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New York - Most Trusted TV Newsman Dead at 92

Published on:   Jul 18, 2009 at 08:54 PM
News Source:  CBS News
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New York - Walter Cronkite, the legendary newsman dubbed 'The Most Trusted Man in America' died Friday night after a long illness, with his family at his side. He was 92.

For half a century, Walter Cronkite told it the way it was, delivering the news straight and unvarnished.

Among the pioneers who built television news from the ground up, he forged a special bond with audiences

He was trustworthy, plain spoke and unflappable.

Walter was there. He'd lived the history of the century and reported it. He was born in 1916 in St. Joseph, Mo., and as a young man growing up in Houston and Kansas City, he saw firsthand the dust bowl of the 1930s and the Great Depression.

As a young wire service reporter in WWII, he hit the ground with troops in North Africa and was the first to make it back with the story.

"I'm just back from the biggest assignment that any American reporter could have so far in this war," he said.

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He was all of 26 - a natural before the camera and the microphone.

In the early 1950s, television came calling. Walter anchored the news on CBS, first in Washington, then on the network from New York.

As television news began taking wing in the 1950s, so did Walter, covering the coronation of Queen Elizabeth, atom bomb testing in Nevada, and the birth of the American space program.

Walter knew 12 American presidents.

"I met all of America's presidents since Herbert Hoover," Cronkite said." And I've known some of them pretty well. Lyndon Johnson called the "CBS Evening News" while I was actually on the air. And insisted that they put him through to me on the air. My secretary said, 'But he, but he's on the air, Mr. President.' 'I don't give a damned where he is. Put him on the phone.'"

Walter assumed the anchor chair of the "CBS Evening News" in 1962.

He was there with us through America's darkest moments, including the assassination of President John Kennedy.

"And I almost lost it there," Cronkite said.

Cronkite was a fixture at political conventions, including the democrat's chaotic meeting in Chicago in 1968. A party - and a country - at war with itself over Vietnam.

Walter 's skepticism grew while reporting on the Vietnam War. He shared those feelings in a landmark broadcast in which he acknowledged he was stating his opinion that it was time the nation get out.

"And it is increasingly clear to this reporter that the only rational way out then, would be to negotiate," he said. "Not as victims, but as an honorable people who lived up to their pledge to defend democracy and did the best they could."

"After that report, I recall that LBJ said to many of us that if I've lost Walter Cronkite, then I've lost the war," said Tom Johnson, a former Lyndon Johnson aide.

"And I think it pained him to have to say what he thought about Vietnam, but he also understood how isolating the White House can be and how people can get to the point where they don't hear discordant voices," said former President Bill Clinton. "And he thought he knew what the truth was. And he thought he had an obligation to tell it.

But his abiding passion was space.

"I think that our conquest of space will probably be the most important story of the whole 20th century," Cronkite said.

In 1969, a waiting world held its breath as man first approached the surface of the moon.

His own spirit was unconquerable. After leaving the "Evening News" he toured well into his 80s, making documentaries and having a good time.

He spent those latter years with his true loves - his three children Nancy, Kathy and Walter Jr., and his wife of nearly 65 years, Betsy. It's said they fell asleep every night holding hands.

In 1996, he taped his thoughts on the amazing century he'd seen.

"If there's anything I've learned it is that we Americans do have a way of rising to the challenges that confront us," Cronkite said. "Just when it seems we're most divided, we suddenly show our remarkable solidarity. The 20th century may be leaving us with a host of problems, but I've also noted that it does seem darkest before the dawn. There's reason to hope for the 21st century. And that's the way it will be."


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Read Comments (16)  —  Post Yours »

1

 Jul 18, 2009 at 09:18 PM yudi Says:

RIP

2

 Jul 18, 2009 at 09:32 PM Cronkite Says:

And thats the way it is.

3

 Jul 18, 2009 at 09:37 PM bunimfrombrooklyn Says:

he may have beem a great guy
BUT
IS THIS WHAT WE SHOULD BE MOURNING THESE DAYS???
Shouldn't we be mourning the fact that in another week and a half if Moshiach doesn't come we will be 1941 years from the destruction of the BEIS HAMIKDASH?
Shouldn't we be mourning all the lost jews in America and around the world?
Shouldn't we be mourning the fact that we've had in the past couple weeks little children returning there little pure souls to to their creator?
Why should this be on anyones mind(with all respect to his family) DONT WE HAVE PRIORITIES?????

4

 Jul 18, 2009 at 09:59 PM menachem Says:

Reply to #3  
bunimfrombrooklyn Says:

he may have beem a great guy
BUT
IS THIS WHAT WE SHOULD BE MOURNING THESE DAYS???
Shouldn't we be mourning the fact that in another week and a half if Moshiach doesn't come we will be 1941 years from the destruction of the BEIS HAMIKDASH?
Shouldn't we be mourning all the lost jews in America and around the world?
Shouldn't we be mourning the fact that we've had in the past couple weeks little children returning there little pure souls to to their creator?
Why should this be on anyones mind(with all respect to his family) DONT WE HAVE PRIORITIES?????

perhaps we should be mourning our lack of universal love and appreciation of mankind as displayed by your statement. Dnt kid yourself. Your lack of concern for your fellow gentle will translate into lack of ahavas yisroel too.

