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  • A. Aubrey Bodine?s sepia-toned photos were legendary. His 1948 ?Oyster...

    A. Aubrey Bodine, Baltimore Sun file photo

    A. Aubrey Bodine?s sepia-toned photos were legendary. His 1948 ?Oyster Tonger? shows his tactile use of light and reflection, which masks the back-breaking work of a Tilghman Island waterman.

  • Michael Phelps darts through the water as the morning sun...

    Karl Merton Ferron, Baltimore Sun

    Michael Phelps darts through the water as the morning sun illuminates the Meadowbrook Aquatic and Fitness Center pool during practice and Karl Merton Ferron uses the lighting to highlight the Olympian.

  • A year after the Supreme Court?s Brown vs. Board of...

    Richard Stacks, Baltimore Sun

    A year after the Supreme Court?s Brown vs. Board of Education ruling ended school segregation, first-graders recite the Pledge of Allegiance in 1955 at Gwynns Falls Elementary School.

  • A police officer keeps the peace at Gay and Orleans...

    Lloyd Pearson, Baltimore Sun

    A police officer keeps the peace at Gay and Orleans streets after the riots that swept the city after the April 4, 1968, assassination of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

  • A smiling Mayor William Donald Schaefer trimmed the city's Easter...

    WILLIAM H. MORTIMER/Baltimore Sun

    A smiling Mayor William Donald Schaefer trimmed the city's Easter egg tree in 1975. Photographer William H. Mortimer.

  • A nursing student volunteer with Hatzalah Baltimore administers a rapid...

    Amy Davis/Baltimore Sun

    A nursing student volunteer with Hatzalah Baltimore administers a rapid COVID-19 test to Aiden Feierstein, age 4 1/2, at a drive-through site at Bnos Yisroel High School in upper Park Heights. Aiden's family, including his younger sister and parents, also got tested just as a precaution, according to his parents, who live in Summit Park. Hatzalah Baltimore, an independent non-profit volunteer organization providing emergency services to the northwest Baltimore community, offers daily COVID-19 testing at different sites.

  • As part of the 2007 Hon Fest in Hampden, Celine...

    Chiaki Kawajiri, Baltimore Sun

    As part of the 2007 Hon Fest in Hampden, Celine Goins, shows off her big hair on stage as she competes in the Bawlmer's Best Hon Contest. The contest began in 1994 and is a vision of the sixties-era women with beehive hairdos, blue-eye-shadow, spandex pants and something, anything with leopard print.

  • In 1952 a flash flood caused by a hurricane washed...

    Frank A. Miller, Baltimore Sun

    In 1952 a flash flood caused by a hurricane washed 21 cars down the main street of Ellicott City along with household furnishings and store merchandise. Frank A. Miller photographed some of the cars piled up near the depot yard at Main Street and Maryland Avenue.

  • In August of 1995, John Hudson looks out from his...

    Jed Kirschbaum, Baltimore Sun

    In August of 1995, John Hudson looks out from his truck at one of his younger customers John Boias, 3, of Meadowood Townhomes in Edgewood, who had to deal with a rapidly melting fudgsicle. Beth Boias (John's mother) said that after the ice cream truck it's usually time for a shower for the youngster. Because a lot of customers run to the truck barefoot, "Mr. John" will often put down a towel for them to get off the hot pavement, or pull close to the grass.

  • A mass river baptism through total immersion took place in...

    Linda Coan, Baltimore Sun

    A mass river baptism through total immersion took place in the Big Gunpowder Falls River. Three churches participated: Solid Rock, Judah Praise, and Holy Temple of Truth.

  • The Sun made history on Sept. 30, 1901, two weeks...

    Baltimore Sun file photo

    The Sun made history on Sept. 30, 1901, two weeks after Theodore Roosevelt became president after President William McKinley's assassination. The Sun ran a photograph. It was a profile shot (right) of Chief Judge James McSherry of the Court of Appeals of Maryland to illustrate a brief story announcing the start of the court's fall term.

  • Rebecca Girvin leans out the second floor window of her...

    Amy Davis, Baltimore Sun

    Rebecca Girvin leans out the second floor window of her home in the 700 block of East Lake Avenue in the Lake-Walker neighborhood to push snow off her front porch roof. She had trouble extending the broom far enough to push the snow over the edge of the roof. With the sun shining, area residents began to dig out after the latest snowfall, which brought the total snow accumulation in Maryland this winter to a record-breaking 79 inches.

  • With tears of joy, Sophia Jones embraces her son Specialist...

