Claim by Chicago Tribune that Thomas Dewey had defeated Harry Truman was today 1948:
The election was on November 2. The paper was an early edition of the November 3 "Chicago Daily Tribune." The picture was taken on November 4. Per Wikipedia's metadata for the picture:
Harry S. Truman holding the
Chicago Daily Tribune with the erroneous headline, "Dewey Defeats Truman" at Union Station in St. Louis, Missouri, on November 4, 1948, after winning the 1948 United States presidential election. He was so widely expected to lose that the Tribune printed the erroneous headline, boldly anticipating victory for his opponent, Thomas E. Dewey.
Dewey Defeats Truman
President Truman holding an early edition of the November 3, 1948
Chicago Daily Tribune showing an erroneous presidential election headline
"
Dewey Defeats Truman" was an incorrect banner headline on the front page of the
Chicago Daily Tribune (later
Chicago Tribune) on November 3, 1948, the day after incumbent United States president Harry S. Truman won an upset victory over his opponent, Governor Thomas E. Dewey of New York, in the 1948 presidential election. It was famously held up by Truman at a stop at St. Louis Union Station following his successful election, smiling triumphantly at the error.
Background
The
Chicago Daily Tribune, which had once referred to Democratic candidate Truman as a "nincompoop", was a famously Republican-leaning paper. In a retrospective article some 60 years later about the newspaper's most famous and embarrassing headline, the
Tribune wrote that Truman "had as low an opinion of the
Tribune as it did of him".
For about a year prior to the 1948 election, the printers who operated the linotype machines at the
Chicago Tribune and other Chicago papers had been on strike, in protest of the TaftHartley Act. Around the same time, the
Tribune had switched to a method by which copy for the paper was composed on typewriters, photographed, and then engraved onto the printing plates. This process required the paper to go to press several hours earlier than usual.
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Aftermath
Two days later, when Truman was passing through St. Louis on the way to Washington, he stepped to the rear platform of his train car, the
Ferdinand Magellan, and was handed a copy of the
Tribune early edition. Happy to exult in the paper's error, he held it up for the photographers gathered at the station, and the famous picture (in several versions) was taken. Truman reportedly smiled and said, "That ain't the way I heard it!"
Tribune publishers could laugh about the blunder years later and had planned to give Truman a plaque with a replica of the erroneous banner headline on the 25th anniversary of the 1948 election. However, Truman died on December 26, 1972, before the gift could be bestowed.
The
Tribune was not the only paper to make the mistake. The
Journal of Commerce had eight articles in its edition of November 3 about what could be expected of President Dewey. The paper's five-column headline read, "Dewey Victory Seen as Mandate to Open New Era of Government-Business Harmony, Public Confidence".
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