AP at 175: A Photographic History
The Associated Press (AP) celebrates its 175th birthday in May 2021. To mark this milestone, the AP Corporate Archives has assembled a concise visual history of the organization, offered here in an eight-part monthly blog, “AP at 175.” In images drawn from the Corporate Archives and our vast news photography collection, we trace both change and constancy in a global news organization that has championed objective journalism since 1846. Images have been chosen for their visual and narrative power. Collectively, they document AP’s origins and governance, its gifted journalists and editors, and its continuous technological innovation on behalf of the members.
Valerie S. Komor
Director, AP Corporate Archives
Part 1: Beginnings, 1846-60
Between AP’s founding in 1846 and the election of Abraham Lincoln to the presidency in 1860, the telegraph continued its rapid expansion up and down the East coast and westward. The first transcontinental telegraph, completed October 24, 1861, joined existing networks by means of a segment between Omaha and Carson City.
As this revolutionary technology took hold, AP grew apace, establishing agreements for the exchange of news from across the country and refining its procedures for collecting and transmitting foreign news. New Hampshire native and pigeon trainer Daniel H. Craig (1814-95), AP’s second General Agent (today’s CEO), envisioned a national newsgathering and distribution system, based upon the telegraph, which he codified in the 1851 circular, “The General News Association of New York.”
Early on, Craig embraced the ideal of factual reporting. During New York state legislative elections in 1853, he asked his reporters to send accurate election results, based on the best information at hand, but were that not possible, he added, “we suggest the propriety of sending nothing.” The “culture of the fact,” as historian Jill Lepore describes it, rooted itself firmly from the start, forming the bedrock of AP identity and mission.