Founded | 2000 |
---|---|
Headquarters location | 388 State St #800 Salem, Oregon 97301 |
Key people | David Thornberry (CEO) |
Owner(s) | Steve and Carol Hungerford |
Official website | countrymedia |
Country Media, Inc. is an American media and web design company based in Salem, Oregon, which owns 10 community newspaper properties in Oregon and one in California. [1] The company previously owned newspapers in the West North Central states.
Country Media, Inc. was largely founded by Steve Hungerford, a Nebraska-native [2] who earned his bachelor's degree in journalism from the University of Nebraska and a master's in journalism from the University of Oregon. He moved to Oregon in 1973 to purchase the weekly Milwaukie Review newspaper. In the mid-1980s, he was named director of human resources at the Salem Statesman Journal and, in 1988, became executive editor and publisher of the Daily Enterprise Courier in Oregon City. Hungerford and his wife Carol moved to Nebraska in 1990 when he was named publisher of the Scottsbluff Star-Herald . A decade later Hungerford left his job in March 2000 to found Country Media, Inc. [3] with his wife and a group of investors from across the United States. [2] Soon after, the newly-formed company based in Scottsbluff, Nebraska purchased 18 weekly newspapers. [3]
In September 2000, Country Media purchased several papers from the Virginia-based Dickson Media, Inc. Included in the sale were South Dakota newspapers based in Sturgis, Deadwood, Newell, Lemmon and Belle Fourche; and North Dakota newspapers based in Hettinger, Langdon, Killdeer, New England along with Baker, Montana. A national agribusiness weekly based in Sturgis called Tri-State Livestock News was also included in the sale. [4]
In October 2000, Country Media purchased the Chadron Record in Chadron and the Hot Springs Star in Hot Springs from CNHI, which had owned the two papers since March 1998. [4]
Country Media marked its first year in business by purchasing the Farmer & Rancher Exchange, a weekly agribusiness advertising publication in Pierre with a 43,000 circulation. It had previously been owned by Roger and Helen Merriman for 25 years. This purchase in September 2001 was the 18th paper County Media acquired. [5]
In December 2004, Country Media sold eight weekly newspapers, two shoppers and a monthly gaming publication to Lee Enterprises. The sale included South Dakota papers Meade County Times-Tribune, Black Hills Press, Butte County Valley Irrigator, Belle Fourche Post, Belle Fourche Bee, Lawrence County Centennial and Hot Springs Star. Lee also bought the Chadron Record in Nebraska, Star Extra shopper in South Dakota, Your Neighbor shopper in Nebraska, and monthly Deadwood Gaming in South Dakota. Country Media retained ownership of eight newspapers and two agriculture publications. [6]
In February 2014, Country Media shuttered the Lemmon Leader. The paper founded in 1906 was closed due to "a financial challenge," in part attributed to competition from rival newspaper The Dakota Herald. [7] [8]
In November 2019, Country Media announced plans to close three North Dakota newspapers: the Adams Country Record in Hettinger, The Herald in New England, and the Dunn County Herald. [9] According to Steve Andrist, executive director of the North Dakota Newspaper Association, Country Media told him the company's newspapers were profitable, but that profit didn't justify the time and effort it took to properly manage them. [10] After failing to find a buyer, the company decided to close the three papers. [9] After news of the closures broke, by December, the Adams County Record and The Herald avoided closure after selling to Grant County News owner Jill Friesz. [10] The Dunn County Herald closed for good in 2019. [11]
In May 2021, Country Media sold the Bowman County Pioneer in Bowman and Fallon County Times in Baker to a joint venture between Little Missouri Media owner Dudley Stuber and The Badlands Patriot, a company owned by Stuber's daughter and son-in-law, Mikki and Brandon Pryor. [12] That same year in November, Country Media shuttered the Cavalier County Republican in Langdon. The paper had been published since 1889. [13] After its closure, County Media had no business operations in the midwest.
