Journal Star (Peoria)
July 27, 2005 front page | |
Type | Daily newspaper (morning) |
---|---|
Format | Broadsheet |
Owner(s) | GateHouse Media |
Publisher | Ken Mauser |
Founded |
December 17, 1855 (Peoria Daily Transcript) 1954 (merger of Journal-Transcript and Star) |
Language | English |
Headquarters |
1 News Plaza Peoria, Illinois 61643 United States |
Circulation |
63,024 weekdays 64,078 Saturdays 72,607 Sundays in 2012[1] |
OCLC number | 8807680 |
Website | pjstar.com |
The Journal Star is the major daily newspaper for Peoria, Illinois, and surrounding area. First owned locally, then employee-owned, it became a Copley-owned entity in 1996. In 2007, the paper was sold to Fairport, New York-based GateHouse Media.[2]
History
The oldest ancestor of the Journal Star, the Peoria Daily Transcript, was founded by N.C. Nason and first published on December 17, 1855.[3] It has a daily circulation of approximately 65,000 copies and a Sunday circulation of 90,350 copies. The Peoria Journal founded as an afternoon paper by Eugene F. Baldwin, the owner of the El Paso Journal and a former editor of the Daily Transcript, and J. B. Barnes, and first publisher on December 3, 1877. Henry Means Pindell started the Peoria Herald in 1889; and soon bought out the Daily Transcript, forming the Herald-Transcript. Baldwin, who had since left the Journal, started the Peoria Star, with Charles M. Powell on November 7, 1897. Pindell bought the Journal in 1900, sold the Herald-Transcript in 1902, and, after that newspaper had become the Transcript, bought it back in 1916 and merged it with the Journal, creating the Peoria Journal-Transcript, with the Transcript in the morning and the Journal in the afternoon.[4]
In 1944, the Journal and Transcript and their rival Star combined presses as Peoria Newspapers Inc. with the Star as a morning paper and the Journal-Transcript as an afternoon paper, but retained their competition in journalism until 1954, when a full merger was agreed to. Once the agreement was reached, both the morning and afternoon papers immediately changed their names to the Journal Star. To hold the merged newspaper, the current newspaper headquarters were built near War Memorial Drive (U.S. Route 150) and the McClugage Bridge; the first edition from the new presses was on November 14, 1955.[4]
During a newspaper strike in 1958, members of the Newspaper Guild printed a temporary paper, The Peoria Citizen.[4]
The Peoria Journal Star has owned and operated various television and radio outlets in Peoria, Bloomington, Lafayette, Indiana, and Indianapolis, Indiana.
In the 1980 presidential election, the Journal Star endorsed Libertarian candidate Ed Clark.[5]
Between 1984 and 1990, the Journal Star Employee Stock Ownership Plan bought about 83 percent of the company, making it effectively employee-owned. It company also bought the Galesburg Register-Mail of Galesburg, Illinois, in 1989. However, the success for the employees had the opposite effect for the company itself, as it had to buy back stock of large numbers of early retirees. The paper was sold to Copley Press, owned by Helen Copley, in 1996; Copley also owned the downstate Illinois papers the State Journal-Register in Springfield, Illinois and the Lincoln Courier.[3]
When Copley purchased the paper in 1996, the daily circulation was 75,000+. According to a Knight Foundation report in 2005, the Journal Star circulation is now 65,126. The Journal Star is the highest-circulation newspaper in downstate Illinois and the fourth-highest circulation Illinois newspaper. As of September 2006, the Journal Star was the 136th-largest newspaper in the United States.[6]
Being a paper-boy for the paper in the 1950s was potentially very rewarding. In addition to the comradeship around the paper-boy drop-off points, the paper ran periodic contests to expand its circulation. Out of town trips were set up for paper-boys that met a quota of paper starts. The paper in this way took bus-loads of paper-boys from Peoria to such places as Chicago (Riverview Amusement Park), Detroit, Cincinnati, and a one-week train trip to a dude ranch in Colorado.
References
- ↑ "FAS-FAX Report: Circulation Averages for the Six Months Ended March 31, 2012". Arlington Heights, Ill.: Audit Bureau of Circulations. Retrieved May 21, 2012.
- ↑ Editor & Publisher. "GateHouse Completes $380 Million Purchase Of Copley Midwest Papers". Retrieved 2007-04-13.
- 1 2 "About GateHouse Media, Inc". pjstar.com. GateHouse Media. 2009-12-09. Retrieved 2010-03-15.
- 1 2 3 Adams, Bill (1993-09-23). "Journal Star history". Peoria Journal Star. GateHouse Media. Retrieved 2010-03-15.
- ↑ Doherty, Brian. Radicals for Capitalism: A Freewheeling History of the Modern American Libertarian Movement, pg. 414
- ↑ Audit Bureau of Circulations. "Top 200 Newspapers by Largest Reported Circulation". Archived from the original on April 29, 2007. Retrieved 2007-04-13.
External links
- pjstar.com — Peoria Journal Star official website