    Monica Lopossay, Baltimore Sun

    With tears of joy, Sophia Jones embraces her son Specialist Tony Jones with Maryland Army National Guard. Soldiers from the Maryland Army National Guard's 1st Battalion, 175th Infantry Regiment are returning home overseas duty supporting Operation Iraqi Freedom.

  • This early morning fire on E. Preston St., killed Angel...

    Amy Davis, Baltimore Sun

    This early morning fire on E. Preston St., killed Angel Dawson and her five children, and left her husband Carnell Dawson, in critical condition. By early afternoon when Sun photographer Amy Davis arrived to photograph the scene, teddy bears and signed condolences filled the top step of the N. Eden St. side entrance to the house. Marilyn Johnson , 10, a 4th grader at Dr. Bernard Harris Sr. E.S., where the three youngest Dawson children went to school, knew all the young victims. Neighbors said that the home had been firebombed recently after Angel Dawson had testified against drug dealers, and the common view was that this fire was retribution against the family for standing up to local drug dealers.

  • A year before the crash, in 1936, Baltimoreans had been...

    Baltimore Sun file photo

    A year before the crash, in 1936, Baltimoreans had been excited by the news that they would get a glimpse of the giant Hindenburg, which was to circle the city late on the afternoon of Saturday, Aug. 8.

  • On Oct. 9, 1966 third baseman Brooks Robinson and catcher Andy...

    Hutchins / Baltimore Sun

    On Oct. 9, 1966 third baseman Brooks Robinson and catcher Andy Etchebarren converge on pitcher Dave McNally after the Orioles swept the Los Angeles Dodgers to win their first World Series.

  • Seabiscuit with jockey Red Pollard at Belmont Park. (Hank Olen/New...

    Hank Olen/New York Daily News

    Seabiscuit with jockey Red Pollard at Belmont Park. (Hank Olen/New York Daily News)

  • Mayor Wiliam Donald Schaefer and Barbara Mikulski take ballet lessons...

    Jed Kirschbaum, Baltimore Sun

    Mayor Wiliam Donald Schaefer and Barbara Mikulski take ballet lessons at The Baltimore School For The Arts.

  • Third baseman Brooks Robinson, pitcher Dave McNally (center) and catcher...

    Paul Hutchins, Baltimore Sun

    Third baseman Brooks Robinson, pitcher Dave McNally (center) and catcher Andy Etchebarren exult as the Orioles win their first World Series in 1966 at Memorial Stadium, sweeping the Los Angeles Dodgers.

  • On November 7, 1910, Hubert Latham flew over Baltimore in...

    Baltimore Sun Staff Photographer / Baltimore Sun

    On November 7, 1910, Hubert Latham flew over Baltimore in the "Antoinette." Photo by Sun Staff Photographer.

  • An FBI agent carries boxes of Healthy Holly books out...

    Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun

    An FBI agent carries boxes of Healthy Holly books out of Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh's home during a raid on Thursday.

  • Flower Mart revelers have been gathering at the foot of...

    Jed Kirschbaum, Baltimore Sun

    Flower Mart revelers have been gathering at the foot of the Washington Monument to celebrate spring since 1917. Here, Summer Matthews and a less-than-enthusiastic Dylan Henderson in 2009.

  • In this prize winning photo finish of the the 1962...

    Joseph A. DiPaola, Jr., Baltimore Sun

    In this prize winning photo finish of the the 1962 Preakness, Sun photographer Joseph A. DiPaola captured Greek Money on the right ridden by Johnny Rotz as he wins by a nose over Ridan ridden by Manuel Ycaza. The photo clearly showed that jockey Ycaza clearly leaning over and arm-locking his elbow into Rotz's stomach, which the track stewards had missed. In a subsequent hearing Ycaza was suspended when the Maryland State Racing Commission used DiPaola's photo as evidence.

  • Dressed as a scantily clad Darth Vader, Ed Griffin, of...

    David Hobby, Baltimore Sun

    Dressed as a scantily clad Darth Vader, Ed Griffin, of Reisterstown, runs into the Chesapeake Bay during his first ever Polar Bear Plunge and David Hobby photographed the moment. The air on January 28, 2006 was 60 degrees, but the water was a less inviting 37 degrees for the tenth annual event, which drew large crowds due in part to the unseasonably warm weather.

  • Participants in a candlelight vigil for the victims of the...

    Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun

    Participants in a candlelight vigil for the victims of the shooting at the Capital Gazette march down Main Street in Annapolis.

  • Former Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh speaks with the media as...

    Kim Hairston/Baltimore Sun

    Former Baltimore Mayor Catherine Pugh speaks with the media as she leaves the federal courthouse in downtown Baltimore after being sentenced to three years in prison, followed by three years probation as a result of her pleading guilty to conspiracy and tax evasion in her "Healthy Holly" fraud scheme. February 27, 2020.

