NewsInHistory Blog

Despite Objections, Louisiana Purchase Treaty Ratified

On Oct. 20, 1803, the U.S. Senate ratified the Louisiana Purchase Treaty by a vote of 24 to 7. With this one treaty the United States nearly doubled in size, acquiring 828,800 square miles from France for only $15 million—an astonishing bargain at less than 3 cents per acre. All or part of 15 current states were acquired, the port of New Orleans was secured, and France’s ambitions in North America were ended (Napoleon, preoccupied with European concerns, was quite amenable to this). With all these advantages, why was the Senate vote not unanimous? read more...

Teddy Roosevelt Shot; Delivers Campaign Speech Anyway

It almost seemed like a political advertising campaign gone awry—but one no consultant would ever dare propose. When Theodore “Teddy” Roosevelt formed the Progressive Party to run for a third term as president in 1912, it became known as the “Bull Moose Party” after he declared: “I’m as fit as a bull moose.” Then, thanks to a would-be assassin’s bullet, Roosevelt got the chance to back up that claim. read more...

Boston Defeats Pittsburgh in Baseball’s First World Series

On this day in 1903, the Boston Americans (later the Red Sox) defeated the Pittsburgh Pirates 3-0 to win Major League Baseball’s first “World’s Championship Series.” The contest between the Pirates, champions of the established National League, and the Americans, champions of the upstart American League, was a best-of-nine series. Even though the favored Pirates won three of the first four games, the Americans came storming back, winning the last four games in a row to take the championship five games to three. read more...

U.S. Navy Responds to Race Riot aboard Carrier ‘Kitty Hawk’

When a race riot erupted aboard the U.S. aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk the night of Oct. 12-13, 1972, while the ship was on combat duty in the Tonkin Gulf during the Vietnam War, the U.S. Navy knew it had a problem. A casualty toll of 46 injured sailors—3 of them hurt seriously enough to require medical evacuation—drove home the point. The problem was confirmed four days later, when another racial “incident” occurred aboard the fleet oiler USS Hassayampa in Subic Bay, Philippines. read more...

Race Riot on U.S. Carrier ‘Kitty Hawk’

An ugly incident in U.S. Navy history occurred on Oct. 12, 1972, when a race riot erupted aboard the U.S. carrier Kitty Hawk while on combat duty in the Gulf of Tonkin during the Vietnam War. More than 100, and perhaps as many as 200, African American sailors began attacking their white shipmates that night, in a six-hour brawl that lasted into the morning hours of Oct. 13. By the time the rioting was finally subdued, 46 sailors—40 white, 6 black—had been injured, 3 seriously enough to require hospitalization. read more...

City Devastated by Great Chicago Fire of 1871

In terms of lives lost, the Great Chicago Fire of 1871 was not the deadliest catastrophe in the city’s history. In the extent of its damage, however, the Great Fire was the biggest disaster. The blaze, whose origins are unknown, began Sunday night, Oct. 8, 1871. Strong winds out of the southwest whipped the flames into towering walls of fire that burned uncontrollably. With the city’s waterworks damaged, firefighters were unable to combat the fire. People fled in panic with only the clothes on their back, having no time to salvage any of their possessions. read more...

Don Larsen’s Perfect Game in 1956 World Series

No one saw it coming. It was the fifth game of the 1956 World Series between the New York Yankees and the Brooklyn Dodgers, and the Yankees trotted out a mediocre, part-time starting pitcher, 27-year-old Don Larsen. This journeyman hurler played for seven different teams in his 14-year career, compiling an unimpressive 81-91 record. In 1954, pitching for the Baltimore Orioles, he was a horrible 3-21. Known as a wild partier, his teammates called him “Gooney Bird.” All he did on Oct. read more...

‘The Jazz Singer’ Premiere: Demise of the Silent Film Era

Hollywood was booming in the first quarter of the 20th century as silent films became one of America’s favorite entertainments. Then on Oct. 6, 1927, something magical happened that radically transformed movies and doomed the silent film era: The Jazz Singer, the first feature-length movie containing songs and dialogue and starring singing sensation Al Jolson, electrified the audience gathered at the Warner Bros.’ theater in New York City for the premiere. It did not happen overnight, but silent movies were on their way out: “talkies” were what film audiences wanted to see. read more...

September 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 40 newspapers from 22 states. A total of 4,505 issues have been added in this release! Here are the details:

Connecticut read more...

Dedication Ceremony for Completion of the Washington National Cathedral

In a similar ceremony exactly 83 years after the cornerstone was laid in 1907, a U.S. president—this time George H. W. Bush instead of Theodore Roosevelt—addressed a crowd celebrating the final stone being laid, as construction was completed on the Washington National Cathedral on Sept. 29, 1990. A national cathedral was envisioned by Pierre L’Enfant, a French-born architect appointed in 1791 by President George Washington to design the nation’s new capital city on the north bank of the Potomac River. Nearly 200 years later, L’Enfant’s dream was a reality. read more...