![]() The July 27, 2005, front page of the Statesman Journal | |
Type | Daily newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Broadsheet |
Owner(s) | Gannett |
Publisher | Ryan Kedzierski [1] |
Editor | Cherrill Crosby [1] |
Founded | 1851 (as Oregon Statesman) |
Headquarters | 340 Vista Ave. SE Salem, OR 97301 USA |
Circulation | 27,859 Mon-Tue, Thur 33,815 Wed. 36,323 Sun [2] |
ISSN | 0739-5507 |
Website | statesmanjournal.com |
The Statesman Journal is the major daily newspaper published in Salem, Oregon, United States. Founded in 1851 as the Oregon Statesman, it later merged with the Capital Journal to form the current newspaper, the second-oldest in Oregon. The Statesman Journal is distributed in Salem, Keizer, and portions of the mid-Willamette Valley. The average weekday circulation was 27,859, with Sunday's readership listed at 36,323, in 2012. [2] It is owned, along with the neighboring Stayton Mail and Silverton Appeal Tribune , by the national Gannett Company. [3]
The Oregon Statesman was founded by Samuel Thurston, the first delegate from the Oregon Territory to the US Congress. [4] His editor and co-founder was Asahel Bush; the paper was a Democratic Party response to the Whig-controlled Portland-based paper, The Oregonian . The first issue was dated March 28, 1851, printed on a hand press in Oregon City, the provincial capital from 1848 to 1851. [5]
Thurston died on April 9 of that year while returning from the nation's capital to the Territory, and Bush then assumed ownership of the paper. The territorial capital was relocated to Salem later that year, so by 1853 the printing operation was transferred to Salem. When the territorial capital was relocated to Corvallis in 1855, the printing process also moved there, but that decision was quickly reversed and the capital reverted to Salem. The printing operation also relocated to Salem in the late fall of 1855. [6]
The paper was used as a mouthpiece of the Democratic Party and of the Salem Clique that ran the party in Salem. [4] Bush vividly criticized rival editors and political figures. Bush and Oregonian editor Thomas J. Dryer are recognized as fomenting a virulent editorial rivalry. [6]
As warclouds gathered over the young nation, the Democratic Party generally favored the South and Secession. Bush, however, sided with the Union cause, and this rift considerably weakened the paper's relevance in territorial politics. As a result, Bush left the paper in 1863 and entered the banking field. [5] The paper was renamed Salem Statesman, and lost much of its partisan slant. [4] It ceased publication in 1866, but resumed in 1869 under the guidance of editor Samuel Asahel Clarke and titled The Statesman and Unionist. [4] [7] The 'Unionist' was soon dropped from the title, and Clarke sold the paper in 1872. [6] For 18 months in 1883–84, 50% of the newspaper was owned by William H. Byars, the former publisher of the Roseburg Plaindealer (1873–83) who was nominated as State Printer in late 1882 and elected in 1883. In 1884 R. J. Hendricks became the paper's manager and editor, positions he held for 44 years. [4] Ownership passed to Jasper Wilkins and Alonzo Gesner, with Gesner selling out his part within a year. [8] In 1929 the paper was sold to Charles A. Sprague (two-thirds interest) and Sheldon Sackett (one-third interest). Sprague had previously published newspapers in Ritzville, Washington and in Corvallis. [6]
Sprague ran for Oregon Governor in 1938, and held that post for one term, leaving the paper in the hands of editor Ralph Curtis and business manager Wendell Wilmarth. When he lost his re-election bid and returned to the paper's helm in 1953, he worked to make it more directly competitive with the city's afternoon newspaper, the Capital-Journal. By 1953 the two papers agreed to share business and production plants while maintaining editorial independence. Sprague died in 1969, leaving his son Wallace to manage the paper from his New York City home. [6]
Will H. Parry established the Capital Journal in 1888, with its first issue dated March 1. It was launched as a for-profit venture and an outlet for the Republican Party. [9] By the end of the year, Parry sold the Journal to William H. Byars (who also was elected that year as Salem's City Surveyor), one of many ownership changes in subsequent years. (In 1890, Byars was appointed by Pres. Benjamin Harrison as U.S. Surveyor General for Oregon.)
