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History Of Newyork Times

History Of Companies - 72

By TheNaethPublished 12 months ago 4 min read

The New York Times is a daily newspaper that is published in New York City, United States of America. The New York Times focuses on news from across the world, as well as news from the United States and local news. It also publishes opinion pieces, investigative stories, and reviews. The Times is one of the longest-running newspapers in the United States and is considered one of the country's newspapers of record.

The New York Times has 296,330 print subscribers, making it the second-largest newspaper in the United States by print readership as of 2023. With 8.83 million online subscribers, The Times has the highest number of any newspaper in the United States. The New York Times firm publishes The New York Times. The Ochs-Sulzberger family has been in charge of the firm since 1896, and A. G. Sulzberger is the current chairman and publisher of the publication. The New York Times Building in Midtown Manhattan is the headquarters of The Times.

Henry Jarvis Raymond and George Jones, who were writers for the New-York Tribune, founded The New York Times in 1851. The Times had a large distribution, especially among conservatives. Horace Greeley, the editor of the New-York Tribune, admired the New-York Daily Times. During the American Civil War, Times reporters collected material straight from the Confederate states. In 1869, Jones acquired the publication from Raymond, who had renamed it The New-York Times.

Despite strong resistance from rival newspapers in New York, the Times proceeded to run a series of pieces denouncing William M. Tweed, the political head of Tammany Hall, under the direction of Jones.Tammany Hall's financial accounts were disclosed by The New-York Times in 1871.

In 1873, Tweed was put on trial and received a sentence of twelve years in jail. The Times received national prominence for its reporting on Tweed.Jones passed away in 1891, which resulted in a management mess. His children did not have the necessary commercial skills to take over the firm, and his will made it impossible for the Times to be acquired.Charles Ransom Miller, the editor-in-chief, Edward Cary, the editorial editor, and George F. Spinney, the correspondent, created a business to run The New York Times. However, they ran into financial problems during the Panic of 1893.

Adolph Ochs, the publisher of the Chattanooga Times, bought The New-York Times in August 1896 and made major changes to the way the newspaper was organized. Ochs founded the Times as a newspaper for merchants and took the hyphen out of the publication's name. The New York Times erected Times Tower in 1905, which was a sign of the company's growth.In the 1910s, the Times underwent a political realignment due to a number of differences that arose within the Republican Party.

While other newspapers were hesitant to publish bulletins that were sent by the Associated Press, the New York Times reported on the sinking of the Titanic. Under the direction of managing editor Carr Van Anda, the Times concentrated on scientific developments, covering Albert Einstein's theory of general relativity, which was not yet known at the time, and participating in the discovery of the tomb of Tutankhamun. Ochs passed away in April 1935, and his son-in-law, Arthur Hays Sulzberger, took over as publisher.

The Great Depression caused Sulzberger to scale down The New York Times's activities. Additionally, changes in the New York newspaper industry led to the creation of bigger newspapers, like the New York Herald Tribune and the New York World-Telegram. Sulzberger was in favor of wirephotography, unlike Ochs.

After the launch of nytimes.com, The New York Times continued to exercise caution in its reporting under executive editor Joseph Lelyveld. For example, the paper declined to print an item from Drudge Report on the Clinton-Lewinsky affair.

There have been other instances in which the editors of nytimes.com have disagreed with the print editors. These include the incorrect identification of security officer Richard Jewell as the culprit in the Centennial Olympic Park bombing and the decision to provide more extensive coverage of the death of Diana, Princess of Wales, than was included in the print edition. The dot-com bust had a negative impact on the New York Times Electronic Media Company.

The Times provided significant coverage of the September 11 attacks. The print edition that came out the next day had sixty-six stories, which were written by more than three hundred reporters who had been sent out. During the anthrax assaults of 2001, journalist Judith Miller received a box that contained a white powder.

This increased the fear level at The New York Times. In September 2002, Miller and military journalist Michael R. Gordon prepared a story for the Times in which they claimed that Iraq had bought aluminum tubes. The report was used by George W. Bush, who was president at the time, to assert that Iraq was building weapons of mass destruction. The idea that aluminum tubes might be used to create nuclear material was only a theory. The Iraq War began in March 2003, when the United States attacked Iraq.

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