1863 - He was born Apr. 29 in San Francisco to schoolteacher Phoebe Apperson and miner George Hearst.
1872 - First silver mine strike by George in Ontario, Utah; 1877 gold mine at Homesteak SD; 1882 copper mine in Anaconda, Colorado
1873 - Europe tour with mother, "a journey of epic proportions" where he went "to the galleries, palaces, churches, etc." but was a life of impermanence
1880 - George bought the San Francisco Evening Examiner, converted it to a morning paper promoting the Democratic party.
1882 - In his last summer before college, met opera singer Sybil Sanderson at Hotel Del Monte, "a time when the beauty of Monterey, the old Spanish Capital of California, was most glamorous."
1883 - helped Eugene Lent on the Harvard Lampoon, as business manager, began 10-year affair with Cambridge waitress Tessie Powers
1884 - In November, was one of only 28 Democrats at Harvard, campaigned for Cleveland's election
1885 - In spring, wrote letter to father asking to take over the Examiner, and became "unpaid consultant and editor-in-wating," admired Pulitzer's N.Y. World
1887 - He became owner of Examiner on Mar. 4, at age 24, bought the New York Herald cables, "developed a ruthless, scheming side," and "fighting the entrenched power of the Chronicle," as the "virtuous underdog," hired Amrose Bierce to write a "column of prattle," and sob sister Winifred Black who disguised herself to be admitted to City Receiving Hospital, "typical of the stunt journalism that was instrumental in raising the Examiner's circulation," launched a "revolution" in appearance and makeup, bought 2 new How web presses called "Monarch and "Jumbo" and new Mergenthaler Linotype machines. He devoted 18 pages on Apr. 3 to the Hotel Del Monte fire in Monterey, "it was this kind of excess and excitement that Hearst intended to ring to his newspaper every day." He printed the fiction of the best writers, such as Jules Verne and H. Rider Haggard. His crime stories began on May 19, and "Examiner crime stories uncovered two layers of criminality at once." Rather than objectivity, Hearst followed a "mingling of genres common to journalistic discourse at the turn of the century." The Examiner was prolabor, anticapital, antirailroad, anti-Asian, offered free job services, "served as an unofficial public agency, an honest broker, an unpaid intermediary between the people and their government."
1888 - He launched crusades against Southern Pacific Railroad, sent Kelly to bring back grizzly bear Monarch, Winifred Sweet as the first sob sister Annie Laurie, created Little Jim fund drive, tragic Crime of the Century with underwear pictures, Last of the McGintys, published a column called "The Workingman."
1890 - He began new office building in downtown San Francisco for the Examiner, to compete with the new Chronicle building of Michel de Young.
1891 - George died Feb. 28 in DC, body sent to California on Hearst Funeral Train, left estate of $20 million to Phoebe.
1892 - Tour of Europe, Orrin Peck painted his portrait in Munich.
1895 - He bought the N.Y. Morning Journal, owned by Albert Pulitzer, published his first issue of the New York Journal Nov. 7, advertised his new paper all over New York City, began formula of society and crime stories on the front page, paid Richard Harding Davis $500 for single story on the Harvard-Yale football game for Nov. 24, printed cartoons by Homer Davenport. "Like Pulitzer in the 1880s and James Gordon Bennett in the 1840s, he aimed to make his newspaper stories as engrossing and entertaining as they were informative. He did this by seeing to it that the stories were illustrated with dramatic line drawings, highlighted with bold, slashing headlines, and told in the style of mini-melodramas of daily life in the metropolis."
1896 - He hired Joseph Pulitzer's complete Sunday staff, led by Morrill Goddard, especially Outcault's Yellow Kid who was featured in the supplement American Humorist after Oct. 25; also hired Simon Carvalho; Arthur Brisbane replaced Goddard in 1897 and became the highest paid journalist in America. Brisbane made the Evening Journal the most profitable of Hearst's papers. In the presidential election campaign, Hearst was pro-Bryan, attacked Hanna more than McKinley; the Journal was the only Eastern paper for William Jennings Bryan in 1896 election
1897 - When the U.P. failed, Hearst bought the New York Morning Advertiser to keep his A.P. franchise. He met Millicent Willson who was a 16-year old "bicycle girl" chorus dancer at the Herald Square Theatre. He sent Richard Harding Davis and Frederick Remington to Cuba in his 112-foot steam yacht Vamoose.
