
audiobook
ARTHUR BRISBANE, Editorial Writer New York Evening Journal
ACCURACY - THE FIRST LAW OF THE NEWS
EDITORIAL AND REPORTORIAL EXECUTIVE STAFF
NEWS PICTURES WHAT THE CAMERA’S EYE SEES
MEANS LIFE TO THE NEWS
LARGEST AND HIGHEST PAID LOCAL NEWS STAFF IN NEW YORK CITY
INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE REPORTS NEWS OF THE WORLD FOR EVENING JOURNAL READERS
TWO DAYS IN ADVANCE!
INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICE COVERS THE EARTH
DURING 1927 - 12,000 - New York Evening Journal - readers addressed letters to - ILLIAM WRIGHT” - Seeking advice on investment problems
Step into the bustling world of a leading New York evening newspaper at the height of its influence. The opening pages lay out the paper’s bold credo—“Get it first, but first get it right”—and introduce the editors and reporters who built a reputation for speed, accuracy, and eye‑catching photographs. Readers learn how a massive local staff, an extensive international news service, and a network of telegraph wires combined to deliver crisp, vivid stories to the city’s half‑million evening readers.
Beyond the headlines, the narrative offers a glimpse of newsroom culture, from the rigorous standards for picture selection to the competitive drive that kept the paper ahead of rivals. It also highlights the global reach of its news service, linking correspondents in London, Paris, Moscow and beyond, and showing how a single newspaper could shape public perception across continents. The result is a vivid portrait of early‑20th‑century journalism, where ambition, technology, and a dedication to truth collided on every printed page.
Full title
What's in the New York Evening Journal America's Greatest Evening Newspaper America's Greatest Evening Newspaper
Language
en
Duration
~50 minutes (48K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Jason Isbell, Linda Cantoni, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2007-02-02
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

A powerhouse in American journalism, this newspaper was part of William Randolph Hearst’s fast-growing New York media empire. Launched as an afternoon paper in 1896, it became one half of the publication later known as the New York Journal-American.
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