National Press Club

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The National Press Club is the world's leading professional organization for journalists, based in Washington, DC. 

The club has been a part of Washington life for nearly 100 years. Through its doors have come all of the Presidents of the United States since Theodore Roosevelt, as well as kings and queens, prime ministers, premiers, senators, congressmen, cabinet officials, ambassadors, scholars, entertainers, business leaders, and athletes. Its members have included all of the Presidents of the United States since Warren Harding and most have spoken from the Club's podium.

On March 12, 1908, thirty-two newspapermen met at the Washington Chamber of Commerce to discuss starting a club for journalists. At the meeting they agreed to meet again on March 29, 1908 in the F Street parlor of the Willard Hotel to frame a constitution for the National Press Club.

The Club founders laid down a credo which promised "to promote social enjoyment among the members, to cultivate literary taste, to encourage friendly intercourse among newspapermen and those with whom they were thrown in contact in the pursuit of their vocation, to aid members in distress and to foster the ethical standards of the profession."

With $300 in hand the founding members moved into its first club quarters on the second floor of 1205 F Street NW. By 1909 the Club had outgrown its new quarters and moved above Rhodes Tavern at the corner of 15th and F Streets. Once again the Club outgrew its residence causing a move to the Albee Building (neé Riggs) at 15th and G Streets.

In 1925, then Club president Henry L. Sweinhart, appointed a special building committee to plan for a permanent Club headquarters. A deal was negotiated with the Ebbitt Hotel which allowed the Ebbitt to move to the Albee building and allowing the National Press Club to demolish the hotel to build the National Press Building. The building included retail space and office space intended for Washington news bureaus with the Club occupying the 13th and 14th floors. In order to increase their funding, the National Press Club struck a deal with Fox to build a theatre as part of the building. The National Press Building opened its doors in August of 1927.

During the Great Depression, the building and the Club struggled financially. The Club, however, was on the way to being recognized as one of the world's premier journalistic organizations and managed to find additional funding from wealthy individuals. Regular weekly luncheons for speakers began in 1932 with an appearance by President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt.

Since 1932 the Club has hosted an average of 70 luncheons each year which provides a national forum for Presidents, Prime Ministers, business and cultural leaders, members of the Cabinet and Congress. Over the years, the Club has hosted such newsmakers as Nikita Khrushchev, Madame Chiang Kai Shek, Golda Meir, Indira Gandhi, Charles deGaulle, Boris Yeltsin, Nelson Mandela, Yasser Arafat, and the Dalai Lama.

Today membership in the club is open to all active journalists, former journalists, government information officers, and to those considered by journalists to be regular news sources.

Speaking at the National Press Club to mark his retirement, CBS commentator Eric Sevareid summed up what the National Press Club means to its members when he called it the "sanctum sanctorum of American journalists."

"It's the Westminster Hall, it's Delphi, it's Mecca," said Sevareid, "the Wailing Wall for everybody in this country having anything to do with the news business; the only hallowed place I know of that's absolutely bursting with irreverence."

Series

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31 Pieces

Round tables, commentary, and insight into happenings at the National Press Club and the Washington political arena.

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5 Pieces

During the Great Depression, the building and the Club struggled financially. The Club, however, was on the way to being recognized as one of the world's premier journalistic organizations and managed to find additional funding from wealthy individuals. Regular weekly luncheons for speakers began in 1932 with an appearance by President-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt. Since 1932 the Club has hosted an average of 70 luncheons each year which provides a national forum for Presidents, Prime Ministers, business and cultural leaders, members of the Cabinet and Congress. Over the years, the Club has hosted such newsmakers as Nikita Khrushchev, Madame Chiang Kai Shek, Golda Meir, Indira Gandhi, Charles deGaulle, Boris Yeltsin, Nelson Mandela, Yasser Arafat, and the Dalai Lama.


Pieces

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Oliver Stone and members of his research team for the movie discuss their latest work that focuses on several South American and central American C...

  • Added: Jun 25, 2010
  • Length: 53:57
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US AID Administrator Dr. Rajiv Shah discusses the mission of US AID in the Obama Administration and it's role in tackeling world hunger, the AIDS e...

  • Added: Jun 25, 2010
  • Length: 53:59
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Ted Leonsis, owner of the Washington Capitals and one of the most powerful figures in Washington sports and business, addressed the National Press ...

  • Added: Jun 18, 2010
  • Length: 54:00
Caption: Gerald Ford Journalism Award Winners Ben Feller (Associated Press), left, and Greg Jaffe (Washington Post), right, are congratulated by awards luncheon keynote speaker Brent Scowcroft, former National Security Advisor to President Ford., Credit: Terry Hill
Brent Scowcroft, national security adviser to Presidents Gerald Ford and George H. W. Bush, spoke at the National Press Club on June 7th, presentin...

  • Added: Jun 13, 2010
  • Length: 54:00
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Barbara Bush, president of Global Health Corps and the daughter of former President George W. Bush, speaks about her non-profit organization's effo...

  • Added: Jun 04, 2010
  • Length: 54:51
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Thomas J. Donohue, President and CEO of the US Chamber of Commerce, delivers “The State of World Trade” at a National Press Club luncheon on Friday...

  • Added: May 27, 2010
  • Length: 54:00
Caption: DNC Chair, Governor Tim Kaine, speaks at a National Press Club Lunceon, May 19, 2010., Credit: Peter Cutts
Governor Tim Kaine, Chairman of the DNC, spoke at a National Press Club Luncheon on May 19th, 2010, the day after several key Democratic Primaries ...

  • Added: May 21, 2010
  • Length: 54:04
Caption: Navy Sec'y Ray Mabus at the National Press Club, Apr. 30, 10, Credit: Terry Hill
Secretary of the Navy and former Mississippi governor, Ray Mabus at a National Press Club luncheon on April 30.

  • Added: May 15, 2010
  • Length: 54:00
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Houston Chronicle Washington Bureau Chief Rick Dunham hosts a political roundtable featuring Steve Thomma of McClatchy Newspapers, Andrea Stone of ...

  • Added: May 07, 2010
  • Length: 54:00
Caption: Rep. Sander Levin  (D-MI 12th), Credit: Peter Stepanek
Congressman Levin spoke at a Nationol Press Club Lunceon on Monday April 19th. The Chairman of the House Ways and Means committee discussed severa...

  • Added: Apr 30, 2010
  • Length: 54:00