Page History: Tacoma Times
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Page Revision: 2009/06/17 13:49
Title
- Ayer Annual1
- Content: Independent
- Established: 1903-1949
- Pages: 4
- Size: 17x22 in.
- Editor:
- Publisher: Tacoma Times Publishing Co.; Yakima Herald Pub. Co. (later 19??)3
- Frequency: Daily (evening, except Sun.)
- Coverage
- Region: Pierce2
- County: Pierce
- Unique ids
- LCCN: sn88085187
- OCLC: 17347623
History
- Succeeding title:
- Related titles: Los Angeles Record, Seattle Star, Spokane Press, Portland News. These paper were also part of the Scripps-Canfield League (later Scripps League).
Essay Draft
The Tacoma
Times was one of several west coast papers founded by E.W. Scripps. Scripps' approach to the newspaper business was to provide minimal funding for printing equipment and facilities in small or mid-sized cities. He would leave the day-to-day operation of the paper in the hands of ambitious young editors. National content was distributed to his newspaper chain through the Scripps-McRae telegraphic news service. This was combined with content about the local community created by the local editorial staff. In 1902 Scripps founded the National Enterprise Association (NEA), a service for distributing editorial cartoons, illustrations, and articles on specialized subjects such as fashion and sports. The Tacoma
Times features many of these graphics. It was Scripps ambition to provide news that would serve a working-class audience, and the Tacoma
Times does occasionally include labor news between its lengthy descriptions of crimes and scandals.
In 1920 E.W. Scripps quarreled with his son James Scripps and the five Pacific Northwest Scripps newspapers were brought under the exclusive control of James. James died in 1921, leaving his widow to manage these papers, which were the core of the Scripps-Canfield League. They included the Los Angeles
Record, Seattle
Star, Spokane
Press, and Portland
News.
The Tacoma
Times was edited by some of the first graduates from the University of Washington School of Journalism. Roy Pinkerton was part of the first class to graduate from the program in 1911 and began editing the paper in 1915 . After leaving the paper in the 1920s he founded the Ventura County (CA)
Star[LCCN 95062154]. Another UW School of Journalism graduate, Ralph Benjamin, took Pinkerton's place in 1921. His first editorship had been at the Olympia
Recorder[LCCN 88085358]. He served as editor-in-chief of the Scripps League papers into the 1930s. He quit to work as s supervisor of transportation, and his involvement with the Teamster's Union led him back into the newspaper industry as editor of the Washington
Teamster[LCCN 88085788] from 1941-1956.
Essay Notes
Tacoma Times part of the Scripps-Canfield League after 1920. Before that, part of Scripps-McRae League, a newspaper chain, 1892-1914.
1Research
- N.W. Ayer & Son's American newspaper annual -- 1903 -- 261
- NDNP Candidate Title List (Appendix A1.2)
- Chronicling America record (LOC) - Tacoma Times
- WorldCat record - Tacoma Times
- WSL record - Tacoma Times
- UW record - Tacoma Times
- Mott. American Journalism.
===Digitization plan===
2008-2009 grant - Plan to digitize WSL's 1909-1918 reels (24 reels) and UW's 1903-1904; 1907 reel (1 reel)
- Also checking on paper copies
- Substitute for now. Checking to see where negatives are.
Notes
One issue on a misc reel (09-22-1894 on reel 2826) and 1909-1934 (reels 1050-1103) negatives exist in State Archives vault.
lrobinson, 2009/02/09 17:39Checked for negatives and couldn't find any significant collection. UW has 1 reel in 1900-1923 time period. UMI/Proquest has 1940-42. WSHS does not have any of this title. Will check state archives books.
lrobinson, 2009/02/06 15:18Trying to locate a more consistent run of this title - Glenda mentioned that perhaps WSHS has some microfilm negatives. Glenda mentioned this title was the one that seems the most requested by Tacoma researchers/librarians
lrobinson, 2009/01/28 18:13"Sensational headlines but substantive mix of local and national news. Good use of graphics. Covers international news well, including the Russo-Japanese War. Editorials tend to be against the trusts, pro-peace. Excellent advertising displays that increase into the 20th century. Microfilm: A4690 22X. Good quality film but too many gaps. WSA holdings better. Mitchell (1964) reports holdings at Tacoma Public Library. Nothing at UMI for time period needed."2 lrobinson, 2009/01/28 18:13 Evaluation
TopReel
- Filmed by: WSL (one reel 1903-12-21 thru 1907-05-18 by UW)
- Positives held by: WSL and UW
- Negatives held by: UW and Washington State Archives
- Positive Holdings
- Location: UW MicNews; WSL
- Call Number: UW A4690 - reel 1 only; WSL 50/409
- Library holds: UW 1903-1904;1907 (1 reel); WSL 1909-1923 (24 reels)
- Negative Holdings:
- State Archives holds 1909-1934
- UW holds 1903-1907 (1 reel)
Evaluation
TopIssues and pages¶
Evaluation
Totals
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