  • Leroy Merriken photographed Babe Ruth in his classic pose at...

    Leroy Merriken, Baltimore Sun

    Leroy Merriken photographed Babe Ruth in his classic pose at the plate during ad exhibition game at Oriole Park in 1931.

  • Joe Gans was the first Black American to win boxing's...

    Baltimore Sun photo

    Joe Gans was the first Black American to win boxing's world championship light heavyweight title.

  • An Amish man is pictured in front of the Nickel...

    Lloyd Fox, Baltimore Sun

    An Amish man is pictured in front of the Nickel Mines Amish School where unprecedented violence took place when a gunman carrying 600 rounds of ammunition burst into the one-room schoolhouse, ordered out the boys and several women, bound the girls and shot 11 of them execution-style, killing at least four.

  • Ray Lewis celebrates with confetti flying around him after the...

    Gene Sweeney Jr., Baltimore Sun

    Ray Lewis celebrates with confetti flying around him after the Ravens win Super Bowl XX in Tampa Bay, Florida on January 28, 2001 and Gene Sweeney Jr. was there to show us the emotion of the moment.

  • A Special operations team remove debris from on top of...

    Kim Hairston/Baltimore Sun

    A Special operations team remove debris from on top of cars that are wedged under a bridge on the TIber River as clean up of Elliott City begins on Monday. Heavy rains flooded the area yesterday, two years after a similar event brought extensive damage to Main Street. Much of the historic business district was rebuilt.

  • President Eisenhower throws out the first pitch at the 1957's...

    Robert F. Kniesche, Baltimore Sun

    President Eisenhower throws out the first pitch at the 1957's opening day baseball game between the Baltimore Orioles and the Washington Senators as Managers Chuck Dressen (Washington) and Paul Richards (Orioles) watch.

  • The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, noted civil rights leader,...

    Baltimore Sun file photo

    The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, noted civil rights leader, greets thousands of admirers on a motorcade tour up North Gay Street on his tour after winning the Nobel Prize for Peace.

  • At the climax of the NAACP hosted protest of discriminatory...

    Elizabeth Malby, Baltimore Sun

    At the climax of the NAACP hosted protest of discriminatory hiring practices in the Supreme Court, NAACP President Kweisi Mfume is arrested for crossing the police line in an attempt to deliver resumes of minority law students to Chief Justice William Renquist.

  • Sunpapers war correspondent Lee McCardell took this gruesome picture on...

    Lee McCardell, Baltimore Sun

    Sunpapers war correspondent Lee McCardell took this gruesome picture on May 23, 1945. American soldiers had ordered townspeople of Neunburg, Bavaria, to attend services and act as pallbearers for 161 Jews slain by SS Troops.

  • Cal Ripken, Jr. played in a string of 2,632 consecutive...

    Karl Merton Ferron, Baltimore Sun

    Cal Ripken, Jr. played in a string of 2,632 consecutive games, a major league baseball record that is known as "The Streak." On Sept. 6, 1995, he played in his 2,131st straight game, breaking Lou Gehrig's record and becoming baseball's Iron Man.

  • An elevated view of the Lexington Market looking west along...

    Baltimore Sun file photo

    An elevated view of the Lexington Market looking west along Lexington Avenue on a busy market day.

  • Joe Flacco holds aloft the Lombardi Trophy after the Baltimore...

    Gene Sweeney Jr./Baltimore Sun

    Joe Flacco holds aloft the Lombardi Trophy after the Baltimore Ravens defeated the San Francisco 49ers' 34-31 in the Super Bowl XLVII in New Orleans.

  • Famed Baltimore Sun photographer Hans Marx got a different angle...

    Hans Marx, Baltimore Sun

    Famed Baltimore Sun photographer Hans Marx got a different angle as the construction of the east tower of the Chesapeake Bay Bridge looking west across the bay. In the foreground is electrician Nicholas C. Guerieri.

  • As soon as the second World Trade Tower was attacked...

    John Makely, Baltimore Sun

    As soon as the second World Trade Tower was attacked in New York City on September 11, 2001, Sun photographer John Makely drove to Manhattan. He didn't arrive till the early morning hours the next day. He worked his way to ground zero of the attack when the sun rose on September 12th. He took this picture as workers started climbing on the rubble that was the remnants of the north tower.

  • Protestor Greg Butler rides his bike in front of a...

    Algerina Perna/Baltimore Sun

    Protestor Greg Butler rides his bike in front of a police line at North and Pennsylvania Avenues on the day of Freddie Gray's funeral. Riots and looting broke out throughout the city. Gray died in police custody on April 19th.

