- The Herald (Rock Hill)
Infobox_Newspaper
name = The Herald
caption = The front page of "The Herald"
fromMarch 18 ,2006
type = Dailynewspaper
format =Broadsheet
foundation =1872 (as "The Lantern")
owners =The McClatchy Company
publisher = Debbie Abels
editor = Paul Osmundson
political =
circulation = Daily: 31,614
Sunday: 33,020
price =USD 0.35 Monday-SaturdayUSD 1.00 Sundays
headquarters = 132 W. Main St.
Rock Hill, SC 29732United States
website = [http://www.heraldonline.com www.heraldonline.com]"The Herald" is a daily morning newspaper published in
Rock Hill, South Carolina , in theUnited States . Its coverage area includes York County, where Rock Hill is located, and two neighboring counties in the Upstate: Chester and Lancaster. In 1990, the paper was bought byThe McClatchy Company of Sacramento, California. The publisher is Debbie Abels, and the editor is Paul Osmundson.History
The paper traces its lineage to 1872, when "The Lantern", a four-page weekly, was founded. The newspaper was designed to be a voice of reason in opposition to the extremism of the
Ku Klux Klan , which was politically influential in York County at the time. The Lantern changed hands several times and ceased publication in January 1874. But its owners soon started a new newspaper called "The Grange", which focused more on farming than politics. In 1876, "The Grange" was merged with a newspaper called "The Benefactor" to create "The Hampton Herald", named in honor of Wade Hampton, the former Confederate general who was running for governor of South Carolina that year on a platform in opposition to Reconstruction. The name was changed by new owners to "The Rock Hill Herald" in January 1879.The paper became a semi-weekly in 1893. In 1911, it was converted to a daily afternoon paper — except Sundays — and renamed "The Evening Herald". That name and production schedule would endure for 75 years through several ownership changes.
In March 1985, the company was purchased by the
News & Observer Co. ofRaleigh, North Carolina , then owned by descendants ofJosephus Daniels . The new owners changed the Saturday edition to morning and got rid of the "Evening" part of the name. In 1986, they launched a Sunday edition and two years later switched to morning publication seven days a week. In 1990, the Daniels family sold the paper to McClatchy. The purchase of The Herald and two other dailies inSouth Carolina -- "The Island Packet " in Hilton Head, and "The Beaufort Gazette " of Beaufort -- marked McClatchy's first foray into the Southern United States. "The Herald" was reunited with the "N&O" when McClatchy bought the Raleigh paper in1995 .McClatchy's purchase of most of
Knight Ridder 's properties, finalized in June 2006, made "The Herald" a sister publication of its longtime rival, the "Charlotte Observer ." The papers plan to remain separate, and the publisher of the Observer has said the paper has no plans to close its Rock Hill bureau.On November 7th, 2007 it was announced that Valerie Canepa, publisher of the Herald for the past four and a half years, would be moving to Columbus, GA to become publisher of the Columbus Ledger-Enquirer. At the same time it was also announced that Debbie Abels, 34-year veteran of the Charlotte Observer, would take over as publisher beginning November 26, 2007. Debbie Abels will also report to the publisher of The Charlotte Observer, Ann Caulkins, instead of the McClatchy Regional Vice President as Canepa did.
Jim Hoagland , a nationally syndicated columnist for "The Washington Post " and a winner of thePulitzer Prize , began his career working summers at "The Evening Herald".Integration with The Charlotte Observer
External links
* [http://heraldonline.com/ heraldonline.com official site]
* [http://buzzfans.com/ Herald Sports]
* [http://www.mcclatchy.com/146/story/493.html The McClatchy Company's subsidiary profile of "The Herald"]
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