Type | Daily newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Broadsheet |
Owner(s) | Sinclair Broadcast Group |
Publisher | Trif Alatzas |
Founded | 1869 |
Headquarters | Ellicott City, Maryland & Columbia, Maryland |
Website | howardcountytimes |
The Howard County Times is a weekly newspaper serving Howard County, Maryland, USA.
Although it claims to trace its earliest origins to 1840, [1] it was refounded as a weekly newspaper in 1869 as The Ellicott City Times, after the purchase of the brief post-American Civil War periodical Ellicott City Record a weekly newspaper then. After nine decades of bearing the name of its main town and county seat, in 1958, its name was changed to The Howard County Times to reflect it's wider coverage of county issues, affairs, and events. It went through other significant changes of ownership in 1882 and 1920. It was finally acquired in 1978 by the then-independent local publisher Patuxent Publishing Company with offices in the nearby city of Columbia, a futuristic planned town by nationally renowned developer James Rouse, along with several other local community weekly papers in Howard County and neighboring Baltimore County (using the Times nameplate) to the northeast in several suburban areas and surrounding Baltimore City in a horseshoe arc. [2]
The Howard County Times is now owned by the Baltimore Sun Media Group, which is a subsidiary of the region's major daily newspaper The Sun, which in turn is now owned since earlier this year by Smith and his Sinclair syndicate. [3] The Howard County paper maintains its online news page on The Baltimore Sun website. [4]
The Howard County Times traces its history to 1840, when the Howard Free Press was established by Edward Waite and Matthew Fields in what was known then as Ellicott Mills, (later renamed Ellicott City). the major mill town along the upper branches of the Patapsco River (and future county seat) of Howard County, Maryland, just southwest of Baltimore, the major city and port of Maryland and the Chesapeake Bay. [5] The newspaper was published until 1842. Between 1840 and the American Civil War (1861-1865), a succession of newspapers opened and closed in Ellicott Mills, serving the designated in 1838 as the Howard or Western District of Anne Arundel County until the separation and erection of Howard as a separate county in 1851 in the State of Maryland as authorized by the General Assembly of Maryland sitting in the state capital of Annapolis. During these years of the early 1850s also saw debates and work for the ratification of the Maryland Constitution of 1851 (to succeed the original document from the American Revolution period in 1776) which influenced the status of the new county separated and laid out in the center of the state between Baltimore and Washington, D.C. and then afterwards the future course of the new 22nd jurisdiction in the state of the new Howard County. After the Patapsco Enterprise closed in the fall of 1861, no other newspaper was published in Howard County during the remainder of the war until 1865 when the Howard County Record was founded by publisher Isaiah Wolfersberger. In 1869, John R. Brown, Jr., a Howard County native who had served in the Confederate States Army during the Civil War, purchased the Howard County Record and changed its name to The Ellicott City Times. Under Brown, the newspaper was successful and thrived. After Brown's death in 1877, the paper had a number of short owners. Five years later, in 1882, Edwin Warfield, (1848–1920), became owner and publisher of the Howard County and Ellicott City news sheet. Besides his local interests close to home he later became the 45th Governor of Maryland, serving from 1904-1908, at the turn of the 19th to 20th centuries and was also future banker, establishing the Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland, a banking and trust firm established in 1890 in Downtown Baltimore (with a landmark office at the northwest corner of the North Charles and West Lexington Streets) built in 1894 (reconstructed and expanded after damaged by Great Baltimore Fire of 1904) and also founder and publisher of The Daily Record , a daily business and legal newspaper in Baltimore. After Warfield's death, publication was continued by the Warfield family over the next century expanding into a small economic media empire with a glossy monthly magazine before being sold.
