British newspapers news newspaper times guardian headlines print English writing reading relaxation inform information press journalists photos papers paper society lifestyle history
The press is printing local afternoon paper, the Los Angeles Mirror-News in the late 1950s. The paper was part of the Los Angeles Daily Times Group begun by the Chandler family which today is part of the Tribune Company of Chicago. The afternoon tabloid the Los Angeles Mirror began in 1948 and in 1954 was absorbed into the Daily News. The combined paper ceased production in 1962. A vintage nineteen fifties photograph from M&N Publishing
The press is printing local afternoon paper, the Los Angeles Mirror-News in the late 1950s. The paper was part of the Los Angeles Daily Times Group begun by the Chandler family which today is part of the Tribune Company of Chicago. The afternoon tabloid the Los Angeles Mirror began in 1948 and in 1954 was absorbed into the Daily News. The combined paper ceased production in 1962. A vintage nineteen fifties photograph from M&N Publishing
Pre-production work carried out on the local afternoon paper, the Los Angeles Mirror-News, in the late 1950s. The paper was part of the Los Angeles Daily Times Group begun by the Chandler family which today is part of the Tribune Company of Chicago. The afternoon tabloid the Los Angeles Mirror began in 1948 and in 1954 was absorbed into the Daily News. The combined paper ceased production in 1962. A vintage nineteen fifties photograph from M&N Publishing, larger 35MB file available on request
Pre-production work carried out on the local afternoon paper, the Los Angeles Mirror-News, in the late 1950s. The paper was part of the Los Angeles Daily Times Group begun by the Chandler family which today is part of the Tribune Company of Chicago. The afternoon tabloid the Los Angeles Mirror began in 1948 and in 1954 was absorbed into the Daily News. The combined paper ceased production in 1962. A vintage nineteen fifties photograph from M&N Publishing, larger 35MB file available on request
Member of the Associated Press; fotoLibra; Scott A. McNealy photographer; period newspaper; retro newspaper; old newspaper; October 28 1940; Alton IL; 1940; Alton Evening Telegraph; newspaper; global English; Global English; Britain; Occupies Greek Isles; National Day of Mourning Proclaimed for President; April 13 1945; ph78a; The front page of a newspaper; photo of a US newspaper
tabloid newspapers UK British red tops redtops top press media United Kingdom Great Britain newspapers paper papers celebrity culture print news England English The Sun Daily Star Mirror News of World tabloids journalism Sunday daily dailies national nationals format formats
Description
A collection of daily and Sunday UK tabloid national newspapers - known as "Red Tops" because of the background colour on the mastheads.
full colour old newspapers cut-out; full colour old newspapers; old newspapers; Alton Evening Telegraph; newspapers; 1936 newspaper Scott A. McNealy photographer; 122.13; photo of a US newspaper
Pre-production work carried out on the local afternoon paper, the Los Angeles Mirror-News, in the late 1950s. The paper was part of the Los Angeles Daily Times Group begun by the Chandler family which today is part of the Tribune Company of Chicago. The afternoon tabloid the Los Angeles Mirror began in 1948 and in 1954 was absorbed into the Daily News. The combined paper ceased production in 1962. A vintage nineteen fifties photograph from M&N Publishing, larger 35MB file available on request
newspaper front page The Times portrait coverage reportage report reporting President Barack Obama inauguration ceremony election first black UK United Kingdom USA States of America US British English newspapers paper papers historic
Description
Front page of The Times newspaper on January 21 2009 reporting the inauguration of Barack Obama as President of the United States of America.
1950s newspaper office - two male and one female desk workers/journalists at work writing with pens and notepads. One man smokes a pipe and the other a cigarette.