1898 - He sent Karl Decker to Cuba to bring back Evangelina Cisneros for U.S. tour; published the stolen de Lome letter, blamed a Spanish undersea mine for causing the Maine explosion. He joined Edison to produce 17 films, the "Edison-Journal views" and used his Anita and Buccaneer yachts to carry reporters and cameramen to Cuba. He leased the steamer Sylvia to carry printing presses to Cuba, with himself and the Willson sisters, Millicent and Anita; captured 29 Spanish sailors marooned on Cuba and gave them to the warship Harvard.
1898-1918
1899 - In Dec., newsies strike and boycott won by the newsies against Hearst and Pulitzer.
1900 - Bryan's Democratic party asked Hearst to start the Chicago American newspaper, and to be president of the National Association of Democratic Clubs with secretary Maximilian Ihmsen. Hearst attacked McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt with cartoons by Davenport and Opper. "Bryan lost again" but "Hearst won - on several counts."
1901 - He attacked Tammany Boss Richard Croker, Murphy, Van Wyck, Ice Trust
1901 - Hearst was blamed for McKinley death; changed the name of his New York paper to "American and Journal" and then simply the New York American.
1902 - He won election to Congress, but Madison Square Garden fireworks celebration killed dozens.
1903 - He married 21-year old chorus girl Millicent, who would be the mother of his 5 sons: George 1904, Junior 1907, John 1909, twins Randolph & David 1915. "A new life began at age forty for William Randolph Hearst, publisher and politician."
1904 - He bought the Los Angeles Examiner and a Boston paper and "created the appearance of a groundswell of enthusiasm for the Hearst candidacy" for president; was popular with urban workers and immigrants; was the only candidate except Debs to support unions and the right to strike; "He had become a new kind of political celebrity, his fame based equally on rumors about his personal life and the image he had cultivated as a knight on horseback come to rescue working people from the trusts." However, he lost presidency nomination to Alton Parker. He won re-election to Congress
1905 - moved into Clarendon apartment; purchased Cosmopolitan magazine to join Motor of 1903, added Good Housekeeping and Hearst's Magazine in 1911 and Harper's Bazaar in 1912
1905 - Hearst ran for mayor of New York City as an independent on the nomination of his Municipal Ownership League; lost mayor election to Charles Murphy's candidate George McClellan; Murphy called Hearst an "anarchist" but Hearst "had turned a political miracle" in New York, and Tammany could no longer ignore reform or striking workers. Heast lost the election "because he had not been ruthless enough."
1906 - Hearst attacked the trusts and corruption of bosses such as Murphy. David Graham Philips wrote "Treason of the Senate" in the March issue of Cosmopolitan that attacked Republican Senator Chauncey Depew; magazine's circulation jumped 50%; article was called "muckraking" by Teddy Roosevelt.
1906 - Hearst ran his third campaign in three years, this time for governor of New York as a candidate of the Independence League, his successor to the Municipal Ownership League, as well as the candidate of the Democratic party. He was called a "movement of his own" by Lincoln Steffens who doubted he was a true reformer, but James Creelman praised the "master-mind of a movement." In the Sept. Collier's, Frederick Palmer wrote that Hearst was "the first one-man party to have gained anything like national headway in the history of our democracy... His power has been gained purely by advertising himself and his propaganda in his own daily editions... He is a celebrity who is guaranteed four million readers every day, This is the largest continuous audience that any American public man has ever possessed." He lost governor election to Charles Evans Hughes because of Roosevelt and the betrayal of the Democratic party leadership; he used talking machine records and motion pictures and illustrated newspaper Farm and Home
1907 - Hearst sought to destroy the Democratic party and replace it with his Independence League, but Max Ihmsen failed to win in the contest for sheriff against Big Tom Foley.