Following the death of Warfield in 1920, the Howard County Times was then owned by a local county partnership of Maryland Circuit Court Judge James A. Clark Sr. (1884-1955), Paul Talbot, and Paul Griffith ("Pete") Stromberg, (1892–1952), who took over as editor. Stromberg was later elected a state senator representing Howard County in the Maryland Senate (upper chamber of the Maryland General Assembly) and an editor of The Baltimore Sun , a major daily morning newspaper in Baltimore (then published since its 1837 by the longtime owners of the A. S. Abell Company of the Abell family and descendants (plus additional Black family of investors in 1910) of co-founder Arunah Shepherdson Abell (1806-1888). Coincidentally, decades later would see The Sunpapers along with its later syndicate chain owner, the Tribune Company (of the Chicago Tribune and the Los Angeles Times ), would in turn also purchase and absorb the Howard County Times in a later merger with its last independent publisher, the Patuxent Publishing Company of Columbia, Maryland. [6]
In 1940, Stromberg took control of the Maryland Printing and Publishing Company, which gave him sole ownership of the paper. Shortly after he took total control as publisher, the Ellicott City Times put out a special issue of 80 pages packed thick with ads and congratulatory notices plus photos, illustrations, and descriptive historical articles for its centennial in March 1941. Stromberg in turn created or purchased over the next few post-World War II years, 11 new local papers in the nearby growing suburban (Baltimore County) or outlying/surrounding Baltimore City communities and neighborhoods, eventually ringing around Baltimore in a horseshoe shaped arc, naming his syndicate the Stromberg Newspapers and employed his nephew Charles L Gerwig as editor. Some of these were the Arbutus Times, Catonsville Times , Owings Mills Times, Towson Times, The Jeffersonian, (Towson) Northeast Record, (Parkville / Carney / Overlea) Northeast Booster, [North] Baltimore Messenger (Baltimore City) and the Laurel Leader . [7]
On November 12, 1958, after nearly 90 years, the name of The Ellicott City Times was changed to The Howard County Times to reflect increased county-wide coverage. [8]
In 1965, The Columbia Times was created by Stromberg Newspapers as a spin-off newspaper for the new growing planned town of Columbia and its traditional main street of the small business district to the new growth in central Howard County. Stromberg's daughter, Doris Stromberg Thompson, took over as editor of the paper for the next 12 years from 1966 to 1978, and focused on the phenomenal growth of the new community and its villages. [9]
The separate competing Columbia Flier was established by Zeke Orlinsky four years later after the start of the Columbia Times in 1969, and two years after Rouse began officially opening and publicizing development of Columbia after purchasing major land buys in secret in the central county during the mid-1960s. It formed a coupon flier for the new development of Columbia. As the new town grew quickly and additional surrounding villages were laid out, Orlinsky's paper served a larger market than the Times. The Stromberg Company syndicate eventually purchased the newer Flier paper. [10] The editor, Tom Graham, used the paper to encourage the growth of Columbia, promoting political candidates who supported the vision of Rouse and the project. [11]
In 1978, The Rouse Company architect Robert Moon designed a new headquarters building for the Patuxent Publishing Company in a modernist building leading into central Columbia. Moon's wife worked at the firm as well, becoming editor of the Columbia Flier and then general manager of Patuxent Publishing. The Baltimore Sun Media Group purchased Patuxent Publishing Company, including the ancient Howard County Times and newer Columbia Flier, integrating the local papers into its growing stable of several daily papers in several regional county seats and towns of several other suburban weekly community newspapers. The Patuxent Publishing/Columbia Flier building was put up for sale, but no tenants were signed up for sale for over three years. [12] In 2014, former Baltimore Sun reporter and news editor and now public relations director for Howard County, David Nitkin, announced that the then-Howard County Executive Ken Ulman, directed the purchase of the Patuxent/Flier building by the county for $2.8 million dollars. [13] County councilperson Mary Kay Sigaty announced the building where husband Tom Graham used to work as an editor would be rebuilt as a replacement headquarters for the county's Economic Development Authority and the Maryland Center for Entrepreneurship. [14]
Columbia is a census-designated place in Howard County, Maryland, United States. It is a planned community consisting of 10 self-contained villages. The census-designated place had a population of 104,681 at the 2020 census, making it the second most populous community in Maryland after Baltimore. Columbia, located between Baltimore and Washington, D.C., is officially part of the Baltimore metropolitan area.
Ellicott City is an unincorporated community and census-designated place in, and the county seat of, Howard County, Maryland, United States. Part of the Baltimore metropolitan area, its population was 75,947 at the 2020 census, making it the most populous unincorporated county seat in the country.
Guilford is an unincorporated community located in Howard County in the state of Maryland. The location is named after the Guilford Mill. Guilford is near Kings Contrivance, one of the nine "villages" of Columbia.
Edwin Warfield was an American politician and a member of the United States Democratic Party, and the 45th Governor of Maryland in the United States from 1904 to 1908. From 1902 to 1903, he served as president general of the National Society of the Sons of the American Revolution.
River Hill is the last and westernmost village to be developed in the town of Columbia, Maryland, United States, though some residents maintain addresses in Clarksville. The village is home to 6,520 residents in 2,096 housing units in 2014. The area was used as a game preserve by James Rouse to entertain clients and personal hunting during the buildout of the Columbia project. In 1976, County Executive Edward L. Cochran selected the 784-acre parcel owned by Howard Research and Development for an alternate location for a county landfill; a task force selected Alpha Ridge Landfill instead. Residential construction started in 1990. It is bounded by Maryland Route 108 and Maryland Route 32, and is centered on Trotter Road. The village is divided into two neighborhoods: Pheasant Ridge and Pointers Run, with about 6,500 residents.
