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National Press Club company history timeline

1991

June 20, 1991 – The first popularly elected president of Russia, Boris Yeltsin, declares “there will be no turning back from the path Russia has chosen.”

July 25, 1991 – “Friends of the National Journalism Library” is established as a 501(c)3 to support the library and its programs.

1992

March 18, 1992 – H. Ross Perot announces he is running for president of the United States The NPC library receives over ten thousand orders for the audio recording.

1992 - H. Ross Perot announces from the National Press Club that he is running for president of the United States.

1993

September 14, 1993 – Palestine Liberation Organization chairman Yasser Arafat is a luncheon speaker.

1994

September 24, 1994 – The first Kalb Report, co-sponsored with George Washington University, is aired from the NPC’s main lounge.

October 7, 1994 – South Africa’s first black president Nelson Mandela speaks at an NPC luncheon.

Beginning in 1994, CBS news legend Marvin Kalb launched a series of television forums that probe the craft of journalism.

1998

1998 - Matt Drudge speaks at NPC luncheon, breaking new ground for online journalism

2000

January 1, 2000 – Members ring in the new millennium at a party in the Club ballroom.

Both Ronald Reagan and Jimmy Carter announced their presidential bids at the Club, and George W. Bush introduced his national security team during the 2000 election.

2001

2001 – The Press Club serves as the “situation room” for hundreds of journalists working in the National Press Building during 9/11 terrorist attacks on Washington, DC; the NPC provides free meals to journalists throughout the day while the building is on lockdown.

2004

January 21, 2004 – Sheila Cherry is sworn in as the Club’s first African American president.

2005

March 8, 2005 – U.N. Goodwill Ambassador and actress Angelina Jolie creates a media feeding frenzy at the NPC.

2005 – NPC’s controversial painting of Greek courtesan “Phryne,” restored by the Fine Arts Committee of the Silver Owls, is auctioned for $80,000 to an anonymous Brazilian; the proceeds are allocated to the NPC archives.

2006

When Senator Barack Obama visited the Club in 2006, he joined actor George Clooney in a press conference about Darfur.

2006 - National Press Club Broadcast Operations Center opens, providing live broadcast and online streaming of public events from the National Press Club to a global audience.

2007

January 19, 2007 – Bindi Irwin, the eight-year-old daughter of naturalist Steve Irwin, becomes the youngest person to address a Club luncheon.

May 14, 2007 – Tony Snow, White House Press Secretary, and veteran reporter Bob Shieffer, go head to head in the Club’s first Battle of the Bands (later dubbed “Journopalooza”).

October 1, 2007 – NPC goes green by switching its energy sources to renewable means.

2008

January 4, 2008 – A new documentary covering the NPC’s first hundred years is viewed at a gala event.

October 16, 2008 – John Cosgrove receives the first President’s Award of Distinction for his fifty-nine years of service to the Club.

2011

May 3, 2011 – The NPC hosts the awards ceremony for the Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize in observance of UNESCO’s annual World Press Freedom Day.

September 11, 2011 – Women journalists of the Civil War are celebrated in a panel of distinguished scholars sponsored by the History & Heritage Committee in observance of the 150th anniversary of the Civil War.

2012

September 21, 2012 – Bob Woodward receives the fortieth Fourth Estate Award.

2015

September 24, 2015 – The Club holds its first luncheon address from outer space when astronaut Scott Kelly spoke to the audience in the ballroom from the International Space Station.

19, 2015 – The Club auctions off its Norman Rockwell oil painting, “Norman Rockwell Visits a County Editor,” for nearly $11 million.

2015 – A secret meeting organized by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists is held in a private room at The National Press Club.

2018

November 29, 2018 – Since the beginning of the Trump administration, the Club has pushed back against the president’s attacks on the main stream media and its role in critiquing the president.

2019

May 2, 2019 – The Club organizes a nationwide campaign to raise the profile of journalist Austin Tice who has been held captive in Syria for nearly seven years.

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1991
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