The On the Road with Charles Kuralt series began in 1967, and ran on CBS for more than 20 years. In that popular program, the veteran journalist rode across America in a bus, meeting "regular" folks ...
The reopening of Ellis Island to the public during America's bicentennial year prompted CBS News' Charles Kuralt to offer his thoughts on the sight of Lady Liberty as viewed by generations of ...
Editor's note: This story originally appeared in the November 2008 issue of SouthPark Magazine. It’s the kind of story Charles Kuralt probably would have loved to tell. If the legendary CBS journalist ...
Charles Kuralt, the TV journalist and "On the Road" reporter, has another distinction. He has become famous in estate planning circles for "what not to do" with regard to your estate plan. Kuralt died ...
From the July 1995 issue of Car and Driver. Of all the mixed blessings and curses of my life, I put motorhomes at the top of the list. —Charles Kuralt The TWA tag on the faux leather flight bag says: ...
Back in the 20th century, a CBS TV reporter named Charles Kuralt set off in an RV with no particular place to go to see what was happening there. “On the Road With Charles Kuralt” was the name for the ...
The legendary poet of the American road, Charles Kuralt, died 20 years ago this July 4th. His CBS News’ “On the Road” segments are well worth binging on during this Independence Day, for each is a ...
Original, charming and eloquent, Charles Kuralt left one of the richest legacies in television news. So today’s special edition of CBS News Sunday Morning offers a marvelous opportunity to see the ...
In October 1967, when Walter Cronkite’s CBS Evening News was swollen with combat footage from Vietnam, a young correspondent named Charles Kuralt made a novel proposal to the network brass. His ...
And now a page from our "Sunday Morning" Almanac: Sept. 10, 1934, 83 years ago today ... the day Charles Kuralt was born in Wilmington, North Carolina. An award-winning young newspaper reporter, ...
Back in October CBS News revived the iconic “On the Road” series with correspondent Steve Hartman picking up where the late Charles Kuralt left off. Now Hartman is carrying the Kuralt link even ...
The last time I saw Charles Kuralt he was smoking a cigarette outside the studios of UNC Television in Research Triangle Park. The year was 1997. I can't believe it's been ten years. Little did I know ...