Around 1918, George Putnam purchased the Capital Journal and served as editor for 30 years before selling to Bernard Mainwaring in 1953. [10] [5] Meanwhile, Charles A. Sprague, who went on to become governor of Oregon, bought the Statesman in 1929. [5] By the 1950s the two editors had agreed that their respective papers should cooperate closely. [9] The Journal moved into the Statesman's new facility and the two papers began sharing printing facilities while keeping independent writers and editors. [5]
In 1973, both papers were sold to national publisher Gannett, the company that publishes USA Today . [9] In 1980, they were combined to form the Statesman Journal. [5] Dating to the Statesman's inception, it is the second-oldest Oregon newspaper. [5] The paper won ten first-place awards in the Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association's annual Better Newspaper Contest in 2001, the most in its division. [11] In the 2006 contest, the paper took first place in its division for overall excellence, best editorial page, and best editorial. [12]
The newspaper primarily covers news in the Salem-Keizer metropolitan area in the middle section of the Willamette Valley. [13] Coverage includes state politics, Salem area news, area sports, business news, and lifestyle news. Circulation is focused on Marion and Polk counties with a market size of 410,000 residents, with some additional circulation in neighboring Linn, Lincoln, Yamhill, and Benton counties. [13] In 2008 The Statesman Journal had circulation of 46,826 from Monday through Saturday, and 53,367 Sunday. By 2018, the average daily circulation had declined to 27,859 Monday-Tuesday, Thursday and 33,815 Wednesday, with a Sunday readership of 36,323. [2] The newspaper also published The Stayton Mail of Stayton and the Appeal Tribune of Silverton [13] after purchasing both in 1990 [14] until both publications ceased in 2022. [15]
The Oregonian is a daily newspaper based in Portland, Oregon, United States, owned by Advance Publications. It is the oldest continuously published newspaper on the U.S. West Coast, founded as a weekly by Thomas J. Dryer on December 4, 1850, and published daily since 1861. It is the largest newspaper in Oregon and the second largest in the Pacific Northwest by circulation. It is one of the few newspapers with a statewide focus in the United States. The Sunday edition is published under the title The Sunday Oregonian. The regular edition was published under the title The Morning Oregonian from 1861 until 1937.
The Register-Guard is a daily newspaper in the northwestern United States, published in Eugene, Oregon. It was formed in a 1930 merger of two Eugene papers, the Eugene Daily Guard and the Morning Register. The paper serves the Eugene-Springfield area, as well as the Oregon Coast, Umpqua River valley, and surrounding areas. As of 2019, it had a supposed circulation of 18,886 daily.
The Oregon Journal was Portland, Oregon's daily afternoon newspaper from 1902 to 1982. The Journal was founded in Portland by C. S. "Sam" Jackson, publisher of Pendleton, Oregon's East Oregonian newspaper, after a group of Portlanders convinced Jackson to help in the reorganization of the Portland Evening Journal. The firm owned several radio stations in the Portland area. In 1961, the Journal was purchased by S.I. Newhouse and Advance Publications, owners also of The Oregonian, the city's morning newspaper.
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Salem-Keizer School District (24J) is a school district in the U.S. state of Oregon that serves the cities of Salem and Keizer. It is the second-largest school district in the state with approximately 40,000 students and nearly 4,000 full-time equivalent (FTE) employees. It serves more than 172 square miles (450 km2) of Marion and Polk counties.
Asahel Bush was an American newspaper publisher and businessman in Salem, Oregon. As publisher of the Oregon Statesman newspaper, he moved the paper to Salem when the territorial capital moved to that city. A Massachusetts native, Bush became the first official printer for the state of Oregon, and his estate is now a city park.
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The Lincoln County Leader was a weekly American newspaper published in Toledo, Oregon from 1893 to 1987. The newspaper was originally published as a Democratic paper, but its party affiliation changed with the ownership. For many years the newspaper was the primary journal in Lincoln County.
The Portland Bee was a Republican newspaper in Portland in the U.S. state of Oregon in the late 19th century. It was launched in November 1875, the same year as the Portland Daily Bulletin disincorporated; like the Bulletin, it had both daily and weekly editions. It initially had two daily editions, and circulated 1,000 free copies.
Journalism in the U.S. state of Oregon had its origins from the American settlers of the Oregon Country in the 1840s. This was decades after explorers like Robert Gray and Lewis and Clark first arrived in the region, several months before the first newspaper was issued in neighboring California, and several years before the United States formally asserted control of the region by establishing the Oregon Territory.
The Silverton Appeal Tribune was a weekly newspaper published in Silverton in the U.S. state of Oregon. The paper originated in 1880 and ceased in 2022. At the time of closure, it was published by the Statesman Journal; along with the nearby Stayton Mail, and was owned by Gannett.
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The Stayton Mail was a weekly newspaper published in Stayton in the U.S. state of Oregon. The paper originated in 1896 and ceased in 2022. At the time of closure, it was published by the Statesman Journal; along with the nearby Silverton Appeal Tribune, and was owned by Gannett.