A Brief History of Newspaper Publishing in Oregon
By Richard Heinzkill
University of Oregon Libraries
August 1993
Introduction
Newspapers usually do not appear in a state until there is a sufficient
number of readers to make their appearance worthwhile. Such is the case
in Oregon. Until the 1830s Oregon had only a few outposts, connected
with the fur trade. In the 1830s Protestant and Catholic missionaries
accompanied a few settlers who ventured into the territory. However,
the settlement of Oregon began in earnest with the Great Migration
overland from the east in 1843. By 1846 there were enough people in the
Willamette Valley to form a provisional government. In 1849 Congress
recognized the Oregon Territory and statehood was granted in 1859.
History of Early
Newspapers
In 1844 the Oregon Lyceum was founded in Oregon City for the express
purpose of providing the growing community with a newspaper. Shares
were sold to finance the purchase of a press, type and paper. It took a
while for the press to arrive from New York City, so it wasn't until
February 5, 1846 that the first newspaper the Oregon
Spectator, appeared. Two years later a second newspaper,
the Free Press, also began in Oregon City.
The state's third newspaper, Western Star,
appeared in the nearby town of Milwaukie in 1850, moving to Portland
the following year to compete with the Oregonian, which had begun there
in December 1850. Still in operation today, the Oregonian is the older
continuously published newspaper in the Far West and one of the few
statewide newspapers in the country.
In March 1851 the Statesman started up in
Oregon City, but soon moved to Corvallis and then again to Salem where
it is still published.
By 1860 there were 13 newspapers in operation, of which two were
dailies. Due to the expense of importing printing presses, many of
Oregon's early papers were printed on a small handful of presses, some
of which are still extant and treasured. As a publisher became
prosperous enough to buy state-of-the-art equipment, the old press was
sold and became again the start-up press of a new publication.
Although Oregon ended up on the side of the Union in the War Between
the States, at the time there was much pro-Southern sentiment in the
state, which was passionately reflected in several newspapers. The
Republicans who were in control of the state government brought
pressure to bear on the postal authorities to refuse to handle these
"abusive and treasonable" papers through the mail, in effect putting
them out of business. Some newspapers resorted to hand delivery, others
changed their name and resumed publication until again forced to shut
down - only to be quickly reborn again under yet another name in an
attempt to fool the post office.
Oregon's early newspapers reflected the strong political positions
commonly held by newspapers. One of the most noted of the outspoken
publishers was Abigail Scott Duniway, a campaigner for women's rights.
Duniway's brother, Harvey Scott, was editor of the Oregonian
and promoted a conservative agenda. To publicize her opposition to
Scott, Duniway started her own paper, the New Northwest,
in 1871 and was instrumental in the 1912 passage of voting rights for
Oregon women. Duniway was the first woman to register, and the first
woman to cast a vote in an Oregon election, eight years before women
gained the right to vote nationwide.
Growth
In 1880 Oregon had seven dailies, 58 weeklies, and eight published at
other intervals for a total of 74 papers. By 1916 this figure had more
than tripled, to 270 papers. During the Depression many papers folded
until by 1940 there were only 125. However, the number of papers does
not tell the whole story. Percentage of readers in relation to the
population would be a better indicator of the health of the state's
newspapers but those figures have not been compiled.
Labor
Records for the early days of the labor movement in Oregon are skimpy.
One historian says the first labor group in the state was an
organization of printers which formed in Portland in 1853; the second
labor group also were printers who banded together to apply for
membership in the National Typographical Union in 1862. From then on
the record is strangely silent about printers' involvement in organized
labor. The history of editorial staff and shop unions in the 20th
century has yet to be written. However, several observations can be
made: the unions were active, strikes were very few, and union strength
today is almost nil.
One strike is especially notable because it was long, bitter, and in
the end hastened the diminishing power of the newspaper unions in
Portland. The strike began in November 1959 against the Oregonian
and Oregon Journal. The National Labor
Relations Board ruled the strike illegal in November 1963. By the
following April the last two remaining unions quit and declared both
plants open shops. By that time the strike was over. Having run over
five years, it was the third longest newspaper strike in the United
States. During this period, striking newspaper people put out a weekly,
the Reporter, to compete with the Oregonian
and Oregon Journal. Because the same company
owned both these latter newspapers, many people supported the Reporter
as healthy competition. Although the Reporter's circulation reached
78,000, it folded after having lasted almost five years. This challenge
to local newspaper monopoly generated much national attention.
Ownership
Running a newspaper, especially a small newspaper (of which Oregon has
had a goodly number), has always been a precarious business. Some
people succeed, some people do not. Some Oregon newspapers have had the
same ownership for over 75 years. Others change ownership more often;
an extreme example is the Dufur paper, which changed ownership 18 times
in the 41 years of its existence.
In the past 25 years, the trend both locally and nationally has been
for corporations to consolidate the publication of several newspapers.