Country Media purchased its first Oregon newspaper, the Cannon Beach Gazette , in October 2006. [3] In April 2007, the company acquired The Headlight Herald in Tillamook and The News Guard in Lincoln City. Those two papers had previously been owned by Oregon Coast Newspapers LLC since February 2003. [3] In October 2007, Country Media purchased the Seaside Signal . [14] A few years later Country Media in February 2009 acquired the St. Helens Chronicle and Sentinel Mist. [15]
In January 2011, Country Media acquired the monthly Coast River Business Journal. The business publication had been founded in Astoria five years prior. [16] The same year in June, the company acquired the biweekly North Coast Citizen newspaper in Manzanita. The paper had previously been owned by the East Oregonian Publishing Company (now EO Media Group), who had purchased it in 2007 from Jan and Dave Fisher. [17]
In February 2013, Country Media sold the Seaside Signal , Cannon Beach Gazette and Coast River Business Journal to EO Media Group. [18]
In July 2014, Country Media acquired the weekly newspaper The Chief in Clatskanie. The paper had previously been owned by two families under the name Clatskanie Chief Publishing Co. for 92 years. [19]
In May 2019, Country Media re-acquired the Cannon Beach Gazette from EO Media Group. The company had previously owned the Gazette from 2006 to 2013. Following the sale, the paper's publishing frequency changed from twice monthly to weekly. [1]
In July 2019, Country Media acquired the Del Norte Triplicate and Curry Coastal Pilot from the bankrupt Western Communications, Inc. Following the sale, three employees at the Triplicate were laid off. [20] The sale price for both papers was $350,000. [21]
In January 2020, Country Media acquired daily newspaper The World in Coos Bay, as well as the weekly newspapers Western World in Bandon and The Umpqua Post in Reedsport from Southwest Oregon Publishing Co., a wholly-owned subsidiary of Lee Enterprises. [22] Due to the COVID-19 recession in the United States, The Umpqua Post ceased operations in June and The World reduced its print days from five to two. [23] The Bandon Western World printed its final issue in July 2020. [24]
In September 2023, Country Media acquired three weekly newspapers, the Newport News-Times, Cottage Grove Sentinel and Siuslaw News , from News Media Corporation. News Media Cooperation had purchased the Siuslaw News in 2000, and the other two papers in 2006. [25] In October that same year, Country Media acquired the Polk County Itemizer-Observer from Scott J. Olson. [26] In December 2023, County Media announced TheChronicle in St. Helens andThe Chief in Clatskanie will merge into a single weekly newspaper called The Columbia County Chronicle & Chief . [27]
In January 2024, Country Media merged Lincoln City News Guard and the Newport News-Times into a single newspaper named after the Lincoln County Leader , which had published for 94 years from 1893 to 1987. [28] The plan was first announced in the previous October. [29] Also in January, the Cannon Beach Gazette switched to monthly publication. [30] In September 2024, the company closed The Columbia County Chronicle & Chief due to declining revenue and difficulty hiring staff. [31]
State | Service Area | Newspaper |
---|---|---|
Oregon | Coos Bay | The World |
Oregon | Tillamook | Tillamook Headlight-Herald |
Oregon | St. Helens | The Columbia County Chronicle & Chief |
Oregon | Brookings | Curry Coastal Pilot |
California | Crescent City | Del Norte Triplicate |
Oregon | Newport | Lincoln County Leader |
Oregon | Manzanita | North Coast Citizen |
Oregon | Cannon Beach | Cannon Beach Gazette |
Oregon | Cottage Grove | Cottage Grove Sentinel |
Oregon | Florence | Siuslaw News |
Oregon | Dallas | Polk County Itemizer-Observer |
Columbia County is one of the 36 counties in the U.S. state of Oregon. As of the 2020 census, the population was 52,589. The county seat is St. Helens.
Local Media Group, Inc., formerly Dow Jones Local Media Group and Ottaway Newspapers Inc., owned newspapers, websites and niche publications in California, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Oregon and Pennsylvania. It was headquartered in Campbell Hall, New York, and its flagship was the Times Herald-Record, serving Middletown and other suburbs of New York City.
The Astorian, formerly known as The Daily Astorian, is a newspaper, published in Astoria, Oregon, United States, established in 1873, and in publication continuously since then. The paper serves the Astoria, Warrenton, Seaside area, the Long Beach Peninsula, and surrounding areas. The newspaper is published three times each week and is owned by EO Media Group.
The East Oregonian (EO) is a daily newspaper published in Pendleton, Oregon, United States and covering Umatilla and Morrow counties.
