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First, in the early 19th century, there was still no expectation of instant news, the way we have it today. In fact, if you got the news within a few days, you considered yourself fortunate. But the 19th century was an era of great change for newspapers-- both in how they got the news and how they made it available to the public. In the early 1800s, the average newspaper was perhaps two or three large pages, with very small type-face; and many had advertisements on the front page. There were daily papers, but there was little expectation of getting them the same day unless you lived near a newspaper office. There were also weekly papers. It was mainly the wealthy who had access to newspapers, since they were educated; large numbers of Americans still could not read.

But in the mid-1800s, more people were going to school, and literacy expanded. Newspapers and magazines began to change, to become more readable for the average person. For example, there was the Penny Press-- newspapers that cost a penny, so almost anyone could afford to buy one. Newspapers also began to have illustrations, making them easier to read; and the size gradually began to shrink. Also, with the creation of the railroad, magazines and newspapers could be delivered more quickly. But the biggest change was the invention of the telegraph. By the early 1850s, newspapers were able to get news and disseminate it the same day, which changed the expectation of when the newspaper would have the latest information. Newspapers were delivered by train to centers of population, and some were also delivered by the U.S. Postal Service.

By the end of the 1800s, however, newspapers were more numerous, had more pages, and fierce competition had broken out. Newsboys (and a few girls) were on the streets selling papers near where people worked, and you also might have gotten your newspaper by going down to your city's "Newspaper Row"-- the street where the newspaper offices were located. In Boston, for example by the late 1800s, there were as many as ten newspapers, and people would gather during important events (like the World Series) to wait for the updates to arrive by telegraph and then be reported by a newsboy with a megaphone. By that time, people had begun to expect multiple editions of the paper (with updated stories), as well as being able to either buy it at a news-agent (news-stand), get it from a newsboy, or in some cases, wait for it to arrive by mail. By the late 1800s, it was typical of the major papers to come out with at least three editions (morning, mid-afternoon, dinner-time) and sometimes a fourth to cover breaking news stories from the late evening.

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12y ago

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