1901 - 1950
The Modern Cooperative Grows
1906 With regular telegraph lines down, Paul Cowles, chief of the AP San Francisco bureau delivers first word of the devastating earthquake in that city by relaying a news bulletin via Honolulu.

Several weeks later AP institutes the "FLASH" to alert editors to news of transcendent importance in as brief a way as possible.
1914 The introduction of the teletype machine allows AP to transmit words by wire from keyboard to distant printers.
1916 AP transmits play-by-play to member newspapers directly from Braves Field in Boston during the World Series between the Brooklyn Nationals and the Boston Red Sox, a first.

AP and member newspapers combine resources to cover the U.S. Presidential race between President Woodrow Wilson and Republican Charles Evans Hughes. AP tallied votes on a precinct-by-precinct, county-by-county basis. Two days after the election, AP declares Wilson the winner by a narrow margin.
1919 AP begins to deliver news to overseas news organizations, after the AP board of directors breaks agreements, originally made by the Western Associated Press, with the European news agencies that claimed exclusive rights to serve Latin America and elsewhere.

On November 7, UP prematurely reports an Armistice ending World War I. Jackson S. Elliott, AP’s General News Editor, remains glued to the telephone when the call comes in from the State Department at 2:15 p.m. and the bulletin is rushed to all wires that the Germans have not yet signed. They do not sign until November 11.
1920 In the first radio broadcast of AP news, election returns from the presidential race in which Warren Harding beat James M. Cox are reported on KDKA radio in Pittsburgh.
1921

AP breaks its tradition of writer anonymity after Kirke L. Simpson writes a moving series about the burial of the Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery. In 1922, Simpson is the first AP writer to win the Pulitzer Prize (see more on AP’s Pulitzer Prize winners at www.ap.org/pulitzer).

1927 AP inaugurates a department of news features and a mailed photo service to illustrate and expand the AP news report.
1931 Reflecting its international expansion, AP opens subsidiaries to serve newspapers in Europe -- the Associated Press GmbH in Berlin and Associated Press Ltd. in London.
1932 The kidnapped infant son of aviation hero Charles Lindbergh is found dead in Hopewell, N.J. AP's Frank Jamieson scores a beat and wins the Pulitzer Prize for his comprehensive reporting throughout the 11-week search for the child.
1933 The "A" wire, AP's main news wire, is converted from a Morse to a Teletype circuit, allowing AP to transmit the national news report at 66 words per minute.
The Associated Press Managing Editors Association (APME) is formed as an industry association dedicated to the improvement, advancement and promotion of journalism by AP and its member newspapers.
1935 AP Wirephoto, the world's first wire service for photographs, is launched, making it possible for newspapers to receive pictures on the day they are taken, rather than by mail. The first AP photo sent by wire depicts the crash of a small plane in New York's Adirondack Mountains.
1936 AP starts an annual poll of sports writers with the Top 10, later Top 25, college football teams. The unofficial rankings make football a top college sport.
1939 Louis P. Lochner, chief of bureau, Berlin, wins the Pulitzer Prize for his reporting from Nazi Germany. (see more on AP’s Pulitzer Prize winners at www.ap.org/pulitzer).
1941

In January, AP's radio wire is launched, and AP enters the broadcasting age. The radio wire serves radio station members with written reports via teletype that are read on the air.

On December 7, AP’s Eugene Burns in Honolulu sees Japanese planes dropping bombs and phones the San Francisco bureau. After dictating a paragraph, the phone is cut off by U.S. officials, and his bulletin never makes the wires. Nearly an hour later, the White House announces the attack to AP and other news agencies in Washington.

The next day, AP's American staffers in Germany, including Berlin bureau chief Louis P. Lochner, are rounded up and held at Bad Nauheim for several months before being exchanged for Germans citizens detained in the United States. At the same time, AP staffers are among those Americans arrested by the Japanese and interned.

1944
D-Day
On D-Day, AP assigns 18 writers and photographers to the invasion forces at Normandy. The group includes Ruth Cowan of Washington, who is assigned to an American hospital for stories on the wounded. AP’s Don Whitehead barely survives his fourth amphibious landing after being pinned down with the U.S. Infantry at Omaha Beach. Amid many such close calls, only one AP man is slightly injured.
1945

AP war correspondent Joe Morton is executed, along with nine American and four British officers, by the Nazis at Mauthausen concentration camp. Morton is the only known journalist to have been executed by the Axis powers during World War II.

AP Paris bureau chief Edward Kennedy defies an Allied Headquarters news blackout to report Germany’s surrender, touching off a bitter episode that leads to his eventual dismissal by the AP. Kennedy argued that he was reporting what German radio had already broadcast.

AP war photographer Joe Rosenthal photographs the Marines raising the U.S. flag on Mount Suribachi on the island of Iwo Jima, a Pulitzer Prize-winning picture and one many consider the most famous photograph of the 20th century (see more on AP’s Pulitzer Prize winners at www.ap.org/pulitzer).

1946 AP's German News Service is revived from Frankfurt.

AP war correspondent Wes Gallagher scores a beat with the verdicts in the Nazi war crimes trials when he bolts from the courtroom at Nuremberg and races 100 yards to a phone line being held open by his wife, Betty. Gallagher led the coverage of the trials, along with Pulitzer Prize winners Dan DeLuce and Louis P. Lochner.
1950

Leonard Kirschen, AP's correspondent in Bucharest, is arrested and imprisoned by Romanian communist authorities. He serves 10 years of a 25-year sentence for alleged spying before his release in 1960. Following his release, he works in AP's London bureau as a commodities reporter, specializing in the coffee trade.

Winner in 1943 of the first AP Pulitzer for photos, Frank Noel is captured by North Korean communist soldiers during the Korean War. In captivity, Noel uses a camera that is secretly delivered to him to take exclusive photos of other prisoners at his POW camp. He is freed August 14, 1953.

 
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