The News-Press & Gazette Company (NPG) is a media company based in St. Joseph, Missouri, wholly owned and operated by the Bradley family. It is presided by Brian Bradley and David R. Bradley, with Hank Bradley (retired), Eric Bradley, and Kit Bradley serving on its board of directors. All are descendants of family patriarch Henry D. Bradley and his son, David Bradley Sr.
The Albany Democrat-Herald is a daily newspaper published in Albany, Oregon, United States. The paper is owned by the Iowa-based Lee Enterprises, a firm which also owns the daily Corvallis Gazette-Times, published in the adjacent market of Corvallis, Oregon, as well as two weeklies, the Lebanon Express and the Philomath Express. The two daily papers publish a joint Sunday edition, called Mid-Valley Sunday.
The Lebanon Express was a weekly newspaper in Lebanon, Oregon. It was owned by Lee Enterprises. The paper ceased publication in January 2023.
The Seaside Signal is a weekly newspaper published for the community of Seaside, Oregon, United States.
The Pamplin Media Group (PMG) is a media conglomerate owned by Carpenter Media Group and operating primarily in the Portland metropolitan area in the U.S. state of Oregon. Robert B. Pamplin, Jr. founded the company in 2001 and sold it to Carpenter in 2024. As of 2019, the company owns 25 newspapers and employs 200 people.
The Observer, established in 1896, is a newspaper that serves Union and Wallowa counties in the U.S. state of Oregon. Its headquarters are in La Grande, the seat of Union County. The Observer circulates Monday, Wednesday and Friday afternoons. EO Media Group based in Salem, Oregon, publishes the newspaper.
Eagle Newspapers was an American newspaper publisher serving the states of Oregon, Washington and Idaho. The company originated in 1948 when Elmo Smith purchased the Blue Mountain Eagle. He would later sell the paper but the company's name would be derived from that title. Smith served a partial term as Oregon Governor and upon his death the business was managed by his son Denny Smith, who rapidly grew it from three newspapers to nearly twenty in the span of two decades. By 1985, Eagle Newspapers publications accounted for nearly one-half of the weekly newspapers sold each week in Oregon. The company sold off its last paper in 2020.
Wick Communications is a family-owned media company with 18 newspapers in 10 states. They also publish websites and other specialty publications. The home offices are in Sierra Vista, Arizona, and it has newspapers in Arizona, Louisiana, Montana, Colorado, Alaska, California, North Dakota, South Dakota, Idaho, Oregon and Washington.
The Columbia County Chronicle & Chief was a weekly newspaper published in St. Helens, Oregon, United States. It was formed in December 2023 by the merger of The Chronicle in St. Helens and The Chief in Clatskanie, both published by Country Media, Inc. It was the newspaper of record for Columbia County. It closed in September 2024.
The Baker City Herald is a tri-weekly paper published in Baker City, Oregon, United States, since 1870. It is published on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays and is owned by EO Media Group.
The Headlight-Herald is a weekly paper published in Tillamook, Oregon, United States, since 1888. It is published on Tuesdays by Country Media, Inc. and has a circulation of 6,621. It is the newspaper of record for Tillamook County.
News Media Corporation (NMC) is an American family-owned newspaper corporation that publishes 25 different newspaper titles in five states across the United States. Currently, it operates in smaller cities and towns with populations between 5,000 and 50,000 in the states of Arizona, Illinois, Nebraska, South Dakota, and Wyoming.
Adams Publishing Group LLC(APG) is a company that provides publishing services, including newspapers, periodicals, and website publishing in the United States. Its corporate headquarters is located in Coon Rapids, Minnesota. Mark Adams, the son of Stephen Adams, founded Adams Publishing Group in late 2013. In March 2014, APG began to acquire newspapers and media related businesses. As of 2022, it owned more than 127 newspapers in 20 states and the District of Columbia.
The EO Media Group, formerly known as the East Oregonian Publishing Company, is a newspaper publishing company based in the U.S. state of Oregon. It publishes 17 newspapers in the state and in southwestern Washington.
The Lincoln County Leader is a weekly newspaper based in Newport, Oregon, United States. It was formed in January 2024 by the merger of the Newport News-Times and Lincoln City News Guard, both published by Country Media, Inc. The newspaper takes the name of an earlier publication that existed from 1893 to 1987. The Leader is the newspaper of record for Lincoln County.
The Cannon Beach Gazette is a monthly newspaper serving Cannon Beach, Oregon.