  • Prior to the running of the 119th Preakness race Sun...

    Chien-Chi Chang, Baltimore Sun

    Prior to the running of the 119th Preakness race Sun photographer Chien-Chi Chang found this interesting perspective to get a picture of buglar Joe Kelly as he sounds out the traditional start of the race.

  • On September 11, 2001 firefighters were still battling flames when...

    Amy Davis, Baltimore Sun

    On September 11, 2001 firefighters were still battling flames when Sun staff photographer Amy Davis showed up on the scene of the Pentagon after a terrorists flew a commercial airliner into the building. Smoke could be seen for miles and a large gash could be seen where the plane had hit the west wall of the building.

  • There is no better excuse for an overheated photographer to...

    Michael Lutzky, Baltimore Sun

    There is no better excuse for an overheated photographer to jump in a cool fountain than to make a picture. During a string of 100 degree days the weather became the news and when Sun photographer Michael Lutzky saw these four kids (l-r Twedell Bell, Damond Wallace, Ernest Robinson and Raymond Wallace) in the fountains at the Inner Harbor (Calvert/Pratt), he rolled up my pants and climbed in with them.

  • Elizabeth Malby captured the excitement of the 2006 Maryland Terrapins...

    Elizabeth Malby, Baltimore Sun

    Elizabeth Malby captured the excitement of the 2006 Maryland Terrapins womens basketball team as the All Tournament Team Most Outstanding Player Laura Harper (top) hugs teammate Marissa Coleman after evening the score and securing overtime before winning the NCAA National Championship at TD Banknorth Garden in Boston.

  • In a 1951 photo that Hans Marx titled ?Mind Over...

    Hans Marx, Baltimore Sun

    In a 1951 photo that Hans Marx titled ?Mind Over Matter,? a bocce ball player lets it roll as his comrades look on.

  • The Ravens win their first Super Bowl, beating the Giants,...

    Gene Sweeney Jr. / Baltimore Sun

    The Ravens win their first Super Bowl, beating the Giants, 34-7.

  • Hall of Fame quarterback, Johnny Unitas, poses in 1999 in...

    Algerina Perna, Baltimore Sun

    Hall of Fame quarterback, Johnny Unitas, poses in 1999 in Memorial Stadium where he played for the Colts. The stadium demolition began in 2000.

  • For the 2006 Preakness The Sun added an additional elevated...

    Doug Kapustin, Baltimore Sun

    For the 2006 Preakness The Sun added an additional elevated photo position with a view of the finish line. As it turned out, it was the perfect view as Barbaro pulled up lame in front of the Pimlico Grandstands, holding up his rear leg which had been fractured. Despite many attempts by the owner to save the horse, he eventually was euthanized in 2007.

  • William Donald Schaefer takes a swim in the seal pool in 1981.

    Lloyd Pearson, Baltimore Sun

    Mayor William Donald Schaefer had promised to jump into the National Aquarium seal pool if the aquarium didn't open on July 1, 1981. It didn't, and he did.

  • A young red fox plays as it leaps between rolls...

    David Hobby, Baltimore Sun

    A young red fox plays as it leaps between rolls of harvested hay on Michael Pishvaian's, farm in Poolesville, MD.

  • It was Dec. 19, 1976, and less than 10 minutes...

    Lloyd Pearson, Baltimore Sun

    It was Dec. 19, 1976, and less than 10 minutes after the Pittsburgh Steelers had crushed the Baltimore Colts, 40-14 in an AFC playoff game at Memorial Stadium when a plane crashed into the seats at Memorial Stadium. Donald Kroner, a former charter pilot, had crashed a rented, low-wing, blue-and-white Piper Cherokee into the upper deck of the end zone, losing a wing in the process. Kroner, who would serve three months of a two-year sentence for malicious destruction of property and violation of city aviation ordinances.

  • Under cover of a night snowstorm, the Colts steal out...

    Lloyd Pearson, Baltimore Sun

    Under cover of a night snowstorm, the Colts steal out of their Owings Mills complex on their way to Indianapolis on March 29, 1984.

  • A homecoming parade is held for the 115th Infantry pictured...

    Baltimore Sun file photo

    A homecoming parade is held for the 115th Infantry pictured are (left to right) Col. Milton Reckord, Maj. Proston Lawa, Lt. Col. John D. Markay, Lt. Col. Finley, Lt. Frank Hancock, Maj. James Knight, Maj. Bruce Wylio, and Capt. Harlan Johnson. All of them are from the 29th Division.

  • A bystander takes a picture of the monument dedicated to...