Pre-production work carried out on the local afternoon paper, the Los Angeles Mirror-News, in the late 1950s. The paper was part of the Los Angeles Daily Times Group begun by the Chandler family which today is part of the Tribune Company of Chicago. The afternoon tabloid the Los Angeles Mirror began in 1948 and in 1954 was absorbed into the Daily News. The combined paper ceased production in 1962. A vintage nineteen fifties photograph from M&N Publishing, larger 35MB file available on request
Lord Northcliffe Alfred Harmsworth 1st Viscount portrait newspaper publisher famous businessman Amalgamated Press magnate media mogul boss proprietor founder British vintage photo publishing industry journalism tabloid tabloids print rich richest of the historic historical 19th 20th century late early Briton Britons portraits newspapers publishers business businessmen magnates moguls bosses tycoon tycoons proprietors controversial Charles William Baron industries journalist journalists paper papers history heritage power powerful influential commentator commentators figure figures people person persons twentieth nineteenth black and white pioneer pioneers pioneering photos photograph photographs leader leaders leading leadership politics political politician politicians 1800s 1900s Daily Mail Mirror Times founders popular mass Market culture society wealthy wealthiest most millionaire millionaires celebrated renowned acclaimed prominent eminent noted famed successful distinguished important key great greats greatest man men male males full-length full length wearing top hat hats head upright vertical a an at as in on for from into with by to barons wealth magazine magazines empire empires financial WW1 WWI WWi WW 1 I i World War One First Director Propaganda 1917 1910s archive archival 1914 - 1918 Irish Irishman Irishmen Britain Europe European Europeans Ireland Northcliff
Description
Vintage photo circa 1917 of British newspaper and publishing magnate Lord Northcliffe (Alfred Charles William Harmsworth, 1st Viscount Northcliffe). Northcliffe (1865 - 1922) founded the Amalgamated Press in 1888 and is famed for buying struggling newspapers and transforming them to entertain the mass Market. He founded the Daily Mail in 1896, the Daily Mirror in 1903 and bought The Times in 1908. Northcliffe wielded enormous influence over public opinion and was appointed Director for Propaganda towards the end of World War One by British Prime Minister David Lloyd George. Photo by Harris & Ewing.
USA; America; Washington D C; Washing D.C.; boys; lads; newspaper; vendors; 1900s; 1910s; 20th; c20th; century; history; historical; Lewis Hine; portrait; group; newspapers; news; journalism; information; media; American; press; child; labour; Sunday; labor; children; kids; youth; laughing; larking; about
Description
USA Washington DC -- circa 1910 -- Sunday Morning, Group of gum vendors and news-boys, Pennsylvania Avenue and 7th Sts. The smallest ones were Sam Kipnis, 412 P St., N.W., Washington, D.C. David Stierman, 701 M St., N.W., Washington, D.C. (Is a truant on probation. Very defiant). Abram Furr, 1004 4 1/2 St., S.W., Washington, D.C., has a badge. The smallest of these were 11 years old. I saw some smaller but couldn't get the photo. Location: Washington (D.C.), District of Columbia -- Picture by Lewis Hine | Lightroom Photos
IRAQ Wajihiyah -- 01 Jun 2005 -- An Iraqi citizen reads a newspaper while a US soldiers patrol the streets in Wajihiyah, Iraq. USAF photo (Released) -- Picture by Suzanne Day / Lightroom Photos / USAF
1950s newspapers - casting pages for a rotary letterpress machine. The final pre-production process when the finished cast is then ready to be attached onto the drum of a printing press.
1950s newspapers - Linotype operator. The machine assembles matrices or moulds for each letter in a line of type which is then cast as a single piece, called a slug, of type metal in a process known as 'hot metal' typesetting. The process allowed much faster typesetting and page making than original hand composition in which operators place down one pre-cast metal letter at a time. The machine revolutionized publishing especially newspaper production, enabling a far smaller number of operators and faster working.
1950s newspapers - making up a letterpress form in a chase. A Linotype machine assembles matrices or moulds for each letter in a line of type which is then cast as a single piece, called a slug, of type metal in a process known as 'hot metal' typesetting. All these lines are eventually form a page of the paper via the chase. The process allowed much faster typesetting and composition than original hand composition in which operators place down one pre-cast metal letter at a time. The machine revolutionized publishing especially newspaper production, enabling a far smaller number of operators and faster working.
Member of the Associated Press; fotoLibra; Scott A. McNealy photographer; period newspaper; retro newspaper; old newspaper; January 15 1936; Alton IL; Centennial Edition of Alton Telegraph; 1936; Alton Evening Telegraph; newspaper; global English; Log Cabin First Store in Alton; Log Cabin; Global English; photo of a US newspaper
?African American man reading a newspaper with the headline 'Presidential Proclamation, Slavery' which refers to President Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation of January 1863. Watercolour by Henry Louis Stephens (1824-1882).