5

 Jul 18, 2009 at 10:41 PM Anonymous Says:

what does rip stand for

6

 Jul 18, 2009 at 10:41 PM bunimfrombrooklyn Says:

Reply to #4  
menachem Says:

perhaps we should be mourning our lack of universal love and appreciation of mankind as displayed by your statement. Dnt kid yourself. Your lack of concern for your fellow gentle will translate into lack of ahavas yisroel too.

your probably more concerned about this fellow gentile more than the story that a family in "klall yisroel" lost there 2 and a half year old son by a neighbor also from "kllal yisroel" who mistakenly killed the kid with the car
both sides of that story have a heck of a lot to get over with now and that's who we should be mourning
I guess TV takes over some peoples minds

7

 Jul 18, 2009 at 11:01 PM Anonymous Says:

Reply to #5  
Anonymous Says:

what does rip stand for

rest in peace

8

 Jul 19, 2009 at 07:25 AM menachem Says:

Reply to #6  
bunimfrombrooklyn Says:

your probably more concerned about this fellow gentile more than the story that a family in "klall yisroel" lost there 2 and a half year old son by a neighbor also from "kllal yisroel" who mistakenly killed the kid with the car
both sides of that story have a heck of a lot to get over with now and that's who we should be mourning
I guess TV takes over some peoples minds

Why do you make such an assumption? The loss of life is always tragic. That is true at any age.

9

 Jul 19, 2009 at 07:47 AM boroparkyenta Says:

There is always something to learn from everyone. In the sixties, he was a household word, as most of us had televisions in our homes in those days.
If he fell asleep every night holding hands, we can learn from that, to be more loving and caring and place our loved ones first. May he rest in peace.

10

 Jul 19, 2009 at 03:12 AM Grow up Says:

Reply to #3  
bunimfrombrooklyn Says:

he may have beem a great guy
BUT
IS THIS WHAT WE SHOULD BE MOURNING THESE DAYS???
Shouldn't we be mourning the fact that in another week and a half if Moshiach doesn't come we will be 1941 years from the destruction of the BEIS HAMIKDASH?
Shouldn't we be mourning all the lost jews in America and around the world?
Shouldn't we be mourning the fact that we've had in the past couple weeks little children returning there little pure souls to to their creator?
Why should this be on anyones mind(with all respect to his family) DONT WE HAVE PRIORITIES?????

Who's talking about mournng??? Its an honorable mention to a gentile who deserved it! He was a decent man and very objective in his reporting. He never had an agenda and he was always fair to mankind despite their race or religion.

Menachem, nos.3 scouldnt have said it better. Your indifference to a human being, regardless of religion, will lead to indifference for your fellow Jew. Grow up!!

11

 Jul 19, 2009 at 09:23 AM Tema Says:

Reply to #3  
bunimfrombrooklyn Says:

he may have beem a great guy
BUT
IS THIS WHAT WE SHOULD BE MOURNING THESE DAYS???
Shouldn't we be mourning the fact that in another week and a half if Moshiach doesn't come we will be 1941 years from the destruction of the BEIS HAMIKDASH?
Shouldn't we be mourning all the lost jews in America and around the world?
Shouldn't we be mourning the fact that we've had in the past couple weeks little children returning there little pure souls to to their creator?
Why should this be on anyones mind(with all respect to his family) DONT WE HAVE PRIORITIES?????

We should have him on our minds because he was a brilliant newsman and a fellow human being. I would rather spend days recalling his life than one more moment of the constant commentary when Michael Jackson died. And for every Jew that ignores a fellow man's life it will turn to another Jew that is ignored.

12

 Jul 19, 2009 at 09:25 AM anonymous Says:

Reply to #4  
menachem Says:

perhaps we should be mourning our lack of universal love and appreciation of mankind as displayed by your statement. Dnt kid yourself. Your lack of concern for your fellow gentle will translate into lack of ahavas yisroel too.

very well said and in concentration camp political non-Jews saved Jews from starvation and one of those is Rabbi Lau who was with in block 66

13

 Jul 19, 2009 at 11:20 AM anonymous Says:

May add one item . The late Edward R. Murrow was the first American reporter to enter Buchenwald and his transmission is a classic and all those heilige Yidden could not have said it better if at all. I have a recording which was transmitted on "all things considered" and it is worth listening that is if you care enough what happened to us in Buchenwald. Of course Edward R. Murrow was of those "goyim"

14

 Jul 19, 2009 at 11:26 AM Common Sense Says:

The narrow-mindedness of some fellow Yidden astounds me. Are our hearts not big enough to feel pain over the loss of Jews and Gentiles? Are there no non-Jews worthy of our respect and even affection? Do not our Prophets and Sages speak about the Righteous Gentiles of the world with the respect they deserve?

In addition to his great journalistic achievements, Walter Cronkite flew bombing missions in the European theater. He helped bring to the world's attention the atrocities committed by the Nazis against the Jews. His work at that time will forever be a thorn in the side of Holocaust deniers. Let's honor this great man, and may he rest in peace.

15

 Jul 19, 2009 at 11:34 AM anonymous Says:

I am one those who saw American bombers fly over Buchenwald and we looked from the ground and the planes looked to us like birds but they were our helpers in the liberation . Number 14 you are absolutely right maybe there is a lack of common sense or plain stupidity and before Rosh Chodesh Av we all should take a cheshbon hanefesh

16

 Jul 19, 2009 at 01:50 PM zalman Says:

oh, the guy who lost us the vietnam war!

17

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