Kings Contrivance is a village in the planned community of Columbia, Maryland, United States and is home to approximately 11,000 residents. It is Columbia's southernmost village, and was the eighth of Columbia's ten villages to be developed. Kings Contrivance consists of the neighborhoods of Macgill's Common, Huntington and Dickinson, and includes single-family homes, townhouses, apartments and a Village Center.
Maryland Route 175 is a state highway in the U.S. state of Maryland. The highway runs 17.01 miles (27.37 km) from Little Patuxent Parkway in Columbia east to MD 3 in Millersville. MD 175 is a major highway through the large unincorporated community of Columbia; the highway connects U.S. Route 29 next to Columbia Town Center with Interstate 95 (I-95) and an industrial area on the eastern side of Howard County. MD 175 also connects Fort Meade with Jessup and Odenton in western Anne Arundel County, where it links MD 295 and MD 32 with the eastern part of the U.S. Army base.
The Howard County Public School System (HCPSS) is the school district that manages and runs the public schools of Howard County, Maryland. It operates under the supervision of an elected, eight-member Board of Education. Jennifer Mallo is the chair of the board. William J. Barnes has been the acting superintendent since January 2024.
The Savage Mill is a historic cotton mill complex in Savage, Maryland, which has been turned into a complex of shops and restaurants. It was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1974. It is located in the Savage Mill Historic District. Buildings in the complex date from 1822 to 1916.
Dorsey's Search is a parcel of land patented by John Dorsey of Hockley-in-the-hole (1645–1714) in Baltimore County. The 479-acre (194 ha) property adjacent to the north branch of the Patuxent river was surveyed by Richard Beard in December 1684, and granted to Dorsey in March 1696. The property lying between "Long Reach" and "Elk Ridge" was resurveyed in March 1723 to include 750 acres (300 ha). After several generations of inheritance, a series of legal disputes were held over the land by Rezin Hammond and Richard Ridgley in 1820. In 1827 the property exchanged hands to Robert Oliver, builder of Oakland Mill, who combined it with multiple properties totaling 2,300 acres (930 ha). George Gaither acquired the property in 1838. John Dorsey's grandson, "Patuxent" John Dorsey of "Dorsey's Search" built Dorsey Hall at the site.
Lake Kittamaqundi is a man made 27-acre (110,000 m2) reservoir located in Columbia, Maryland in the vicinity of the Mall in Columbia as well as Merriweather Post Pavilion. It is also adjacent to offices and visible from US-29.
Dorsey Hall is a historic home in Columbia, Maryland, United States. It is a six-by-one-bay, 2+1⁄2-story stucco structure with a gable roof covered with asphalt shingles. It is a well-preserved and detailed example of the vernacular dwellings of the early 19th century in Howard County and associated with the Dorsey family, one of the "first families" of the county.
The Middle Patuxent Environmental Area (MPEA) is a 1,021-acre (4.13 km2) wildlife area in Clarksville, Maryland and operated by the Howard County Department of Recreation and Parks. It is located next to the River Hill village in the town of Columbia, Maryland, in the United States. The MPEA was created in 1996 for educational, research, and recreational purposes.
Charles E. Miller (1902–1979) was an American politician and businessman in Howard County, Maryland
Norman E. Moxley (1905-1995) was an American politician and businessman in Howard County, Maryland
The Laurel Leader is a weekly newspaper which has been published continually since 1897, serving the greater Laurel, Maryland area, including Prince George's, Montgomery, Anne Arundel, and Howard Counties. The Leader operates as a subsidiary of The Baltimore Sun.
Oakland or Oakland Manor is a Federal style stone manor house commissioned in 1810 by Charles Sterrett Ridgely in the Howard District of Anne Arundel County, Maryland. The lands that became Oakland Manor were patented by John Dorsey as "Dorsey's Adventure" in 1688 which was willed to his grandson Edward Dorsey. In 1785, Luther Martin purchased properties named "Dorsey's Adventure", "Dorsey's Inheritance", "Good for Little", "Chew's Vineyard", and "Adam the First" to make the 2300 acre "Luther Martin's Elkridge Farm".
The Simpsonville Mill is a historic pre-colonial mill complex in Simpsonville, Maryland, part of the Columbia, Maryland land development.
The Howard County Courthouse is a historic building in Ellicott City, Maryland that was the courthouse for Howard County's Circuit Court from 1843 to 2021.
Paul Griffith ("Pete") Stromberg was the owner since 1940 and editor since 1920 of "The Howard County Times", founded 1840 in Ellicott City, Maryland, the county seat of Howard County, which later grew into a syndicate of local community newspapers known as the "Stromberg Newspapers" in Howard County, Anne Arundel County, Prince George's County, Baltimore County and Baltimore City. He also was a Maryland State Senator from Howard County in the General Assembly of Maryland.