1908 - Archbold letters published to elect Thomas Hisgen for Hearst's Independence party; Tammany attacked Hearst's character with 48-page Life of William R. Hearst and he lost 1909 NY mayor to William Gaynor
1909 - He created INS to coordinate syndication services; later King Features under Moses Koenigsberg
1910 - Hearst lost Lt. Gov. race in New York, his "last hurrah as an independent." Next year he declared himself to be a member of the Democratic party.
1912 - Hearst supported Champ Clark rather than Woodrow Wilson for the Democratic nomination; critical of Pres. Wilson in 1913 for failing to intervene in Mexico to protect his ranches.
1913 - He created Hearst-Selig newsreel; bought the Clarendon Hotel in New York, danced with Vernon and Irene Castle, decorated it with art; "Collecting was a passion that ranked for him just below journalism and politics."
1914 - created Perils of Pauline movie serial of 20 episodes starring Pearl White
1915 - opposed U.S. entry into WWI and was widely hated; "he intended to play a dominant role in setting his nation's foreign policy from his vantage point as the nation's leading publisher." He praised Bryan's resignation from Wilson's cabinet over the Lusitania notes; Hearst and Robert McCormick's Chicago Tribune were critical of England's blockade as well as German's sub; he was prohibited by England from using its cable service, sent his own reporters to Germany who reported by radio to the Sayville, Long Island, radio station. William Bayard Hale sent cables for INS, and Nelson Edwards sent motion pictures from Germany. He was friends with von Bernstorff and Cissy Patterson. Although a pacifist in regard to Europe, he was anti-Japanese and he promoted Pershing expedition against Pancho Villa in Mexico.
1915 - after Christmas met 18-year old chorus girl Marion Davies who was dancing in Irving Berlin musical Stop! Look! Listen! at the Globe Theater six blocks from his batchelor studio apartment in New York.
1916 - produced History of the World's Greatest War from German footage; worked with Karl Fuehr and his pro-German American Correspondent Film Company to release German films; sent his own cameraman Nelson Edwards to film behind German lines for Hearst News Pictorial
1916 - removed anti-Japanese scenes from serial Patria but French and American officials investigated Hearst for ties with German spy Bolo Pach on trial in Paris
1917 - With Walter Brisbane he bought the Washington Times in May; he endorsed John Hylan, the Democratic candidate for mayor of New York, but he was attacked by the New York Times and others as pro-German, "Hearst, Hylan, the Hoenzollerns, and the Hapsburgs."
1918 - The New York Tribune ran from April to June a six-part attack on Hearst's loyalty, published in a pamphlet "Coiled in the Flag -- Hears-s-s-s-t." The Tribune reported July 22 that a dead Prussian soldier at Hill 304 in Verdun had a copy of a German newspaper with a Hearst editorial, and on July 31 that hanged German spy Bolo Pacha had a letter that named Hearst as his friend.
1919-1951
1919 - Phoebe died; The Chief inherited $7.5 m plus debts of $10 m; built Cosmopolitan Studio to make Davies a movie star; hired Joseph Urban as art director and gave him champagne on his new yacht, the Oneida. he began working with architect Julia Morgan to build San Simeon on the 60,000-acre ranch along the Pacific and the Santa Lucia mountains. Morgan rebuilt the pier in the old whaling village so steamers could unload raw materials. He leased a 5-story warehouse on 143rd St. in the Bronx to store his art collections.
1920 - He opposed League of Nations and Al Smith. He failed to get VP nomination; His Cosmopolitan films were distributed by Adolph Zukor and Paramount.
1922 - He lost NY governor nomination to Al Smith
1923 - He was slow to establish tabloidMirror in New York.