    Jerry Jackson/Baltimore Sun

    A bystander takes a picture of the monument dedicated to the Confederate Women of Maryland after it was taken down early Wednesday morning.

  • Pope John Paul II arrives to celebrate mass at Oriole...

    Algerina Perna / Baltimore Sun

    Pope John Paul II arrives to celebrate mass at Oriole Park at Camden Yards.

  • Sun photographer Jed Kirschbaum took this whimsical picture of heavyweight...

    Jed Kirschbaum, Baltimore Sun

    Sun photographer Jed Kirschbaum took this whimsical picture of heavyweight boxer Hasim Rahman as he pretends to gives in to his hard punching four year old Sharif near the end of his workout.

  • Grayson Gilbert, 6, of Towson left a note beneath the...

    Jed Kirschbaum, Baltimore Sun

    Grayson Gilbert, 6, of Towson left a note beneath the Jesus Statue before his surgery for pancreatic cancer. Jed Kirschbaum captured a moment when he visited the statue again during an office visit to Hopkins. He had asked his mother if they could go the long way out and see the statue.

  • The Great Baltimore Fire started on the morning of Feb....

    Baltimore Sun file photo

    The Great Baltimore Fire started on the morning of Feb. 7, 1904, at John E. Hurst building located near present day 1st Mariner Arena. The first alarm sounded at 10:48 a.m. and the fire quickly spread, eventually destroying 1,500 buildings over 140 acres. In this particular shot The Alexander Brown and Company building was the only one to survive in the immediate area.

  • Surrounded by a sea of Beatles fans at today's performance,...

    Baltimore Sun file photo

    Surrounded by a sea of Beatles fans at today's performance, a man and boy (upper left) seem to be trying to shut out the din of music and shrieks in the Baltimore Civic Center. Witnesses said it was impossible.

  • The 6th regiment fires upon the mob on the corner...

    BALTIMORE SUN / Baltimore Sun

    The 6th regiment fires upon the mob on the corner of Frederick and Baltimore Streets, July 20th, 1877 during the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Strike. File photo

  • Staff photographer Andre F. Chung chanced upon this June 1997...

    Andre Chung, Baltimore Sun

    Staff photographer Andre F. Chung chanced upon this June 1997 arrest of a carjacking suspect detained by Officer Ray Cook at Edmondson and Allendale avenues.

  • As a right of passage from moving from the plebe-year...

    John Makely, Baltimore Sun

    As a right of passage from moving from the plebe-year to upperclassman, the freshman class of the United States Naval Academy must climb an obelisk monument smeared with lard. The object of the exercise is to replace a plebe's "dixie cup" with an upperclassman's cap. The one who succeeds, it is believed by some, will become the class' first admiral.

  • Layman Norman Yokely was considered one of the greatest pitchers...

    Ellis, J. Malashuk,Baltimore Sun

    Layman Norman Yokely was considered one of the greatest pitchers ever, compared to Satchel Paige, Bob Feller and Lefty Grove. After playing for Baltimore and a number of other Negro League teams, he retired and opened a shoeshine parlor on Pennsylvania Avenue.

  • On December 28, 1958 Baltimore Colts fullback Alan Ameche advances...

    Baltimore Sun file photo

    On December 28, 1958 Baltimore Colts fullback Alan Ameche advances through a big opening provided by teammates to score the winning touchdown in overtime period against the New York Giants during the NFL Championship football game at Yankee Stadium in New York. The Colts won 23-17 in overtime for the title and the game became known as the "greatest game."

  • Sun photographer John Makely was embedded with the 3rd Battalion,...

    John Makely, Baltimore Sun

    Sun photographer John Makely was embedded with the 3rd Battalion, Fifth Regiment convoy on a Tuesday morning when it came under attack. U.S. Marine Lance Corporal Marcco Ware, from Los Angeles, carries an injured Iraqi soldier who was shot three times during the attempted ambush. One Marine was killed, one injured during the attack which resulted in about 40 dead Iraqi soldiers and thirty POW's.

  • Indian workers carry a 350kg sheet of steel across the...

    Perry Thorsvik, Baltimore Sun

    Indian workers carry a 350kg sheet of steel across the Annapurna Shipyard in Alang, India. This technique is the cause of many foot and let injuries. The Sun's coverage of this story lead to a Pulitzer Prize.

  • In 1936 noted Sun photographer A. Aubrey Bodine photographer workers...

    A. Aubrey Bodine, Baltimore Sun

    In 1936 noted Sun photographer A. Aubrey Bodine photographer workers on the docks at Long Warf loading watermelons onto a boat.

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Since The Sun was first printed in Baltimore on May 17, 1837, it has spent 185 years illuminating Maryland’s accomplishments and failures. Nearly two centuries of local and global history lives in the pages of the paper of record.

