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Rating(3.8 / 5.0, 21 votes)
5 stars
2(10%)
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13(62%)
3 stars
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21 reviews
March 26,2025
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a fascinating history of the new york times but the best part is showing how the very smart FEMALE members were passed over for sons, even nephews, to run the paper. in addition to the family gossip it tells the stories behind the times taking controversial positions (publishing the pentagon papers for instance).
March 26,2025
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I don’t think every reader of The Trust would give it five stars, but I think those who would downgrade it would probably stop reading before the end. It’s loooong.

If you’re really interested in the history of the NYT and the intertwined histories and machinations of the Ochs/Sulzberger extended clan as such relate to the Paper, it’s hard to imagine a book better sourced or more thoroughly done. The Trust did take me a bit to get into, and I kept returning to the family tree at the start of the book to keep all the characters straight, but once I put in the effort, this book was definitely worth the read. Probably the definitive modern history of the Times. Highly recommend for those deeply interested in print media in general or the New York Times in particular.
March 26,2025
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A thorough history of the Grey Lady and the family that controls her. The authors take their time walking through the century of ownership, taking detours through the various family members' lives, quirks and peccadilloes. While it's an interesting read, it's a bit long and may not be of interest to all.
March 26,2025
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I read this great NYT biography around 2010, when the competitive rise of free online instant news, vanishing advertising revenues and disappearing help-wanted adds seemed to hammer down the last nail on the printed paper coffin of the NYT.

And yet, as I am writing theses lines in July 2021, the NYT is the last large American daily newspaper that remains privately owned, and is financially profitable in the ever shifting corporate business model of newspaper publishing. Five generations of Ochs - Sulzberger's men have, plowing through good and bad days, successfully kept that newspaper business side up and running, while managing to keep the paper's critical editorial content alive and relevant.
March 26,2025
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An amazing book! Hands-down one of my favorite books--enthralling and very interesting.
March 26,2025
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This was great - I've been talking about it in the context of the WSJ debacle.

March 26,2025
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Page 46 (my book)

In the end Adolph (the publisher) decided he liked his own invention [catchphrase] best and decided to keep it. In early February, 1897 “All the News That’s Fit to Print” appeared for the first time in the upper-left-hand corner of the front page where it remains today.


This book is the history of the New York Times starting when Adolph Simon Ochs purchased it in 1896. At that stage the newspaper (then written as The New-York Times) was failing. Adolph turned that around and made it a success and kept it as a quality newspaper as opposed to the bulk of the New York sensationalist tabloids of that era. One of his most risky and fruitful ventures was to lower the price from three cents to one cent! This increased both circulation and advertising.

Adolph Ochs and his spouse Effie Marian Wise had only one child Iphigene, who married Arthur Hays Sulzberger in 1917. Although Iphigene never became publisher, she was the ruling matriarch of the New York Times. She lived until the age of 97 (she died in 1990). Iphigene was liberal in outlook and her influence was felt through several generations of publishers - on her husband Arthur Hays Sulzberger (publisher from 1935-61), the short publishing reign of her son-in-law Orvil E. Dryfoos (publisher 1961-63), her son Arthur Ochs Sulzberger (commonly known as “Punch”, publisher 1963-92), and her grandson Arthur Ochs Sulzberger Jr who ended his reign in 2017 – and gave it to his son – yes, you guessed it, his name too is Arthur. (Note that this book was published in 1999; I looked the last couple of publishing years on the internet.)

As all this aptly demonstrates the New York Times is a family run newspaper. As the authors point out it has the features of both a corporate enterprise and a monarchy.

In many ways the Ochs-Sulzbergers over the years have tried to be as inauspicious as possible. They kept their Jewish roots hidden, Adolph in particular never gave prominence to Jewish issues in his newspaper.

I did find the authors continuing emphasis on the “modesty” of the family clan through the decades over the top. They lived with the ruling matriarch Iphigene in a large estate, Hillandale, in Connecticut and had nice apartments in Manhattan with servants. They were a part of the New York City elites. Punch Sulzberger had a dominant position on the board of the Metropolitan Museum of Art.

This is a family history where we get loads of information on marriages, births and deaths – and affairs and transgressions. Too much I felt. I would have liked more chapters like the one on the Pentagon Papers. The far-flung international reporters of the Times get little mention (except for Cyrus Sulzberger). The cataclysm of the Civil Rights era in the 1950’s and 1960’s is not mentioned at all – even though they were often front-page news. It would have been interesting to know how the publishers and their families reacted to these events and the impact they had on the New York Times.

There is little on the rise of the woman’s movement and the Vietnam war protests that occurred across the United States.

There is much as to how the newspaper evolved in a mechanical sense. Up to the 1960’s there were only two sections – and then special feature sections were introduced. There were many labour strikes where the newspaper did not publish over several weeks. Orvil E. Dryfoos, in 1963, suffered a fatal heart attack due to the stress from this labour dispute.

This book was published in 1999 so we do not get to know the full brunt of the internet revolution on the New York Times.

Page 607

The physical embodiment of the company’s soaring fortune was the edition of Sunday, September 13, 1987 – at 1,602 pages, the largest in Times history.


Even though there is a hereditary process to the main management position of publisher (and other significant positions as well) let it be known that the family members (mostly male it would seem) undergo ample training at various posts in the business. They get to know their empire from bottom to top. Even though the family is tolerant, woe betide an employee (in particular a high-level one) who does not cooperate in this training of family members. It will be compelling how this monarchy continues to rule The New York Times as the family tree has greatly expanded from what it was in the mid-twentieth century.

And as the authors state the importance of the voice of The New York Times continues to be felt over the years.

Page 597

In 1976, when U.S. News and World Report had published a cover story on the nations top thirty leaders, headlined “Who Runs America” President Gerald Ford had come in first, Punch [The New York Times publisher] at number thirteen. When the survey was repeated in 1982, Punch was still ranked thirteen, but everyone else above him had changed.
… Presidents had their moments on the national stage and world stage, but The New York Times remained a constant, a power unto itself.
March 26,2025
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The Ochs and the Sulzberger families truly created an institution in the New York Times. I think that Susan Tifft and her husband Alex Jones created a very personal account of the family and the various generations. A good read, although it felt long by the end.
March 26,2025
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We tend to take for granted the New York Times. I at least never knew much of anything about the Ochs family. Adolph Ochs start with the Chattanooga Time, my hometown newspaper, and his purchase of the New York Times in 1896 is a family history rich in detail. Reading their history is also the reading of American history during those turbulent years. What a great read.
March 26,2025
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I just finished this today... fantastic book! Very interesting and detailed history of The New York Times. It's not a page-turner by any means, seeing as it's almost 800 pages long... I kept picking it up and coming back to it. But it was a very engaging read that certainly didn't FEEL 800 pages long! A great look into the family that built this newspaper empire. Lots of interesting tidbits and stories about the family, but it wasn't scandalous or gossipy. I'm so glad I found this book and bought it at a book sale! One of the best $1 I ever spent!
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