Type | Weekly newspaper |
---|---|
Owner(s) | Country Media, Inc. |
Founder(s) | William Glendye |
Publisher | Frank Perea |
Editor | Joe Warren |
Deputy editor | Will Lohre |
Founded | 1881 (as Oregon Mist) |
Language | English |
Ceased publication | September 25, 2024 |
Headquarters | 1805 S. Columbia Blvd. |
City | St. Helens, OR |
Website | thechronicleonline thechiefnews |
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. [1] It ceased publication in September 2024. [2] [3]
The St. Helens Chronicle originated in 1881 as the Oregon Mist. [4] [5] The paper was founded by William Glendye out of a vendetta against Enoch Adams of the Columbian, founded a year earlier. [6] Within two years, Glendye sold the paper to Emmanuel H. Flagg. In 1890, Charles Meserve acquired the paper. [6] Flagg resumed ownership by 1913 and at that time changed the paper’s name to St. Helens Mist. [6] In 1915, Steele L. Moorhead bought the publication and sold his interests to Simpson C. Morton in 1917. [6] Morton sold the paper in 1926 to Ira B. Hyde Jr. and George D. Borden. [7] Miss Jessica L. Longston and Miss L. Berenice Anderson purchased the paper from Hyde in August 1929. [8]
In 1926, the St. Helens Sentinel was established by Lew Cates and J. M. Cummins. [9] It was soon sold to Edward. E. Brodie [4] and then to Fred J. Tooze in 1928. [10] He sold it a year later to Longston. [11] In 1933, Longston merged the Mist and Sentinel together to form the St. Helens Sentinel-Mist. [12] In 1963, Longston and A. T. Brownlow sold the paper to John M. McClelland Jr. [13] In 1936, a Paul Paulson founded the St. Helens Chronicle. He sold it to Gilbert and Eldridge Crouse in 1965. [14] The Crouse brothers and McClelland bitterly feuded for years until merging their papers together in 1968 to form The Sentinel-Mist Chronicle. [15] In 1985, the paper was sold to Earl Parsons. [16] By then the paper's name was The Chronicle and Sentinel-Mist, finally becoming The Chronicle in 2009. [5] [17] That same year the newspaper was sold to Country Media, Inc. [18]
The Clatskanie Chief was founded in 1891 by F. T. Shute. [19] An article in another newspaper read "The latest newspaper in Oregon, launched upon the fateful sea of journalism May 29th, is the Clatskanie Chief. It is bright and newsy and evidently succeed." [20] In its early days the paper offered a bundled subscription with Better Fruit, a publication in Hood River, Oregon. [21] Shute soon sold the Chief to Enoch C. Blackford. [22] His uncle Enoch W. Conyers, [23] a businessman and a former state legislator, became the controlling owner in 1889. Conyers had been a lifelong Whig, and became a Republican when that party was formed. [24] As his health declined, Conyers sold his interest in the paper. [25] The new owners in 1908 were his niece and nephew Nora H. and George B. Conyers. [26] The siblings sold the paper in 1910 [27] By 1915, the paper was owned by W. G. Baylis. [28] Baylis' business partner Minnie Hyde bought him out in 1920. [29] A couple months later she sold a half-interest to A. E. Veatch, who owned the Rainer Review. Hyde worked as editor and Veatch handled the business-side. [30]
At that time the paper was printed in Rainier until the Chief installed a cylinder press. Veatch sold his interest in 1921 to S. F. Scibird. [31] Hyde's health declined which led her and Scibird to sell the paper in 1922 to Earle Richardson and W. Arther Steele. [32] Richardson went on to buy the Elgin Recorder later that year, [33] and sold his Chief shares to Steele. [4] [19] About three decades later Steele was named president of the Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association in 1953. [34] He published the paper for five decades and also served as the town's mayor for 18 years and a councilman for six years. [35] Arthur and his wife Melvina Steele ran the paper together until Melvina's death in 1972, when their son Gail Steele took over. [36] [19] Arthur Steele died in 1988. [37] Gail Steele died in 1999 and his daughter Deborah Steele Hazen inherited the paper. [38] In 2014, The Clatskanie Chief 's name was changed to simply The Chief. [39] That same year Hazen sold the newspaper to Country Media, Inc. [40]
In December 2023, Country Media announced The Chronicle and The Chief will merge to create a new weekly newspaper called The Columbia County Chronicle & Chief. [41] The change was made due to declining revenue and difficulty recruiting and retaining experienced staff. Country Media president Steve Hungerford said: “Combining the two newspapers into one was a last-ditch effort to reduce expenses and reestablish profitability." But the effort was unsuccessful and after eight months the paper was closed. Its last issue was published on September 25, 2024. [2] [3]
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.
