The Boston Journal
The Boston Journal was a daily newspaper published in Boston, Massachusetts, from 1833[2] until October 1917 when it was merged with the Boston Herald.[1]
The April 10, 1865, front page of the Boston Daily Journal | |
Type | Daily newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Broadsheet |
Owner(s) | Ford & Damrell (1833–1841) John Sherburne Sleeper, John A. Dix, Henry Rogers (1841–1845) Sleeper and Rogers (1845–1854) Henry Rogers & Charles O. Rogers (1854–1855) Charles O. Rogers (1855–1869) Estate of Charles O. Rogers (1869–1896) William D. Sohler (1896–1899) Stephen O'Meara (1899–1902) Frank Munsey (1902–1913) Matthew Hale (1913–1914) Walton A. Greene, Frederick Enwright, & Hugh Cabot (1914–1917) Charles Eliot Ware Jr. (1917) James H. Higgins (1917) |
Publisher | Journal Newspaper Company |
Founded | February 5, 1833 |
Language | English |
Ceased publication | October 1917 (merged with the Boston Herald)[1] |
Headquarters | 264 Washington Street, Boston, Massachusetts |
The paper was originally an evening paper called the Evening Mercantile Journal. When it started publishing its morning edition, it changed its name to The Boston Journal.[2]
In October 1917 John H. Higgins, the publisher and treasurer of the Boston Herald,[3] bought out its nearby neighbor The Boston Journal and created The Boston Herald and Boston Journal.[1]
Former contributors
- Charles Carleton Coffin, war correspondent who wrote dispatches from the front under the byline "Carlton".
- Stephen O'Meara, reporter (1874–1879), city editor (1879–1881), managing editor (1881–1895), general manager (1891–1895), editor-in-chief and publisher (1895–1899), and majority owner (1899–1902). Later served as the first commissioner of the Boston Police Department.
- Thomas Freeman Porter
- Benjamin Perley Poore, Washington correspondent and war correspondent who wrote under the byline "Perley".
- John Sherburne Sleeper, principal editor and part owner of the newspaper. Sleeper wrote the Journal's "Tales of the Seas" under his nom de plume of Hawser Martingale.[4]
Images
- Boston Morning Journal, 1852
- Boston Journal building, 19th century
- Detail of 1881 map of Boston, showing location of Journal office
- Boston Sunday Journal "Bicycle Number", May 1896
gollark: Kind of, maybe, depending how you define it.
gollark: Inasmuch as converting analog input from a microphone into different frequencies through some analog process actually counts as encoding, I guess.
gollark: You have to have *some* encoding step to translate your data into radio signals.
gollark: Or possibly some other SDRs.
gollark: I vaguely remember reading about RTL-SDRs being used to reverse-engineer (partly) LoRa and some satellite phone encoding.
References
- "Boston Papers Merged.; Herald Absorbs The Journal and Will Use the Joint Title" (PDF). The New York Times. October 6, 1917. p. 12.
- Stanwood, Edward (1886), Boston Illustrated, Boston and New York: James R. Osgood & Co., and Houghton Mifflin & Co, p. 102
- "James H. Higgins, Retired Publisher; Also Was Treasurer of Boston Herald for 10 Years After Merger With Traveler Dies at Central Valley In 1917 He Bought The Boston Journal and Consolidated It With The Herald. The New York Times, page 13, August 1, 1938.
- Bacon, Edwin Munroe (1886), Bacon's Dictionary of Boston, Boston, Massachusetts and New York, New York: Houghton Mifflin & Co, The Riverside Press, p. 220.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Boston Journal. |
- Bostonian Society. Photo of billboards hanging from the Boston Journal Building at 264 Washington Street, April 1898
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.