Member of the Associated Press; fotoLibra; Scott A. McNealy photographer; period newspaper; retro newspaper; old newspaper; Alton IL; 1940; Alton Evening Telegraph; newspaper; global English; Global English; National Day of Mourning Proclaimed for President; April 13 1945; photo of a US newspaper
Pre-production work carried out on the local afternoon paper, the Los Angeles Mirror-News, in the late 1950s. The paper was part of the Los Angeles Daily Times Group begun by the Chandler family which today is part of the Tribune Company of Chicago. The afternoon tabloid the Los Angeles Mirror began in 1948 and in 1954 was absorbed into the Daily News. The combined paper ceased production in 1962. A vintage nineteen fifties photograph from M&N Publishing, larger 35MB file available on request
Pre-production work carried out on the local afternoon paper, the Los Angeles Mirror-News, in the late 1950s. The paper was part of the Los Angeles Daily Times Group begun by the Chandler family which today is part of the Tribune Company of Chicago. The afternoon tabloid the Los Angeles Mirror began in 1948 and in 1954 was absorbed into the Daily News. The combined paper ceased production in 1962. A vintage nineteen fifties photograph from M&N Publishing, larger 35MB file available on request
ph78a; The front page of a newspaper; ph78a The front page of a newspaper; global English; newspaper; Alton Evening Telegraph; 1936; Centennial Edition of Alton Telegraph; Alton IL; January 15 1936; old newspaper; retro newspaper; period newspaper; Scott A. McNealy photographer; fotoLibra; Trade center back to days of Indians; Alton Always a Market; Member of the Associated Press; Global English; photo of a US newspaper
Edward Baines (1800-1890) English journalist, economist and politician; editor Leeds Mercury; advocated public education independent of the state. Cartoon from Punch London, 1847
ph78a; The front page of a newspaper; ph78a The front page of a newspaper; global English; newspaper; Alton Evening Telegraph; 1936; Centennial Edition of Alton Telegraph; Alton IL; January 15 1936; old newspaper; retro newspaper; period newspaper; Scott A. McNealy photographer; fotoLibra; Log Cabin; Log Cabin First Store in Alton; Member of the Associated Press; Newspaper from Alton IL USA-1936; Global English; photo of a US newspaper
World War Two, WWII, 1940s, Forties, Headlines, Newspaper, Daily Sketch, The Press, News, Uniform, Air Raid Precautions Base, Mechanic, Driver, Cars, Vehicles, Ambulances, Converted Buses and Coaches, Stretchers, Medical, Nurses, First Aid, Injured, Rescue, Home Front, Dad's Army, Bomb Sites, Combat, Men, Man, Driving Gloves, Maurice Swansborough Photographic Archive, England, Britain, British, Germany, People, Archive, Social History, Historical, Documentary, Vintage, Black and White, Monochrome,
Description
Allies Strike! WWII News Headlines A.R.P. Base, Enfield, London, 1940 - The Daily Sketch’s headline news concerns the German invasion of Denmark (and their surrender) and Norway (The ports of Kritiansand, Stavanger, Bergen, Trondheim, Narvik and Oslo) and the Allies fight back which included destroying fuel tankers that were essential to the German war machine. The Royal Navy Flotilla, the British 2nd Destroyer Flotilla and the battleship Warspite were involved (a few days previously). Other news the Norwegian King hides under goods truck during raids. Adverts in the paper include ‘Waste Not, Want Not - Use HP Sauce'.
William Randolph Hearst portrait newspaper publisher famous businessman magnate media mogul boss proprietor American US USA vintage photo publishing industry journalism print rich richest United States of America the historic historical 19th 20th century late early Americans portraits newspapers publishers business businessmen magnates moguls bosses tycoon tycoons proprietors controversial Citizen Kane film WR W R W.R. movie industries journalist journalists paper papers history heritage power powerful influential commentator commentators figure figures people person persons infamous notorious twentieth nineteenth yellow press black and white photos photograph photographs leader leaders leading leadership politics political politician politicians north Orson Welles 1800s 1900s films culture society ever wealthy wealthiest multi-millionaire multi-millionaires most millionaire millionaires multi celebrated renowned acclaimed prominent eminent noted famed successful distinguished important key great greats greatest man men male males head shoulder shoulders close-up closeup close up upright vertical a an at as in on for from into with by to baron barons wealth magazine magazines empire empires financial San Francisco Titanic sinking ship 1912 disaster shipwreck iceberg Star Line J Joseph Bruce Ismay world world's archive archival 1910s
Description
Portrait photo circa 1910 of William Randolph Hearst (1863 - 1951). Hearst was an influential American newspaper magnate and leading publisher who at one stage owned nearly 30 papers in major American cities and had the largest newspaper and magazine business in the world. Hearst exercised enormous political influence and following the Titanic disaster in 1912 his papers savagely attacked the alleged cowardice of White Star Line Managing Director Joseph Bruce Ismay after Ismay survived by taking a place in a lifeboat. The famous Orson Welles film "Citizen Kane" (1941) was loosely based in part on Hearst's life story. Photo by Harris & Ewing.
