Logo

Today's Document

  • Archive
  • RSS
  • Ask
  • Suggest a Document
banner
'\x3cdiv id=\x22photoset_12328141835\x22 class=\x22html_photoset\x22\x3e \x3ciframe id=\x22photoset_iframe_12328141835\x22 class=\x22photoset\x22 scrolling=\x22no\x22 frameborder=\x220\x22 height=\x22349\x22 width=\x22500\x22\x0a style=\x22border:0px; background-color:transparent; overflow:hidden;\x22 src=\x22http://todaysdocument.tumblr.com/post/12328141835/photoset_iframe/todaysdocument/tumblr_lu5383p7BF1qjih96/500/false\x22\x3e\x3c/iframe\x3e\x3c/div\x3e'

ourpresidents:

“That’s the way it is.”

-Walter Cronkite’s nightly sign-off for the CBS evening news

Walter Cronkite, the iconic newsman, was born on November 4, 1916.  His career as a broadcast journalist spanned 5 decades and 9 U.S. presidents.  From the 1930s to the 1980s Cronkite reported on the biggest news of the day including D-Day, the Nuremberg Trials, the Vietnam War, civil rights, the moon missions,  and Watergate.  It was Cronkite who broke the news of President Kennedy’s assassination, and he covered the subsequent killings of Martin Luther King, Jr., Robert Kennedy, and John Lennon. 

Cronkite’s broadcasts seemed to capture the emotions of the country.  His excitement for the Apollo 11 moon mission was so great that he reported live on the event for 27 hours straight and exclaimed, “Go, baby, go!” at blast off.

In 1972, a nationwide poll determined that Walter Cronkite was “the most trusted man in America.”  Other choices in the poll had included contemporary journalists, the Vice President, and the President. 

Here are photos of Cronkite and a CBS news crew with Marines during the Battle of Hue City in Vietnam, interviewing President Kennedy, and with President Carter in the White House.

Happy birthday Walter Cronkite

November 4, 1916 - July 17, 2009

    • #History
    • #Birthdays
    • #Icons
    • #JFK
    • #Jimmy Carter
    • #Journalists
    • #Marines
    • #Military
    • #News
    • #Television
    • #Vietnam War
    • #Walter Cronkite
    • #Apollo 11
  • 1 year ago > ourpresidents
  • 257
  • Permalink
  • Share

Portrait/Logo

About

Daily featured documents from the holdings of the U.S. National Archives.

Connect

  • @TodaysDocument on Twitter
  • Facebook Profile
  • USNationalArchives on Youtube
  • usnationalarchives on Flickr
  • USNatArchives on Foursquare

Pages

  • About Today's Document
  • Policies
  • Mobile App
  • DOCUMERICA
  • Civil War
  • World War II
  • Women's History
  • African American History
  • Patents & Inventions
  • Animated History (GIFs!)
  • Steampunk

@TodaysDocument

loading tweets…

Things we like

  • Photo via smithsonianmag

    A Brief History of Robot Birds

    Our recent post on the history of the cuckoo clock inspired some research into other examples of early,...

    Photo via smithsonianmag
  • Photo via exploratorium

    Happy 33rd Birthday to PAC MAN from the Exploratorium! Today, four-person Team Pac-Man is an exhibit we’ve created here where each person controls...

    Photo via exploratorium
  • Photoset via markcoatney

    todaysdocument:

    Midshipmen Wrong and Right are back for another vintage installment of the U.S. Navy’s Dating Dos and Don’ts training film:...

    Photoset via markcoatney
  • Photoset via mdhsphotographs

    Foster Brothers Manufacturing Company
    320-325 North Holliday Street, Baltimore, Maryland
    ca. 1905
    Hughes Company
    8x10 inch glass negative
    ...

    Photoset via mdhsphotographs
See more →
  • RSS
  • Random
  • Archive
  • Ask
  • Suggest a Document
  • Mobile

Visit www.archives.gov for official U.S. National Archives information. Copyright information. Effector Theme by Carlo Franco.

Powered by Tumblr