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The power of news : the history of Reuters, 1849-1989 / Donald Read.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 1992Description: xii, 431 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0198217765
  • 9780198217763
  • 0198204590
  • 9780198204596
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 070.435 20
LOC classification:
  • PN5111.R4 R43 1992
Online resources: Available additional physical forms:
  • Also issued online.
Contents:
List of Plates -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Key Dates -- Introduction -- 1. Julius Reuter: Before and After 1851 -- 2. 'The Great Reuter' -- 3. An Imperial Institution, 1865-1914 -- 4. The World's News, 1865-1914 -- 5. Wartime Reconstruction, 1914-1918 -- 6. War News, 1914-1918 -- 7. The Autocracy of Roderick Jones, 1919-1934 -- 8. The Decline and Fall of Roderick Jones, 1934-1941 -- 9. News Between the Wars, 1919-1939 -- 10. War News, 1939-1945 -- 11. 'In the Nature of a Trust', 1941-1963 -- 12. Making the New Reuters, 1963-1981 -- 13. Achieving Worldwide Presence, 1963-1981 -- 14. Going Public, 1981-1984 -- 15. The World's News, 1945-1989 -- 16. Retrospect, 1849-1989 -- Appendix. Comparison of Results 1952-1989 -- Picture Acknowledgements -- Glossary -- References -- Select Bibliography -- Index.
Summary: "In 1851 Julius Reuter moved from Berlin to London where he and his staff of one office boy set up the telegraph office that was to evolve into one of the most powerful news agencies in the world. For over a century, Reuters, as it came to be named, was the news agency of the British Empire,committed to providing "truth in news" and doing so quickly, two standards of reporting that it maintains to this very day. And for over 150 years, Reuters has been a part the great revolution in world communications, from the days of overland and undersea telegraphs, to modern computer links andsatellites. In The Power of News, Donald Read presents the history of this communications giant, from its beginnings in 1851 to the company's decision to go public in 1984. Read shows how the completion of the world's first translatlantic cable in July 1866 launched Reuters into a new era of cablecommunication, bringing news to the world more quickly than ever. News of Lincoln's election as President in 1861 had taken eight days to reach London, while news of Grant's 1869 victory took only one day. Read also reveals how Reuters profited greatly for its wartime reports, from theAustro-Prussian War in 1866, to the Franco-Prussian War in 1870, to the momentous 1914 telegram ("Sarajevo Ferdinand Deste assassine") at the start of World War I. Read also traces the agency's post-World War II days under the leadership of Christopher Chancellor, who transformed the agency into aninternational organization that sold its services in many languages across the world, from Argentina, to Africa, to Japan. He delves into Reuters' profitable business of supplying economic information--its delivery of stock market and commodity prices and the successful Reuter Monitor Money Ratesservice launched in 1973. And he shows how this financial success was important to Reuters' independence and objectivity of reporting. (During wartime, and throughout its history, Reuters' subsidization by the British Government had drawn criticism that the agency was "partial to things British.")And for the first time, Read presents the story behind the controversial decision to float the agency as a public company in 1984. The first to report the building of the Berlin Wall in 1961, and the first to report its fall in 1989, Reuters has remained at the forefront of worldwide communications. Revealing the failures as well as the successes, The Power of News tells the fascinating story of the company that has beenbringing us history in the making for over a hundred fifty years."--Publisher description.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Book City Campus City Campus Main Collection 070.435 REA (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available A060966B

Includes index.

List of Plates -- List of Figures -- List of Tables -- Key Dates -- Introduction -- 1. Julius Reuter: Before and After 1851 -- 2. 'The Great Reuter' -- 3. An Imperial Institution, 1865-1914 -- 4. The World's News, 1865-1914 -- 5. Wartime Reconstruction, 1914-1918 -- 6. War News, 1914-1918 -- 7. The Autocracy of Roderick Jones, 1919-1934 -- 8. The Decline and Fall of Roderick Jones, 1934-1941 -- 9. News Between the Wars, 1919-1939 -- 10. War News, 1939-1945 -- 11. 'In the Nature of a Trust', 1941-1963 -- 12. Making the New Reuters, 1963-1981 -- 13. Achieving Worldwide Presence, 1963-1981 -- 14. Going Public, 1981-1984 -- 15. The World's News, 1945-1989 -- 16. Retrospect, 1849-1989 -- Appendix. Comparison of Results 1952-1989 -- Picture Acknowledgements -- Glossary -- References -- Select Bibliography -- Index.

"In 1851 Julius Reuter moved from Berlin to London where he and his staff of one office boy set up the telegraph office that was to evolve into one of the most powerful news agencies in the world. For over a century, Reuters, as it came to be named, was the news agency of the British Empire,committed to providing "truth in news" and doing so quickly, two standards of reporting that it maintains to this very day. And for over 150 years, Reuters has been a part the great revolution in world communications, from the days of overland and undersea telegraphs, to modern computer links andsatellites. In The Power of News, Donald Read presents the history of this communications giant, from its beginnings in 1851 to the company's decision to go public in 1984. Read shows how the completion of the world's first translatlantic cable in July 1866 launched Reuters into a new era of cablecommunication, bringing news to the world more quickly than ever. News of Lincoln's election as President in 1861 had taken eight days to reach London, while news of Grant's 1869 victory took only one day. Read also reveals how Reuters profited greatly for its wartime reports, from theAustro-Prussian War in 1866, to the Franco-Prussian War in 1870, to the momentous 1914 telegram ("Sarajevo Ferdinand Deste assassine") at the start of World War I. Read also traces the agency's post-World War II days under the leadership of Christopher Chancellor, who transformed the agency into aninternational organization that sold its services in many languages across the world, from Argentina, to Africa, to Japan. He delves into Reuters' profitable business of supplying economic information--its delivery of stock market and commodity prices and the successful Reuter Monitor Money Ratesservice launched in 1973. And he shows how this financial success was important to Reuters' independence and objectivity of reporting. (During wartime, and throughout its history, Reuters' subsidization by the British Government had drawn criticism that the agency was "partial to things British.")And for the first time, Read presents the story behind the controversial decision to float the agency as a public company in 1984. The first to report the building of the Berlin Wall in 1961, and the first to report its fall in 1989, Reuters has remained at the forefront of worldwide communications. Revealing the failures as well as the successes, The Power of News tells the fascinating story of the company that has beenbringing us history in the making for over a hundred fifty years."--Publisher description.

Also issued online.

Machine converted from AACR2 source record.

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