The Brookings Register

The Brookings Register is a newspaper of South Dakota. The newspaper's offices are in Brookings, South Dakota.

Brookings Register
TypeDaily newspaper
FormatBroadsheet
Owner(s)News Media Corporation
PublisherWilliam N. McMacken
EditorJill Fier, Managing Editor
Headquarters312 5th Street, Brookings, South Dakota 57006
Websitehttp://www.brookingsregister.com

The newspaper is used for public notices including those published for the South Dakota Public Utilities Commission.[1]

The newspaper is owned by the News Media Corporation, a company which owns 71 newspapers in the United States, mostly newspapers published in small cities in the western United States.[2]

Frequency

The Brookings Register publishes daily Monday through Friday afternoon and Saturday morning with a focus on local news and sports in an effort to keep area residents and visitors informed.

History

The rich history of the Brookings Register dates back to March 30, 1882, when the paper's forerunner, the weekly Brookings County Sentinel, began accounting the events of the Brookings region. That first edition numbered six pages and featured on the first Page One, the death of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, food recipes, and the battle against "beer drinking in a civilized society." George N. Breed and Charles D'A Wright, editors and publishers, gave their thanks on the editorial page "to all upright citizens" and to them the publishers extended the "hand of mutual friendship." It was their desire, the men said, to present the news of the day, discussions of topics of interest, and to help build up Brookings County.

Under the leadership of George Breed and Paul Dutcher, the first issue of the Brookings Register--eight pages—was printed on June 13, 1890. At that time the city boasted a population of 1,700 people and the price of a subscription was $1.50 for a one-year subscription. On January 6, 1891, the Register bought out the Sentinel. Initially, the publication came out twice weekly, only to return to a weekly schedule in 1898. Local pictures appeared in print in 1910 and the first advertisements for automobiles followed in 1911. The Register resumed its twice-weekly publication schedule in 1948, under the ownership of the Mitchell family. The paper turned daily in January 1970, publishing five days per week, Monday through Friday. Later that year, the paper was sold to Stauffer Communications of Topeka, Kansas. Stauffer held onto the Register until 1990, when Omaha World-Herald of Omaha, Nebraska purchased the paper. The newspaper added a sixth day of publication—Saturday—in March 1995. The current owners, News Media Corporation, of Rochelle, Illinois, bought the Register on February 1, 1999.[3]

Today, the Register prints over 5,000 copies daily.

gollark: Hunting rifle no, and I may not actually have ever seen one in person, bow and arrow yes, I said so.
gollark: Also not a crossbow. Although I did fire a non-cross bow at some point.
gollark: No. Like I said, it never came up, this being the united kingdom™, which does not like guns™.
gollark: Also running `optipng` over some image files I had, which can mildly reduce their size.
gollark: Neither, unless you count "running imagemagick" as A.

References

  1. Cremer, Karen E. (February 22, 2008). "Notice of Public Hearing" (pdf). South Dakota Public Utilities Commission. Retrieved 2009-02-02.
  2. "Company Overview". News Media Corporation. Retrieved 2009-02-02.
  3. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-07-15. Retrieved 2009-09-09.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)


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