist Ernest Taylor "Ernie" Pyle's most famous piece, chronicling the death of Army Captain Henry T. Waskow, is released by the Scripps-Howard syndicate -- A report of D-Day, the long-promised Allied landings in Normandy, appears in Stars and Stripes, the American military's own newspaper -- The rise of one of America's first "pop" heroes, Frank Sinatra, is recounted in this review of the crooner's Paramount Theater concert by The New York Daily News -- 1945 Before the American flag was firmly planted on Iwo Jima, there was much bloody fighting below, as reported by Pulitzer Prize winner Homer Bigart of The New York Herald-Tribune -- Quietly elegant in its simplicity, this New York Post obituary of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt appeared among the troops of whom he was the Commander-in-Chief -- A month after 60 percent of the Japanese city of Hiroshima was destroyed by a single American atomic bomb, New York Times correspondent W.H. Lawrence describes the devastation.

1947 The Baltimore Afro-American looks at Jackie Robinson as he becomes the firs black major league baseball player -- 1950 The Wheeling Intelligencer reports on Wisconsin Senator Joseph McCarthy's attempts to foment a "red scare" -- 1953 Developed by a University of Pittsburgh research team led by Dr. Jonas Salk, the announcement of the first polio vaccine made page one news in The Pittsburgh Press -- 1954 Gossip columnist Louella Parsons, writing in The San Francisco Examiner, gushers over the marriage of movies star Marilyn Monroe and baseball idol Joe DiMaggio -- The Topeka Capital Daily explains that the Supreme Court's landmark desegregation decision in Brown v. Board of Education will have "Little Effect on Topeka" -- 1955 Jerry Hulse of the The Los Angeles Times reports on the opening of "The Happiest Place on Earth," Disneyland -- Associated Press reporter Relman Morin's Pulitzer Prize winning story on the integration of Little Rock, Arkansas' Central High School, as it appeared in The Los Angeles Times -- 1960 The regional news page of The Charlotte Observer tells of attempts by student protest to integrate a Greensboro, North Carolina, lunch counter -- The Washington Post covers the admission by the American government that it lied about the flight of Gary Powers's U-2 spy plane over the Soviet Union -- Almost alone among American newspapers, The New York Times ran a small story about the Food and Drug Administration's approval of a drug called " Enovid," the first birth control pill.

1962 During the height of the Cuban missile crisis, Anthony Lewis of The New York Times covers President John F. Kennedy's announcement about an American arms blockade of that Caribbean nation -- 1963 "The March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom," which attracted 200,000 civil rights demonstrators to the capital's Mall, is describe by The Washington Post -- United Press International reporter Merriman Smith's Pulitzer Prize-winning coverage of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy conveys the fast-breaking nature of news -- 1964 Tongue in cheek, The Christian Science Monitor warns of a new British invasion, the coming of the Beatles -- The Gulf of Tonkin Incident marking the point of no return for American military involvement in Southeast Asia, is chronicled by Tom Wicker of The New York Time -- 1965 The Montgomery Advertiser reports on the arrival of a civil rights march from Selma, Alabama, led by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. -- 1967 The Green Bay Packers show who's boss in Los Angeles Times sports editor Paul Zimmerman's coverage of the Super Bowl -- 1968 Following the Tet Offensive, The Des Moines Register revealed to its readers that despite repeated promises of "light at the end of the tunnel," no part of South Vietnam was immune from enemy attack -- The assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. by a sniper's bullet is described by The Memphis Commercial Appeal -- 1969 Moon-walker Neil Armstrong's "one giant leap for mankind" reported by The Orlando Sentinel -- Alfred G. Aronowitz of The New York Post tries to put the Woodstock rock concert into perspective -- 1971 The New York Times explains why the Supreme Court ruled in its favor in "The Pentagon Papers' case.

