EditorialThe ledger, signed by every player in the Masters Tournament, at Augusta National Golf Club, in Augusta, Ga., April 8, 2022. (Doug Mills/The New York Times)
EditorialThe ledger, signed by every player in the Masters Tournament, at Augusta National Golf Club, in Augusta, Ga., April 8, 2022. (Doug Mills/The New York Times)
EditorialThe ledger, signed by every player in the Masters Tournament, at Augusta National Golf Club, in Augusta, Ga., April 8, 2022. (Doug Mills/The New York Times)
EditorialSam Bankman-Fried chief executive of FTX, a crypto derivatives exchange that offers products unavailable to traders in the U.S., at the offices in Hong Kong, May, 26, 2021. (Lam Yik Fei/The New York Times)
EditorialBugs Bunny, Daffy Duck and Flintstones voice actor Mel Blanc memorabilia to go under the hammer, including studio microphone and signed animations
EditorialBeauty salon owner Jayne Ledger who lost her business premises and her home because of Covid but set up in Merstham in Surrey and has made it a success. Picture taken 3rd August 2021
EditorialA spread from a 1931 ledger of the New York Public Library’s Picture Collection, listing images that were added to the folders, from circus pictures to “Ladies of the White House,” in the Stephen A. Schwarzman Building in New York, July 30, 2021. (Gus Powell/The New York Times)
EditorialLamont Collins, founder of the Roots 101 African American Museum, holds a ledger that includes the sales of enslaved people from an Indiana port in Louisville, Ky., April 27, 2021. (Andrew Cenci/The New York Times)
EditorialLamont Collins, founder of the Roots 101 African American Museum, holds a ledger that includes the sales of enslaved people from an Indiana port in Louisville, Ky., April 27, 2021. (Andrew Cenci/The New York Times)
EditorialA ledger kept by sole proprietor Henry Yao for his Army & Navy Bags military surplus store, on Houston Street in Manhattan's Lower East Side, Nov. 14, 2020. (Kirsten Luce/The New York Times)
EditorialA ledger with the the original handwritten Union Army record of an order that brought emancipation to enslaved people in Texas at the end of the Civil War. (National Archives via The New York Times)