The Earliest Identifiable WNYC Recording: Lindbergh at City Hall in 1927 | From the WNYC Archives
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 Published On Jul 8, 2024

As part of WNYC's centennial celebration, each week we'll take listeners on a tour of key moments from the WNYC and NYC Municipal archives, starting with WNYC’s oldest surviving piece of audio — Charles Lindbergh from 1927.

Read more about the earliest identifiable WNYC recording: https://www.wnyc.org/story/110652-the...

Read and listen to more from the WNYC Archives: https://www.wnyc.org/articles/wnyc-hi...

View a timeline of our history: https://www.wnyc.org/timeline

Other From the Archives selections include press conferences, events, and interviews with notables such as Jack Kerouac (1958), Bob Dylan (1961), Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. (1964), Martin Scorsese (1970), Gloria Steinem (1982), and Barack Obama (2007). Listeners will also hear key historic news reports that aired on WNYC, including the announcement of the attack on Pearl Harbor (1941), a broadcast of a town hall meeting on the Atom Bomb (1951), and WNYC journalists running toward the Twin Towers to report on 9/11 (2001).

As we celebrate our 100th birthday and beyond, check out our full calendar of on-air and live centennial events, listen to more historical audio gems from our archives, share your own New York story, and learn about our first century of serving New York: https://www.wnyc.org/100

Follow WNYC:
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Threads: https://www.threads.net/@wnyc

From the Archives is produced by Andy Lanset and Karen Frillmann.
This spot is narrated by Sara Fishko.
Video by Kim Nowacki.

WNYC is listener-supported public radio. Support the next 100 years of WNYC by making a donation here: https://wnyc.org/donate

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