Smithsonian Magazine

Origins: Stop the presses! The AP is turning 175

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IN MAY 1846, eager to get news of the Mexican-American War to his readers in the Northeast, Moses Yale Beach, publisher of the New York Sun, convinced the leaders of four other New York newspapers to invest in a network of couriers on horseback who would carry reporting from the front lines of the war to Montgomery, Alabama. From there, the correspond­ence would travel via stagecoach to the southernmo­st U.S. telegraph office, in Richmond, Virginia, for transmissi­on to New York. The complicate­d scheme ensured that the five newspapers were first to break war news.

Speedier transmissi­on of informatio­n was not the only innovation of the service, which eventually became known as the Associated Press. Unlike most American news outlets at the time, the AP took a firmly nonpartisa­n stance, providing reports to Democratic- and Republican­aligned publicatio­ns alike. “My dispatches are merely dry matters of fact and detail,” the first Washington bureau chief, Lawrence Gobright, said in 1856.

By then, the AP was a quasi-official recorder of election results nationwide. During the Civil War, its impressive network of agents—with access to 50,000 miles of telegraph lines—regularly conveyed battle results within a day.

The journalist­ic neutrality that the AP pioneered, and which became a model for many other news organizati­ons, strikes some commentato­rs these days as quaint. They question whether unbiased reporting is possible—or even desirable. “Neutral objectivit­y trips over itself to find ways to avoid telling the truth,” the Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter Wesley Lowery declared in an op-ed last year.

But the AP’s “dry dispatches” remain as vital as ever, 175 years after its founding. More than half the world’s population has access to news from the AP every day. In an era of shrinking journalism budgets and shuttered newsrooms, the organizati­on still operates 248 bureaus in 99 countries. Even in the United States, an AP reporter is often the only journalist covering a regional news event. Its best-selling Stylebook, now in its 55th edition, still sits on the desks of writers around the world, and the AP’s studied neutrality, even if an unreachabl­e ideal, helps indicate to readers where “the truth” might actually be.

 ??  ?? One of the
AP’s legendary photograph­ers captured constructi­on workers lunching on a steel beam atop the 66-story
RCA Building in New York in September 1932.
One of the AP’s legendary photograph­ers captured constructi­on workers lunching on a steel beam atop the 66-story RCA Building in New York in September 1932.
 ??  ?? The 1940 press pass for an AP reporter named Joe Abreu.
The 1940 press pass for an AP reporter named Joe Abreu.

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