If the Writer's Almanac is to be believed, the New York Times owes its existence in some degree to bad blood between newspaperman Horace Greeley and his one-time protegee:
"The founders were Henry J. Raymond and his partner George Jones, and Raymond was motivated to start the paper in part by a desire for revenge. He'd spent 10 years working for Horace Greeley at the New York Tribune, only to be laid off when he caught a fever. He intended The New York Times to put the New York Tribune out of business."---Writer's Almanac, 9/18/2006
The paper, which was founded as the New-York Daily Times on September 18, 1851, has won more Pulitzer Prizes for journalism than any other North American newspaper (Source: World Book Online). Adolph Simon Ochs bought the paper in 1896. Ochs wanted the paper to avoid the sensationalism practised by many of its competitors, and the slogan "All the News that's Fit to Print" reflects his focus on hard news and his drive for unprejudiced journalism. He is also credited with starting the New York Times Magazine and New York Times Book Review (originally titled "Saturday Review of Books and Art").
The New York Times is available in the library going back to 1963. You'll find it on microfilm for 1963-2005. Just stop by the reference desk if you'd like some help getting started with the microfilm. If you prefer to see the electronic version, it's available in the Newsbank database, accessible on our web site at http://www.nashua.lib.nh.us/IbrowseAdultNews.htm. (Note that there are separate links for in-library use versus outside use.) The Newsbank collection goes back to January 1, 2000. We also retain the latest month of the paper copy in the Stearns Room and have an additional five months in storage, should you wish to see the newsprint.
If you'd like to know more about the Times, its history, and its controversies, we also have more than a dozen books about the paper, including:
Buried by the Times : the Holocaust and America's most important newspaper, by Laurel Leff.
The times of my life and my life with the Times, by Max Frankel.
The Pentagon papers : national security or the right to know, by Susan Dudley Gold.
Hard news : the scandals at the New York times and their meaning for American media, by Seth Mnookin.
