Have a question? Need assistance? Use our online form to ask a librarian for help.
Chat with a librarian, Monday through Friday, 12-2 pm Eastern Time (except Federal Holidays).
About Chronicling America
Chronicling America is a searchable digital collection of historic newspaper pages through 1963 sponsored jointly by the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Library of Congress.
Read more about it!
Follow Chronicling America by subscribing to email alerts and RSS feeds.
Also, see the Directory of U.S. Newspapers in American Libraries, a searchable index to newspapers published in the United States since 1690, which helps researchers identify what titles exist for a specific place and time, and how to access them.
Introduction
"UNCLE SAM.DETERMINED ..." The San Francisco Call (San Francisco, CA), September 30, 1901, Image 4. Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers.
With competition for newspaper readership fiercer than ever, papers including the New York World and New York Journal take to publishing catchy headlines and exaggerate the facts to draw in readers. Though other papers heavily criticize these in editorials, they still run articles from these influential publications. This new style of reporting, dubbed yellow journalism, is as sensational as it is inaccurate. The World and the Journal heavily cover revolution in Cuba and the eventual Spanish-American War. The yellow press is accused of causing the war with its reporting. Read more about it!
The information in this guide focuses on primary source materials found in the digitized historic newspapers from the digital collection Chronicling America.
The timeline below highlights important dates related to this topic and a section of this guide provides some suggested search strategies for further research in the collection.
Timeline
February 1897
The New York Journal and New York World dispatch war correspondents to Cuba.
October 1, 1897
Scandal as an employee of the yellow press is caught stealing an early issue of another paper.
October 1897
The yellow press rescues Evangelina Cisneros, a Cuban prisoner who escapes to the US with the help of the New York Journal.
February 1898
The yellow press misreports on the sinking of the Maine, stirring up rumors and adding fuel to the fire calling for war with Spain.
March 19, 1898
The New York Journal continues publishing questionable information on tensions between Spain and the US, including a letter allegedly written by the former Captain General of Cuba.
May 1898
Though critical of the yellow press’ reliability, smaller local papers continue to reprint articles published in the World and Journal.
May 24, 1898
First major battle of the Spanish-American War takes place at Manila Bay.
November 29, 1898
The United States and Spain prepare to sign the Treaty of Paris, ending the Spanish-American War.
September 30, 1901
In the wake of President McKinley’s assassination, the yellow press is accused of inciting anarchy through its reporting.