NewsInHistory Blog

Editorials Speculate on Cause of Dakota War in Minnesota

While Northern readers were consumed by stories in their newspapers about the Civil War during the summer of 1862, they were startled to suddenly find accounts of an awful massacre of white settlers in Minnesota by enraged Indians that erupted on Aug. 17, 1862. During a fearsome six-week period settlers were relentlessly pursued and killed by roving bands of Eastern Sioux (Dakota) Indians driven to desperation by the government failing to honor treaties and deliver promised food, money and goods. read more...

Denied Promised Food, Starving Sioux Rampage in Minnesota

The 400-year armed conflict between whites and Native Americans saw enough savagery and cruelty to shame both races, but even in this context it is hard to understand the butchery that marked the short-lived Dakota War that erupted in Minnesota on Aug. 17, 1862. During a fearsome six-week period white settlers in Minnesota were relentlessly pursued and killed by roving bands of Eastern Sioux (Dakota) Indians driven to rage by the government failing to honor treaties and deliver promised food, money and goods. read more...

Newspaper Editorializes about the ‘Injury of Innocents’ in the Watts Riots

The following editorial by a Texas newspaper presents a conservative view of the bloody, destructive riots then raging in Watts, the predominantly African-American area of Los Angeles, California, in August 1965. The editorial takes a strong stand—yet in its seemingly clear position and the arguments it musters to support its point of view, it reflects the underlying uncertainty and complexity that makes it difficult to understand something as terrifying and complicated as a race riot. read more...

Black Reporter’s Eyewitness Account of Watts Riots

For six bloody, destructive days in the summer of 1965, from Aug. 11-16, the predominantly African-American area of Watts (Los Angeles, California) was torn apart in a series of riots that left 34 people dead, over 1,000 injured and more than 3,400 arrested. It was an explosion of violence triggered by a white police officer’s arrest of a black man on suspicion of drunken driving, along with his brother and mother—but the underlying cause was the long-simmering tension caused by poverty, discrimination, and distrust of an almost all-white police force. read more...

International Newspaper Editorials Urge President Nixon to Resign

When President Richard M. Nixon made his nationally-televised address to the nation on Aug. 8, 1974, announcing he was resigning the presidency, the news came as a relief to an American public weary and frustrated by the Watergate scandal. The sense of relief was felt far beyond the United States, as the following international newspaper editorials reveal. These two newspaper articles, each summarizing international opinion, were printed in American papers on Aug. read more...

American Newspaper Editorials Urge President Nixon to Resign

When President Richard M. Nixon made his nationally-televised address to the nation on Aug. 8, 1974, announcing he was resigning the presidency, the news came as a relief to a public weary and frustrated by the Watergate scandal. For two years Nixon had denied any involvement in the scandal’s cover-up, but the Supreme Court ruled that the president had to release tapes of White House conversations he had secretly recorded. On Aug. read more...

First Intercollegiate Athletic Event: 1852 Harvard-Yale Boat Race

In an exciting two-mile rowing race on the waters of New Hampshire’s Lake Winnipesaukee on Aug. 3, 1852, Harvard’s Oneida won the first Harvard-Yale Boat Race, beginning a regatta rivalry that continues to this day. That 1852 race was the first intercollegiate athletic competition between American colleges. It was witnessed by a large crowd including General Franklin Pierce, who was elected the United States’ 14th president later that year. Pierce presented Harvard with the prized trophy: a pair of black walnut oars inscribed with silver. read more...

U.S. Forces Japan to Open Its Ports to American Trade

After 200 years of shielding itself from the outside world, Japan was forced to end its policy of seclusion on July 29, 1858, when it somewhat reluctantly signed the Treaty of Amity and Commerce with the United States. This treaty, negotiated by U.S. Consul General Townsend Harris, was the culmination of the U.S. effort to force open Japan begun by the arrival of Commodore Matthew C. Perry and a naval fleet that arrived in Uraga Harbor (Tokyo) on July 8, 1853. read more...

July Addition: NewsInHistory Adds More Papers!

NewsInHistory is continually adding more content to our historical newspapers archive—titles new to our collection as well as expanding the date ranges and number of issues for titles already in our archive. New titles are indicated by an asterisk (*). This current addition involves 41 newspapers from 20 states. A total of 4,251 issues have been added in this release! Here are the details:

Connecticut read more...

Southern Resistance to the 14th Amendment Granting Citizenship to Former Slaves

On December 6, 1865, the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratified, outlawing slavery. Even with this constitutional protection, however, most freed slaves in the former Confederacy were denied civil and political rights and kept in virtual slavery. To address this, Congress proposed a “Reconstruction” amendment on June 13, 1866, to ensure citizenship for emancipated slaves and guarantee due process of law. read more...