“…Although the increase in competition telegraphy generated during the 1840s encouraged newspapers to form partnerships, the limited reach of the nascent communications network, and the consequent costs of coordination among a large group of publishers, kept participation in these early news organizations small, personal, and regional. 7 Aft er the Civil War, when the telegraph network rapidly expanded, there emerged a loose federation of news associations comprising organizations operating in different parts of the country, such as the Western Associated Press in the Midwest and the Southern Associated Press, all of which were largely subordinate to the New York Associated Press. 8 In 1875, this coalition of news associations served approximately 350 of the nation's daily newspapers out of a total population of 458, or 76 percent of the market, but recurrent disagreements over the manner in which the news was collected and distributed prohibited the federation from operating as a unifi ed body.…”