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Central Oregonian

Weekly newspaper published in Prineville, Oregon


Weekly newspaper published in Prineville, Oregon

FieldValue
nameCentral Oregonian
imageCentral Oregonian front page.jpg
typeTwice-weekly newspaper
founded1881 (as *Prineville News*)
languageEnglish
ownersPamplin Media Group
founderHorace Dillard
circulation5,253
circulation_date2022
circulation_ref
headquartersPrineville, Oregon
website

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.

History

The first newspaper published in Prineville was the Ochoco Pioneer, founded by John E. Jeffrey in 1880. The paper ceased after a few months. In 1881, Horace Dillard founded the Prineville News. He took in D. W. Aldridge as a business partner, who later became the editor and publisher. On Nov. 11, 1883, a fire destroyed the newspaper's office, causing $1,500 worth of damage to the News. Aldridge was editor and publisher until the role was given to Fred E. Wilmarth in 1893. Aldridge sold the paper in April 1894. It was later absorbed by the Ochoco Review, started in Prineville by Douthit & Barnes in June 1885. The paper from then on was known as the Prineville Review.

In November 1894, traveling printer-editor Bruce "Rocky Mountain" Smith, a notorious heavy-drinker, recruited school-teacher W. F. Magee to publish the Mitchell Monitor in Mitchell, Oregon. A. C. Palmer purchased the paper and printing plant around 1898 and moved it to Prineville, where he renamed the Monitor to the Crook County Journal. In 1901, Palmer sold the paper to W. T. Fogle, who sold a half interest to W. H. Parker. In 1903, the paper was owned by W. C. Black and S. M. Bailey.

J. N. Williamson was made manager of the combined Prineville Review paper that formed in 1894 and was succeeded by L. N. Liggett, who bought the publication. He sold it in July 1902 to William Holder, who in turn sold it to A. H. Kennedy in April 1904. Charles O. Pollard was editor and publisher of the Review in 1915, by then renamed back to the Prineville News. A. M. Byrd purchased the News in March 1917. He renamed it the following month to the Central Oregon Enterprise. Byrd sold the paper in 1920 to Floyd A. Fessler, who renamed it to the Prineville Call.

In 1915, Guy La Follette purchased the Crook County Journal from J. H. Gray. Six years later he merged the paper with Fessler's Prineville Call on July 14, 1921 to form the Central Oregonian. Fessler sold his stake the following month to George H. Flagg, who in turn sold his share to La Follette in January 1922. La Follette, with full ownership, sold the paper for the third time in eight months to Robert H. Jonas in April 1922. Jonas and his sons sold the Central Oregonian in 1939 to Remey M. Cox, who simultaneously purchased Crook County News from Steve Bailey and merged it into the paper.

Cox's widow sold the paper to L. R. Batman in 1952. Two years Batman sold the Central Oregonian to Monroe Sweetland, who then traded it to Edward A. Donnelly for his Milwaukie Review. Donnelly purchased the Tribune Publishing Company, a newspaper printing plant in Prineville, from Steve Bailey in 1959. After Donnelly's death in 1962, his family owned the Central Oregonian until selling it in September 1969 to Eagle Newspapers. Eagle owned the paper for 44 years until selling it to Pamplin Media Group in June 2013. In October 2018, the newspaper implemented a paywall on its website, under which users are permitted free access to three stories per calendar month, after which payment of per-story fee is required for non-subscribers. In 2024, Robert B. Pamplin Jr. sold his newspaper company to Carpenter Media Group.

References

References

  1. (2022-10-19). "Pamplin Media Group: Media Kit 2022".
  2. "Newspapers and Genealogical Resources". [[University of Oregon Libraries]].
  3. "Central Oregonian". [[Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association]].
  4. (November 15, 1883). "The Fire Record". San Francisco Chronicle.
  5. (January 6, 1893). "Social and Personal". Albany Democrat.
  6. (April 20, 1894). "Prineville News". Albany Democrat.
  7. Turnbull, George S.. (1939). "[[wikisource:en:History of Oregon Newspapers". [[Binfords and Mort]].
  8. Turnbull, George S.. (1939). "[[wikisource:en:History of Oregon Newspapers". [[Binfords and Mort]].
  9. (March 8, 1917). "Byrd Sells Juntura Times To George Crow". The Ontario Argus.
  10. (April 4, 1917). "Central Oregon Enterprise". The Bend Bulletin.
  11. (March 15, 1920). "Newspaper Changes Hands". La Grande Observer.
  12. (January 1, 1915). "Oregon Sidelights". The Oregon Daily Journal.
  13. (July 14, 1921). "Prinville Papers Combine". The Oregon Daily Journal.
  14. (August 10, 1921). "Prineville Paper Is Reported Sold". The Bend Bulletin.
  15. (January 31, 1922). "La Follette Again Newspaper Owner". The Bend Bulletin.
  16. (April 1, 1922). "Prineville Paper Sold Third Time". The Bend Bulletin.
  17. (November 30, 1939). "Cox Consolidates Prineville Papers". The Bend Bulletin.
  18. (August 1, 1952). "Central Oregon Newspaper Sold To Californians". The Bend Bulletin.
  19. (July 31, 1952). "Prineville Paper Sold". The Oregon Daily Journal.
  20. (March 18, 1954). "Prineville Paper Sale 'in Works,' Report Indicates". The Bend Bulletin.
  21. (March 30, 1954). "Welcome and Farwell". The Bend Bulletin.
  22. (June 26, 1959). "Donnelly buys printing firm". The Bend Bulletin.
  23. (February 13, 1962). "Prineville Publisher's Rites Pend". Statesman Journal.
  24. (September 26, 1969). "Paper Sold At Prineville". The Oregonian.
  25. Giegerich, Andy. (June 27, 2013). "Pamplin group buys Prineville's Central Oregonian paper". [[Portland Business Journal]].
  26. Pamplin Media Group. (June 27, 2013). "Pamplin newspaper group buys Central Oregonian". [[Portland Tribune]].
  27. Ahern, Tony. (October 22, 2018). "Central Oregonian moving to metered paywall on website". Central Oregonian.
  28. Rogoway, Mike. (June 3, 2024). "Pamplin Media, Portland Tribune’s owner, sells to Carpenter Media". The Oregonian.
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