Lord Rothermere Harold Harmsworth 1st Viscount portrait newspaper publisher famous businessman Associated Newspapers press magnate media mogul boss proprietor founder British vintage photo publishing industry journalism tabloid tabloids print rich richest of the historic historical 19th 20th century late early Briton Britons portraits publishers business businessmen magnates moguls bosses tycoon tycoons proprietors controversial Sidney Baron industries journalist journalists paper papers history heritage power powerful influential commentator commentators figure figures people person persons twentieth nineteenth black and white pioneer pioneers pioneering photos photograph photographs leader leaders leading leadership politics political politician politicians 1800s 1900s Daily Mail Mirror Glasgow Record Sunday Pictorial General Trust founders popular mass Market culture society wealthy wealthiest most millionaire millionaires celebrated renowned acclaimed prominent eminent noted famed successful distinguished important key great greats greatest man men male males half-length half length head shoulder shoulders close-up close up closeup upright vertical a an at as in on for from into with by to barons wealth magazine magazines empire empires financial WW1 WWI WWi WW 1 I i World War One First President Air Council 1917 1910s archive archival 1914 - 1918 Britain appeasement policy Hitler Nazi Germany Nazis Europe European Europeans Northcliffe Alfred Charles William Amalgamated
Description
Portrait photo circa 1910s of British newspaper magnate Lord Rothermere (Harold Sidney Harmsworth, 1st Viscount Rothermere). Rothermere (1868 - 1940) was the owner of Associated Newspapers and the founder of the Glasgow Daily Record and the Sunday Pictorial. He is particularly remembered for the development of the Daily Mail and Daily Mirror with his brother Alfred Harmsworth (Lord Northcliffe). Rothermere also served for a time as President of the Air Council during WW1 in the government of Prime Minister David Lloyd George and in later life supported the policy of appeasement in relation to Hitler's Nazi Germany. Photo by Bain News Service.
William Randolph Hearst portrait newspaper publisher famous businessman magnate media mogul boss proprietor American US USA vintage photo publishing industry journalism print rich richest United States of America the historic historical 19th 20th century late early Americans portraits newspapers publishers business businessmen magnates moguls bosses tycoon tycoons proprietors controversial Citizen Kane film WR W R W.R. movie industries journalist journalists paper papers history heritage power powerful influential commentator commentators figure figures people person persons infamous notorious twentieth nineteenth yellow press black and white photos photograph photographs leader leaders leading leadership politics political politician politicians north Orson Welles 1800s 1900s films culture society ever wealthy wealthiest multi-millionaire multi-millionaires most millionaire millionaires multi celebrated renowned acclaimed prominent eminent noted famed successful distinguished important key great greats greatest man men male males head shoulder shoulders close-up closeup close up horizontal landscape a an at as in on for from into with by to hat hats headwear wearing baron barons wealth magazine magazines empire empires financial San Francisco Titanic sinking ship 1912 disaster shipwreck iceberg Star Line J Joseph Bruce Ismay world world's archive archival 1910 1910s
Description
Photo circa 1910 of William Randolph Hearst (1863 - 1951). Hearst was an influential American newspaper magnate and leading publisher who at one stage owned nearly 30 papers in major American cities and had the largest newspaper and magazine business in the world. Hearst exercised enormous political influence and following the Titanic disaster in 1912 his papers savagely attacked the alleged cowardice of White Star Line Managing Director Joseph Bruce Ismay after Ismay survived by taking a place in a lifeboat. The famous Orson Welles film "Citizen Kane" (1941) was loosely based in part on Hearst's life story. Photo by Bain News Service.
John Walter the Younger (1818-1894) English newspaper proprietor and politician. Chief proprietor of The Times of London. Introduced the Walter printing press in 1869. A Member of Parliament from 1845-1885. Engraving from The Illustrated News of the World (London, c1860).
United Kingdom, Wales, Cardiff, newspapers for sale, stacks, money, coins, change, man's hands, newspaper, information, for sale, street vendor, street seller, street selling, bungee holder, IPSV6865
United Kingdom, Wales, Cardiff, newspapers for sale, stacks, money, coins, change, man's hands, newspaper, Western Mail, information, for sale, street vendor, street seller, street selling, bungee holder, IPSV6865,