1972 Watergate, the "third-rate burglary" that eventually would lead to the downfall of a presidency, was covered by veteran Washington Post police reporter Alfred E. Lewis -- 1974 Twenty-seven months after the Watergate burglary, Carroll Kilpatrick of The Washington Post describes the final moments of the administration of the first president to resign from office -- 1978 San Francisco Chronicle correspondent Keith Power tells of the horror following the mass suicide at Jonestown, Guyana -- 1979 The Philadelphia Inquirer, which was to earn a Pulitzer Prize for its coverage of the incident, prints its first story about the nuclear accident at Three Mile Island -- 1982 Prior to the word "AIDS" entering the language, Randy Shilts of The San Francisco Chronicle writes the first story of illnesses collectively called "GRID"---Gay-related immuno-deficiency diseases -- The Salt Lake City Tribune covers the implantation of the first mechanical heart into a living human being -- 1984 The Democrats make history by picking Congresswoman Geraldine Ferraro of New York as their vice-presidential candidate, an event reported in her hometown Long Island paper, Newsday -- 1986 The Santa Fe New Mexican appraises the contribution of Georgia O'Keefe to American art -- 1989 In the frigid waters of Alaska's Prince William Sound, the ecological disaster that couldn't happen did, as The Anchorage Daily News reported in its coverage of the Valdez oil spill -- New York Times correspondent Serge Schmemann captures something of the emotional as well as the epochal in his account of the fall of the Berlin Wall. For decades the symbol of tyranny and repression, the wall's demise signaled the end of a once-escalating high-stakes conflict. Perhaps, finally, the cold war and its nuclear fears of superpowers annihilating one another could be consigned to the pages of history.

1990 Obscene and pornographic was the judgment of a grand jury playing art critic in weighing several of Robert Mapplethorpe's photographs on view at Cincinnati's Contemporary Arts Center. The Cincinnati Enquirer's Jane Prendergast reports the grand jury's indictment, a legal finding that would help trigger a "culture war" between government officials and edgy artists invoking such passionate issues as free speech and federal funding of the arts -- 1991 In a heartfelt obituary, San Diego Union-Tribune staff writers John Wilkens and Robert P. Laurence look back on the colorful life of Theodor Geisel, better know to millions of young readers as Dr. Seuss -- 1995 The so-called trial of the century ended with a verdict of "not guilty." After more than 15 months of sensationalistic journalism and an avidly watched televised trial that sometimes seemed more crime fiction than serious legal inquiry, football great O.J. Simpson was free. However, the proceedings had polarized the country, the charge of a racist Los Angeles Police Department a key component in Simpson's winning defense, Jim Newton of the Los Angeles Times examines the verdict in the wake of the long, divisive trial -- 1997 Though more than a few sports pundits predicted that 21-year-old Tiger Woods would buckle under the pressures of competing in golf's classic Masters tournament, Woods proved them wrong. He became the first person of African American descent to capture the Masters, doing it with style and grace. Glenn Sheeley of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution looks at Woods's historic win -- 1998 The battle between Mark McGwire and Sammy Sosa to beat Roger Maris's 37-year-old single-season home run record of 61 took on epic proportions from April through September in 1998. Rich Hummel of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch recounts the outcome of this intense yet gentlemanly battle, announcing which man has triumphed as the modern "Sultan of Swat." -- 1999 Controversy was nothing new to the presidency of Bill Clinton. However, his private and personal affairs, fueled by charges of insider trading and extramarital hanky-panky, reached Promethean proportions when he was impeached. Peter Baker and Helen Dewar of the Washington Post report the outcome of President Clinton's trial by the U.S. Senate -- 2000 It was a political cliff-hanger that seemingly would not end, the post-Election Day battle between the Democratic candidate, Vice President Al Gore, and the Republican standard-bearer, Texas governor George W. Bush. The battle ground was Florida, its 25 electoral votes defiantly claimed by both candidates. In the weeks after the polls closed, Americans would become familiar with such formerly arcane terms as "butterfly ballot" and "pregnant chad." Finally, after more than a month without a president-elect, a U.S. Supreme Court ruling effectively handed the victory to Bush.

Capturing the kick and stir of history as it unfolded, American Datelines reveals the courage, hope, and grit of the American experience as chronicled in the headlines of the nation's public press from the earliest issue of The Boston News-Letter to the major newspapers of today.

The original articles in this compelling collection are arranged chronologically and appear as they were first published, providing a lively and unique view of the events that have most influenced politics and culture. Readers can experience the thrill and excitement of breaking news from the real story of Jesse James and the capture of Al Capone to a vibrant portrayal of baseball's first professional African American player and a probing look at the shocking New York Armory show where modern art was born. This first paperback edition features an updated introduction by the editors and several newsworthy additions, including the fall of the Berlin Wall, the O.J. Simpson trial, the Clinton Impeachment trial, the home run race between Mark McGwire and Sammy sosa, and Bush volume Gore.

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