Many newspapers use wire services to provide readers with national and international news that locally they
might not have access to. This service has historic roots, beginning with the formation of the Associated Press. This blog compiles the way in which it came into existence and what implications it has on the journalistic realm.
After the Civil War, with the
introduction of the telegraph, newspapers became increasingly competitive to
report a broad range of news, and at faster speeds. Oliver Gramling writes in "AP: the Story of News" that all the New York papers paid the full telegraph rate
and arranged for the delivered news independently. However, there was “only one
wire available to serve all the New York papers” (Gramling, 20). Additionally,
papers had to take 15-minute rotations at the telegraph Newspapers that
retrieved the news last were often too late. The Harbor News Association was
founded in New York to retrieve international ships carrying news from Europe
(Bleyer, 402). The Harbor News Association and the Telegraphic and General News
Association was combined into the General News Association of the City of New
York (Bleyer, 402).
For the consolidation, ten men
representing six New York Newspapers met in an office at the New York Sun in May
of 1848. Of them, Gramling writes that “some were belligerent, some were
conciliatory, some were unconcerned, and some were worried” (Gramling, 19). The
Herald, Courier and Eunquirer, the Journal of Commerce, the Tribune, the Sun,
and the Express all incorporated into the Associated Press. The intent of the
collaboration was to split expenses evenly among the group and allow equal
access to the news. By 1851, plans were forming to sell the collected news to
other newspapers. The same year the New York Times joined the Associated Press
(Shmanske 61).
Figure 2: Gramling, in AP: The Story of News depicts the six newspaper representatives discussing formation of the Associated Press (Gramling, 21). |
The Press began sending news to various
regions and local newspapers there would split the cost of expenses. Thus the
Western Associated Press, North-western Associated Press, New England
Associated Press and the Philadelphia Associated press arose in their
respective regions (Shamanke 62). Eventually, many organizations merged.
The Associated Press also partnered with
international newspapers to provide global coverage. Such advances pushed a
rival of the AP, the United Press, to go under in 1897 (Associated Press).
Today, the Associated Press has 15,000
news outlets in 112 nations, and has won the Pulitzer Prize 43 times (Liddell).
According to the company’s website, the AP is a non-profit owned by the 1,400
U.S. newspaper members. The Associated Press supplies over 65 percent of the
content present in daily newspapers (Alabiso, 18). In “Flash! The Associated
Press Covers the World!” Alabiso et al. writes, “the AP news report has become
the blood that flows through the body of American journalism, an essential
component in the nation’s news day” (Alabiso, 17).
Click here for 1901 Associated Press articles
Click here for 1856 Associated Press article
Click here for the Associated Press website
Click here for 1901 Associated Press articles
Click here for 1856 Associated Press article
Click here for the Associated Press website
Works Cited
Alabiso
, V., Smith Tunney, K., & Zoeller, C. (1998). Flash! the associated press
covers
the
world . Harry N. Abrams
Associated
press. (n.d.). Retrieved from http://www.questia.com/library
/communication/journalism/associated-press
G.
Bleyer, W. (1927). Main currents in the history of american journalism .
Cambridge,
MA:
The Riverside Press Cambridge.
Gramling,
O. (1940). Ap the story of news. New York, NY: Farrar and Rinehart, Inc.
Liddell,
M. A. (1998). The AP looks back. Smithsonian, 29(2),
108.
Marietta daily leader. (Marietta, Ohio) 1895-1906, June 29, 1901, Image 1. Retrieved from http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn87075213/1901-06-29/ed-1/seq-1/
Nashville daily patriot. (Nashville, Tenn.) 1855-1857, July 03, 1856, Image 3. Retrieved from http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86053516/1856-07-03/ed-1/seq-3/
Marietta daily leader. (Marietta, Ohio) 1895-1906, June 29, 1901, Image 1. Retrieved from http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn87075213/1901-06-29/ed-1/seq-1/
Nashville daily patriot. (Nashville, Tenn.) 1855-1857, July 03, 1856, Image 3. Retrieved from http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn86053516/1856-07-03/ed-1/seq-3/
Perrucci,
D. (1997). Celebrating AP's 150 years. Editor & Publisher, 130(47),
20.
Shmanske,
S. (1986). News as a Public Good: Cooperative Ownership, Price Commitments,
and
the Success of the Associated Press. Business History Review, 60(1),
55-80.
Silberstein-Loeb,
J. (2012). Exclusivity and Cooperation in the Supply of News: The Example
of the Associated
Press, 1893–1945. Journal Of Policy History, 24(3),
466-498. doi:10.1017/S0898030612000140