The newspaper promoted innovation and progress in the United States, but it also participated in advertising the slave trade and devalued the stories of Black Americans. Moving forward, The Baltimore Sun continues to chronicle the city’s joys and its sorrows and events both large and small — on newsprint but also through phones and computer screens across Maryland and beyond.

To celebrate 185 years of The Baltimore Sun, we took a look back in our archives to highlight notable news events for each decade. Of course, this is just a sampling and not meant to be superlative. There are plenty of important events that aren’t mentioned here — both historical, like the Great Baltimore Fire of 1904, and from the more recent past, like the death of Freddie Gray in 2015 and the Capital Gazette shooting in 2018.

Here is a list of some legendary moments informed by the Sunpapers.

1830s

March 7, 1839 — Baltimore City College was established and enrolled 46 students. The high school would later be known as one of the largest public schools in the country, where many Baltimore celebrities have attended, and is the third oldest high school in the nation.

1840s

Oct. 7, 1849 — Edgar Allan Poe died, the distinguished poet, scholar and literary critic, died from an unknown illness in Baltimore after being sick for about five days. “This announcement, coming so sudden and unexpected, will cause poignant regret among all who admire genius, and have sympathy for the frailties too often attending it,” The Sun reported in 1849. Poe’s Baltimore rowhouse became a museum a century later.

Edgar Allan Poe, long known as the master of morbid prose, died under circumstances so mysterious that as many as nine theories still surround his unexplained death in 1849.
Edgar Allan Poe, long known as the master of morbid prose, died under circumstances so mysterious that as many as nine theories still surround his unexplained death in 1849.

1850s

Jan. 1, 1853 — Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, the first steam-operated railway in the United States, was extended 380 miles — the first to link Baltimore on the Atlantic to Wheeling, West Virginia on the Ohio River. About 50 passengers traveled in a mail train from Baltimore to Wheeling in 15 hours with stops along the way. The revolution confirmed B&O President Thomas Swann’s prediction that “the traveler would be able to eat his breakfast in Baltimore and take an early supper at Wheeling,” The Sun reported.

1860s

July 24, 1868 — During Baltimore’s “Black Friday Flood,” fierce rain overflowed Jones Falls’ banks, and a rising tide quickly grew to reach 20 feet. Horses, houses, humans and bridges were swept away, while a terrifying number of rats scurried across the ground. The storm killed 50 people and countless animals, destroyed 2,000 homes and caused millions of dollars in property damage. Water, gas and communication across the city were severed.

The Sun Iron Building was flooded, but the newspaper prevailed in publishing the next day. “Many ludicrous things occurred, making the streets appear more like Venice during a carnival than a sober American city,” The Sun reported in 1868. In the aftermath, the smell of death was overpowering, and an outbreak of typhoid fever followed.

1870s

June 16, 1877 — “Railroad War in Maryland” read the headline of The Sun’s coverage of the great Baltimore and Ohio Railroad worker strike that sparked a national labor movement. The strike started in Baltimore over a 17-cent reduction in daily wages and a shortened work week.

Protests were mostly nonviolent across multiple towns until railroad baron John W. Garrett asked Gov. John Lee Carroll to send in the National Guard. A crowd of 15,000, alerted to the guardsmen’s presence by a fire bell, marched down Eutaw Street, where they met guardsmen and threw rocks. The troopers fired their bayonets on the crowd, and 10 people were killed in the chaos. “The scene … was one of terror,” The Sun reported.

The 6th regiment fires upon the mob on the corner of Frederick and Baltimore Streets, July 20th, 1877 during the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Strike. File photo
The 6th regiment fires upon the mob on the corner of Frederick and Baltimore Streets, July 20th, 1877 during the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Strike. File photo

1880s

Oct. 13, 1882 — “Always in the Lead!” proclaimed The Sun after the Iron Building became the first in Maryland to be powered by electricity. The newspaper considered itself on the cusp of technological advances, such as adopting the telegraph before its competitors in other American cities. A dynamo was flipped on just after 8 p.m., stunning all who witnessed the invention. “The current of electricity generated by it passed through the wires to the lamps, the carbon filaments glowed, and instantaneously there was a brilliant effusion of light. It is so pure and white that in comparison with it a gaslight appears a smoky yellow,” The Sun reported.