The sale of the Oregonian (Portland) to S.I.
Newhouse in 1950 was a significant event in American journalism. Up
until that time the Newhouse Group had concentrated on acquiring
newspapers on the East Coast and several in the Midwest. The jump to
the West Coast launched the Newhouse Group on a series of acquisitions
throughout the country, until today they are one of the largest media
owners in the United States. The trend toward ownership of many
newspapers, despite the absentee owners' avowed commitment to local control, is a
concern to many newspaper editors and social critics.
Other corporations owning newspapers in Oregon are the Ottaway
Newspaper Group, Scripps-Ifft Newspapers, Inc., Eagle Newspapers, Lee
Newspapers, and Capital Cities Communication, who own ten Oregon
newspapers.
Special Groups of
Readers
The history of non-English newspapers in Oregon is not well documented.
There have been several published in their native language for
immigrant populations. The earliest one is the German newspaper, Oregon
Deutsche Zeitung, starting in Portland in 1868 and
continuing under various names until 1917. The state's most famous
German newspaper, St. Joseph Blatt, began as
a parish newsletter in Portland in 1888, but soon moved to Mount Angel
where it expanded and generated enough readership to continue up until
July 1991.
As Portland has long been a major port for the Pacific Rim, it has had
a substantial Asian population. In 1880 nearly one-quarter of
Portland's population was Chinese; it is likely there was a Chinese
newspaper but none has been located. Oregon News
in Japanese had a long run - from 1904 until World War II.
The large Scandinavian influx was served by several Swedish newspapers,
none of which lasted beyond World War II, and a Finnish newspaper,
Lannen
Suometar, coming out of Astoria from 1939 to 1951.
There has been an Italian newspaper in Portland almost continuously
from 1912 through 1964, first La Tribuna Italiana,
then Columbia Record.
Seasonal Hispanic migrant workers were sometimes served by supplements
printed in Spanish and distributed with local newspapers or a
Spanish-language page in the body of the paper. In recent years more
Hispanic people have become year-round residents. Two statewide
newspapers are published for them: one, El Hispanic News
(Portland) is mostly in English, and Go Latino
(Salem) is mostly in Spanish.
There were not many African-Americans in the state until work in the
Portland shipyards during World War II attracted them to Portland,
where the majority of the state's African-Americans still live. Most
likely the first newspaper to concentrate on news of interest to the
African-American community was the Northwest Clarion
which started in 1946 and lasted into the early 1970s. Presently
African-Americans have their choice of the Portland
Observer (since 1970) and The Skanner
(since 1975). Recently a Eugene publisher began a newspaper, Eugene
Observer, for the African-American
community there.
During the 1960s several alternative newspapers started up, especially
in the Willamette Valley and the southern part of the state. Several of
them, in somewhat altered guises, are still being published, e.g.
Eugene
Weekly (Eugene) and Willamette Valley
Observer (Portland).
Awards and
Professional Development
Oregon journalists won Pulitzer prizes in 1934, 1937, 1939, and 1957.
They also participated in the Pulitzer Prize process by regularly being
selected to serve on Pulitzer nominating committees.
Although several colleges and universities in Oregon have courses in
journalism, the undergraduate and graduate program at the University of
Oregon has dominated journalism education in the state. Established as
a professional school in 1916, it is one of the oldest journalism
schools in the country.
The Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association was founded in 1887. It
soon eclipsed other similar organizations and became a dominant force
in Oregon newspapers publishing. The ONPA is an assertive professional
organization that has done much to lobby for some of the strongest
freedom of information, shield and open meeting laws in the nation.
There is a long record of cooperation between the University of
Oregon's journalism faculty and the Oregon Newspaper Publishers
Association. Journalism faculty have spoken at their meetings, been
inducted as honorary members, and served on the Board of Directors. For
many years up until 1973, when ONPA moved to Portland, its executive
offices were located in the same building as the School of Journalism.
Oregon newspaper personnel have also drawn attention to themselves
nationally by regularly winning Nieman Fellowships for advanced study
at Harvard.
Present
Characteristics of Oregon Newspapers
Outside of the Portland metropolitan area, Oregon is basically a large
state with only a few medium-sized cities and many small towns. This is
reflected in the present publishing pattern of only 19 dailies, but ten
semi-weeklies and 76 weeklies. Some newspapers are produced with almost
completely computerized operations; others retain some mechanized or
manual methods. A letterpress was used to print the Sherman County
Journal until the owner of the one-man operation retired in late 1997.
Over 20 Oregon newspapers are more than 100 years old.
In general, newspapers in Oregon reflect trends in newspaper publishing
in the rest of the country. For instance, free distribution community
newspapers have been started and continue to thrive. And in keeping
with the new look of newspapers made popular by USA Today,
many Oregon newspapers have recently been restyled.