1924 - He no longer supported the cause of public ownership of utilities when he made an alliance with Hetch Hetchy promoter Herbert Fleishhacker to sell $12 m in bonds for Hearst. He supported William McAdoo for presidential nomination, but McAdoo could not win over Al Smith, and both yielded to John Davies on the 103rd ballot. The William Fallon jury-tampering trial revealed secrets of Hearst-Davies affair; Hearst was blamed for November death of Ince on board yacht Oneida
1925 - Cosmopolitan Productions merged with MGM in March; Alice Head purchased St. Donat's castle in Wales; Millicent agreed to live separate life with her charities such as the Milk Fund
1926 - Marion moved into Ocean House on the Santa Monica beach
1927 - Hearst bought the 140-room Belmont house on the Long Island beach for Millicent, the model for the Great Gatsby's mansion in F. Scott Fitzgerald's 1925 novel; Hearst sponsored the trans-Atlantic flight stunt, but the Old Glory plane crashed in the Atlantic with no survivors. He published the Avila documents in November that described plot against U.S. by communist Calles and bribery of 4 Senators
1928 - Hearst Radio Service network on West Coast; trip to Europe with Marion and decorated St. Donat's castle in Wales, published secret Anglo-French military expansion treaty; refused to use religion issue against Al Smith; supported herbert Hoover for president.
1929 - He started a press campaign against World Court after Hoover proposed U.S. membership and allowed Congresswoman Ruth McCormick, sister-in-law of Cissy Patterson, to speak against it over the radio; Winston Churchill visit to San Simeon in September; signed talking picture alliance with William Fox and his Movietone Newsreel and started Hearst Metrotone Newsreel in October; converted Embassy Theater in NYC to all-newsreels Oct. 28; Marion indicted for income tax fraud. The private zoo at San Simeon had grown to 300 animals including an elephant, giraffes, 44 bison, 3 cougars, 5 lions, a leopard, 3 Java monkeys, 3 ostriches, 5 zebras.
1930 - After expulsion from France, Hearst made a very public arrival in New York, greeted by the Disabled American War Veterans, led national lecture tour for isolationism. However, his isolationism was selective; he approved intervention in Mexico and the Pacific but not in Europe; he opposed disarmament treaties, the Dawes Plan, the Kellogg-Briand pact, the World Court. He signed Adolph Hitler to write articles for his neswpapers, the first was published Sept. 28 and the second Oct. 5. He sold public shares of Hearst Consolidated Publications, Inc. and raised $50 million.
1931 - He rebuilt Wyntoon in northern California after fire; operated the two largest bread lines in New York for the unemployed that inspired Yip Harburg to write the song "Brother, Can You Spare a Dime" for the show Americana; proposed $5 billion public works plan in June 5 radio address over CBS, and began relentless attacks on President Hoover
1932 - San Simeon became social center for Hollywood; cocktails always served at 7 pm for guests (limit was two drinks), dinner served at 9 pm, games and music and films; the telephone never stopped ringing; LA department stores sent trucks of presents for selection at Christmas; Hearst arranged elaborate excursions on horseback for picnics or overnight events; Marion gave masquerade parties at Ocean House; Hearst wanted John Nance Garner for president but helped Joe Kennedy nominate FDR; contract with Mussolini and Margherita Sarfatti for 26 articles
1933 - He produced Walter Wanger's Gabriel Over the White House film for MGM; supported NIRA Aug. 16 by displaying the Blue Eagle, but turned against the NRA Oct. 29.
1934 - Marion ended deal with MGM and signed with Warner Bros; Hearst changed from pro-union to anti-union by opposing the American Newspaper Guild; helped break the San Francisco general strike; meeting with Hitler during European trip; began an anti-communist witch-hunt
1935 - Hearst's "last crusade" was his opposition to FDR after Jan. effort by Roosevelt to join the World Court; he opposed the second New Deal as Roosevelt's "Raw Deal" especially its plan to tax the rich as announced in FDR's June speech to Congress. Gov. Frank Merriam passed a steep income tax in California. Hearst tried to control Landon in the 1936 campaign, but was unsuccessful.
1937 - gave up control to avoid bankruptcy
1938 - Hearst's assets were cataloged and began to be sold by trustee Judge Clarence Shearn; was anti-British and pro-peace as Hitler took Austria and Czechoslovakia
1942 - Marion and her dachshund Gandhi fell ill at Wyntoon