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Keys to a revolution: History of the typewriter and how it changed the world


Updated: July 16 2021, 12.36pm
Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffman, left, type up Nixon s downfall in All The President s Men.
It is one of the most famous sequences in movie history: Robert Redford and Dustin Hoffmann typing as if their lives depended on it, as Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein in All the President’s Men.
The film, which chronicled the investigative journalism of the duo that exposed the Watergate scandal and eventually sparked the resignation of White House incumbent Richard Nixon, highlighted a world before desktop and laptop computers when newspaper reporters, often with a cigarette dangling from their mouths, battered out the brass tacks of their latest exclusives and sent them to the sub-editors. ....

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14 things you might not have if it weren't for Milwaukee


Typewriters 
There had been machines to type letters and numbers before, but it was Christopher Lathom Sholes tinkering (with help from Samuel Soule and Carlos Glidden) that led to the development of a practical, working typewriter in 1869 in a workshop in downtown Milwaukee. Four years later, Sholes perfected the QWERTY keyboard that became the industry standard.  
One half of Major League Baseball
Before 1900, Major League Baseball was just the National League. But in a hotel room at the Republican House (at what is now King Drive and Kilbourn Avenue) on March 5, 1900, two team owners and the president of the Western League met with two Milwaukee lawyers and, in secret, founded the American League. The league had eight teams in 1901, including one in Milwaukee (that team moved to St. Louis the next year.)   ....

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9 Surprising Things That Are Younger than The Saturday Evening Post


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In 2021,
The Saturday Evening Post celebrates 200 years since the publication’s first edition rolled off the press. Since 1821, the
Post has chronicled America’s growth and change and my how it has changed in that time. Two centuries of political and cultural shifts, technological advancement, and artistic innovation can be difficult to put into context.
What was the United States like when the
Post first went to print in 1821? America was watched over by its fifth president, James Monroe. The Union was just days away from admitting its 24th state, Missouri. In most of those states, only white male land-owners over age 21 could vote in elections. Slavery was still legal, and women were expected to run the home. And these nine things just didn’t yet exist: ....

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