Although this short history has focused on general newspapers, several
religious newspapers have been and continue to be an important part of
newspaper publishing in Oregon, including among others: St.
Josephs Blatt, the Catholic Sentinel
, and the Oregon Episcopal Churchman. Also
there are several trade and industry newspapers issued for Oregon
audiences, and several which aim at a national readership.
Historiography
Writings about Oregon newspapers comprise a very short list. The
following works account for nearly all of the titles eligible for such
a list.
George Turnbull, who was acquainted with many of the pioneers of Oregon
journalism, put together a fascinating compilation of stories about
those who founded and ran Oregon newspapers from the beginning up until
he wrote his History of Oregon Newspapers in
1938. Early Oregon newspapers have attracted the attention of several
graduate students: Flora B. Ludington did a study of Oregon newspapers
during the period 1846-1870 , Donald L. Guimary wrote about the
Portland Reporter , Bonnie Wiley tells of the Oregonian's early years,
Roy W. Adam portrayed Oregon politics and the "Oregon style" from
1855-1865 when Union and anti-Union feeling ran high in the state.
For many years newspapers provided an outlet for Oregonians wanting to
have their poetry and essays in print. Several columnists and editorial
writers were also regarded throughout the state as literary figures.
Alfred Power's History of Oregon Literature
details the newspapers' role in Oregon's early literature.
Newspapers themselves are a source of their history as told in
commemorative editions issued usually on the occasion of the paper's
anniversary. Some of these can be found cataloged in local libraries,
but for the most part their existence is not known other than by
browsing newspaper files. Otherwise few Oregon newspapers have a
published history; notable exceptions are the histories of Oregon
Spectator, East Oregonian
(Pendleton) by Gordon Macnab, Register-Guard
(Eugene) by Warren Price, Oregon Journal
(Portland) by Marshall Dana, Oregonian
(Portland) by Robert Notson, Reporter (Portland) by Allen Hoffard and
the Wallowa County
Chieftain (Enterprise) by Lloyd Coffman.
Oregon journalists have been the subject of several biographies, some
of them done as graduate school projects. George Putnam
was written by George Turnbull, Thomas Jefferson Dryer
by Richard S. Cramer, Harvey Scott by Lee M.
Nash, Sheldon Fr. Sackett by Joseph R. Sand,
and E. Hofer by Rolf Swensen.
References
Coffman, Lloyd W. 5200 Thursdays in the Wallowas: A
Centennial History of the Wallowa County Chieftain.
Enterprise, OR: Wallowa County Chieftain, 1984.
Dana, Marshall. Newspaper Story: Fifty Years of the Oregon
Journal, 1902-1952. Portland, OR: Oregon Journal, 1951.
Guimary, Donald Lee. The Decline and Death of the Portland
Daily Reporter. Eugene, OR; University of Oregon, 1966.
Hoffard, Allen Edward. An Experiment in Publishing: The
Portland Daily Reporter. S.l.: American University, 1964.
Keeney, Paula I. The Oregon Spectator: Pioneering Western
Journalism, 1846-1855. Carbondale, IL: Southern Illinois
University, 1975.
Ludington, Flora Belle. The Newspapers of Oregon,
1846-1870. Eugene, OR: Koke-Tiffany Co., [1925?].
Macnab, Gordon. A Century of News and People in the East
Oregonian, 1875-1975. Pendleton, OR: East Oregonian
Publishing Co., 1975.
Nash, Lee. Refining a Frontier: The Cultural Interests and
Activities of Harvey W. Scott. Eugene, OR: University of
Oregon, 1961.
Notson, Robert C. Making the Day Begin: A Story of the
Oregonian. Portland, OR: Oregonian Publishing Co., 1976.
Powers, Alfred. History of Oregon Literature.
Portland, OR; Metropolitan Press, 1935.
Price, Warren. The Eugene Register-Guard: A Citizen of Its
Community. Portland, OR: Binford & Mort, 1976.
Sand, Joseph Russell. Sheldon F. Sackett: Flamboyant
Oregon Journalist. Eugene, OR: University of Oregon,
1971.
Swensen, Rolf Holen. "An Age of Reform and Improvements":
The Life of Col. E. Hofer (1855-1934). Eugene, OR:
University of Oregon, 1975.
Turnbull, George Stanley. History of Oregon Newspapers.
Portland, OR: Binfords & Mort, 1939.
Turnbull, George Stanley. An Oregon Crusader.
Portland, OR; Binfords & Mort, 1955.
Wiley, Bonnie. History of the Portland Oregonian, With
Emphasis on Early Years. Carbondale, IL: Southern
Illinois University, Department of Journalism, 1965.
The Oregon Newspapers Index has been supported in part by
the Institute of Museum and Library Services through the Library
Services and Technology Act, administered through the Oregon State
Library, by the University of Oregon Libraries, and by several anonymous
donors.