Clatskanie is a city in Columbia County, Oregon, United States. It was named for the Tlatskanai Native American tribe, and the Clatskanie River which flows through the town and empties into the Columbia River about four miles to the north. The population was 1,737 at the 2010 Census.
The Clatskanie River is a tributary of the Columbia River, approximately 25 miles (40 km) long, in northwestern Oregon in the United States. It drains a timber-producing area in the foothills of the Northern Oregon Coast Range north-northwest of Portland.
U.S. Route 30 (US 30) in the U.S. state of Oregon is a major east–west United States Numbered Highway that runs from its western terminus in Astoria to the Idaho border east of Ontario. West of Portland, US 30 generally follows the southern shore of the Columbia River; east of Portland, the highway has largely been replaced with Interstate 84 (I-84), though it is signed all the way across the state, and diverges from the I-84 mainline in several towns as a de facto business route. Out of all the states US 30 traverses, it spends the most time in Oregon. At 477.02 miles (767.69 km), it is also the longest road in the state.
The Daily News is a newspaper covering Longview, Kelso, Washington, and Cowlitz County, Washington in the United States. Apart from a brief period in the 1990s when, prior to ceasing publication, the Cowlitz County Advocate was published in Longview, the Daily News has been Longview's only newspaper since its inception.
Bradley State Scenic Viewpoint is a state park in the U.S. state of Oregon, administered by the Oregon Parks and Recreation Department. It is located directly north of U.S. Route 30 between Astoria and Portland.
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.
The Cottage Grove Sentinel is a weekly newspaper serving the city of Cottage Grove, Oregon, United States. It was established in 1889 and is published on Wednesdays with a circulation of 2,829.
The Central Oregonian is a twice-weekly newspaper published in Prineville in the U.S. state of Oregon. Tracing its roots to 1881, the paper covers Central Oregon where it is the newspaper of record for Crook County.
Columbia Gorge News is a weekly newspaper based in Hood River, Oregon. It covers communities throughout the Columbia River Gorge, including those in Wasco County, Oregon and Klickitat County, Washington. It was formed in April 2020 by the merger of The Dalles Chronicle, Hood River News and White Salmon Enterprise after Eagle Newspapers sold them to Chelsea Marr. The paper has a circulation around 7,000 and publishes on Wednesdays. Columbia Gorge News is a member of the Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association.
Sarah Dixon was a wooden sternwheel-driven steamboat operated by the Shaver Transportation Company on the Columbia and lower Willamette rivers from 1892 to 1926. Originally Sarah Dixon was built as a mixed use passenger and freight vessel, and was considered a prestige vessel for the time.
The Columbia County Spotlight, previously known as the Scappoose Spotlight and the South County Spotlight, is a weekly newspaper in Columbia County, Oregon, United States, established in 1961. The paper serves Scappoose and St. Helens, and covers communities along Highway 30 from Linnton and Sauvie Island to Clatskanie. The editorial staff is based in Scappoose, while some administration and creative services are based in Milwaukie at the headquarters of Pamplin Media Group, which owns the newspaper. The Spotlight is one of a number of community newspapers in the group, including the Forest Grove News-Times and the Hillsboro Tribune. It is a general member of the Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association and its coverage has been cited by other newspapers in the area, including The Oregonian. The paper it is part of the Northwest News Partnership, along with Daily Astorian and the EO Media Group.
Manzanillo was a stern-wheel driven steamboat built at Portland, Oregon in 1881. Manzanillo was first run on the Columbia River route from Portland to Clatskanie, Oregon and way points along the river. The initial owner of the boat was the People's Freighting Company, but the Shaver family soon acquired control of the vessel, which became the first vessel of what is now Shaver Transportation Company.
Mascot was a sternwheel-driven steamboat built in 1890 which operated primarily on a route running from Portland, Oregon down the Willamette and Columbia rivers to points on the Lewis and Lake rivers. Points served included the town of Woodland, Washington, on the main branch of the Lewis, and La Center, Washington on the east fork.
Northwest was a steamboat that operated on the Columbia, Cowlitz and lower Willamette rivers from 1889 to 1907. In 1907 Northwest was transferred to Alaska, where it sank on the Skeena River
Joseph Kellogg was a stern-wheel driven steamboat that operated on the Willamette, Columbia, and Cowlitz rivers for the Kellogg Transportation Company. It was named after the company's founder, Joseph Kellogg (1812-1903). The sternwheeler Joseph Kellogg was built in 1881 at Portland, Oregon.
The Heppner Gazette-Times is a weekly newspaper serving Morrow County in the U.S. state of Oregon. It has a circulation of 1,430.
Columbia County Rider is a transit service in Columbia County, Oregon, that is managed by the Columbia County Transit Division. It is a part of NW Connector, an alliance of small bus networks in Northwest Oregon. As of July 2021, CC Rider comprises one bus route connecting St. Helens and Scappoose to Portland.
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. The company previously owned newspapers in the West North Central states.