A 1931 edition of The Afro-American
A 1931 edition of The Afro-American

1890s

Aug. 13, 1892 — John H. Murphy Sr. established The Afro-American, a nationally esteemed weekly publication and the first Baltimore newspaper written for the city’s Black communities. In 30 years, its reputation and circulation grew to become the largest Black paper in the United States. The paper exposed injustice, lynchings and corruption and persistently promoted civil rights movements. “The paper also found success by presenting a complete portrait of black life — weddings, social events, births, sports, personalities — that was all but ignored by the white press,” The Sun reported in 1992 on the publication’s 100th anniversary.

Joe Gans was the first Black American to win boxing's world championship light heavyweight title.
Joe Gans was the first Black American to win boxing’s world championship light heavyweight title.

1900s

May 12, 1902 — Joe Gans of Baltimore became the first Black American to win boxing’s world championship light heavyweight title. Gans, a studious 26-year-old boxer who weighed 133 pounds, faced Frank Erne in a rematch. This time, Gans knocked out Erne in mere minutes of the first round.

“The end came with startling suddenness. The men were scarcely warmed up when Gans, trying cautiously, caught Erne napping and landed a hard right on the ear, which appeared to jar Frank badly,” The Sun wrote.

1910s

Nov. 7, 1910 — Hubert Latham became the first person to fly an airplane over Baltimore in a Sun-sponsored event to boost subscriptions. Latham was awarded $5,000 to fly a monoplane through the city on his way to an airplane event in Halethorpe. Crowds, spellbound by their first time seeing a “flying machine,” jammed the streets and rooftops to catch a glimpse.

“A large crowd had assembled on the roof of The Sun building, and from that vantage point Latham’s flight was watched with the greatest interest. Soon after noon whistle began blowing far off to the southwest. “He’s coming! He’s coming!” ran like a thrill rather than a whisper or murmur through the crowd,” The Sun wrote.

On November 7, 1910, Hubert Latham flew over Baltimore in the “Antoinette.” Photo by Sun Staff Photographer.

1920s

Nov. 2, 1920 — “Election Day Dawns, All Eyes on Women,” reads The Sun’s headline on the first election after the 19th Amendment was ratified, giving women the right to vote. In Maryland, 200,000 women voted in a landslide presidential election that saw Republican Warren Harding defeat Democratic James Cox.

“Like so many revolutions destined to shake a nation to its depths, this one came and passed without seeming to ruffle the surface of affairs. People who sensed the significance of this first equal suffrage national election tightened their nerves for shock, but there was no shock,” wrote The Sun, which opposed woman’s suffrage for the threat of “increasing the quantity without improving the quality” of voters.

1930s

Nov. 1, 1938 — In the midst of the Great Depression and global tensions ahead of World War II, a record 40,000 spectators packed Pimlico Race Course to see the legendary horse race between Seabiscuit and War Admiral. “In one of the greatest match races ever run in the ancient history of the turf, the valiant Seabiscuit not only conquered the great War Admiral but, beyond this, he ran the beaten son of Man o’War into the dirt and dust of Pimlico,” reported The Sun. Seabiscuit and jockey George Woolf won by three lengths, breaking a track record in front of a thrilled crowd.

Seabiscuit with jockey Red Pollard at Belmont Park.  (Hank Olen/New York Daily News)
Seabiscuit with jockey Red Pollard at Belmont Park. (Hank Olen/New York Daily News)

1940s

March 25, 1949 — Parts of Lexington Market, first established in 1803, were burned to the ground in a roaring fire the morning before a busy Saturday market. The fire started from an electric wire. Many stall owners did not have insurance, and the market itself would take three years to reopen. “Flames leaped hundreds of feet in the air from the roaring stalls. Cornices on Lexington Street buildings opposite the market caught up the tongues of flame and blazed out,” described The Sun.

1950s

Jan. 20, 1955 — Morgan State University students hold an impromptu sit-in at Read’s Drug Stores on Lexington and Howard streets to protest being denied service, which resulted in 37 Read’s chain stores in the area desegregating. The event, which occurred five years before the Greensboro lunch counter sit-ins in North Carolina, expanded to attempts to desegregate other Baltimore businesses.

Morgan State students, who organized with the Baltimore Committee on Racial Equality, also had a sit-in at a movie theater that ended in arrests.

“‘We will serve all customers throughout our entire stores, including the fountains, and this becomes effective immediately,’ was the official statement of the company president,” The Sun reported. The decision came shortly after the first sit-in on Jan. 20, 1955.

1960s

Oct. 9, 1966 — The Orioles won their first ever world championship after sweeping the Los Angeles Dodgers. The 1966 team included legendary players Brooks Robinson, Frank Robinson and Jim Palmer. More than 54,000 fans packed Memorial Stadium to watch the World Series win. At the end of the series, Baltimore exploded into what The Sun called the zaniest celebration since the end of World War II. Jubilant revelers practically trampled moving cars on The Block, lighting firecrackers and chanting “Birds! Birds! Birds!”

On Oct. 9, 1966 third baseman Brooks Robinson and catcher Andy Etchebarren converge on pitcher Dave McNally after the Orioles swept the Los Angeles Dodgers to win their first World Series.
On Oct. 9, 1966 third baseman Brooks Robinson and catcher Andy Etchebarren converge on pitcher Dave McNally after the Orioles swept the Los Angeles Dodgers to win their first World Series.

1970s

Dec. 8, 1971 — William Donald Schaefer was sworn in as the 44th mayor of Baltimore, a position he served for 15 years until January 1987. During his tenure, Schaefer championed big development projects that Baltimore is known for today, including Harborplace, Camden Yards, the National Aquarium, the Convention Center and the light rail. He later served as Maryland governor for two terms. At his inauguration ceremony, Schaefer said his administration would follow a “calmly and carefully set course of action” toward rebuilding the city and the population’s morale, The Sun reported.

A smiling Mayor William Donald Schaefer trimmed the city's Easter egg tree in 1975. Photographer William H. Mortimer.
A smiling Mayor William Donald Schaefer trimmed the city’s Easter egg tree in 1975. Photographer William H. Mortimer.

1980s

May 19, 1986 — The Pride of Baltimore, a hand-built wooden schooner and replica of a 19th century ship, sank 240 miles north of Puerto Rico. Four people died, including the ship’s captain, and eight crew members were stranded at sea, floating in a raft for nearly five days. The vessel sank after a freak and violent white squall blew it on its side in one minute. The storm hit so quickly that crew members couldn’t send a distress signal, and news of the sunken vessel first came after a Norwegian tanker rescued the lost members from the Atlantic.

1990s

Oct. 9, 1995 — Pope John Paul II visited Baltimore in a day of prayer and joy for Maryland Catholics. After a year of anticipating his visit, the pope held an emotional Mass to a stadium crowd at Camden Yards, toured soup kitchens and saw Baltimore’s grand cathedrals.

“Although he appeared haggard on this final day of a five-day U.S. visit, the 75-year-old pope displayed some of the personality and warmth that have charmed millions, even many who disagree with his views on the church’s moral teachings,” wrote The Sun.

Pope John Paul II arrives to celebrate mass at Oriole Park at Camden Yards.
Pope John Paul II arrives to celebrate mass at Oriole Park at Camden Yards.

2000s

Jan. 28, 2001 — “Glorious!” The Sun’s headline exclaimed after the Baltimore Ravens romped the New York Giants, 34-7, in Super Bowl XXXV to take home the city’s first NFL championship in 30 years. The Ravens’ defense dominated the Giants in a wild and one-sided victory. The victory was a turning point for fans still bereaved from the Baltimore Colts’ departure from the city in the middle of the night for Indianapolis in 1984.

“Call it the purple reign. Call it whatever you want,” The Sun reported. “It took 30 years and no small amount of heartache and tears, but Baltimore is on top of the football world once again.

The Ravens win their first Super Bowl, beating the Giants, 34-7.
The Ravens win their first Super Bowl, beating the Giants, 34-7.

2010s

Jan. 6, 2010 — Sheila Dixon resigned, part of a plea deal that ended a years-long corruption investigation and the tenure of Baltimore’s first female mayor. Dixon was convicted of perjury and embezzlement and barred from holding any city or state post for a two-year period.

State prosecutors investigated Dixon for four years, finding that her former boyfriend, developer Ronald H. Lipscomb, gifted her lavish presents that she did not disclose when she was City Council president. A jury of Baltimore residents also found her guilty of embezzlement for using a $500 gift card donated for charity by developer Patrick Turner to buy her family a gaming system.

The decade would see another mayoral resignation and indictment in 2019, when Catherine Pugh was charged with fraud, tax evasion and conspiracy in relation to her “Healthy Holly” children’s book series.

2020s

March 12, 2020 — In a move that signaled only the beginning of the biggest global public health crisis in recent history, Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan announced a statewide closure of public schools in response to the coronavirus pandemic. What started as a two-week break would turn into two years of school — and life — looking nothing like what had ever been experienced before.

“The extraordinary closing of the state’s schools, which will send about 1 million children home and create ripple effects as parents scramble to find alternative care and adjust their work schedules, are part of a sweeping set of directives from Gov. Larry Hogan,” The Sun reported.

Soon, hospitals would be overwhelmed, and thousands of Marylands would die, and continue to die, as the coronavirus surged on. In 2022, people have a better defense with a variety of vaccines.

Baltimore Sun librarian Paul McCardell contributed to this article.