Weston Democrat

The Weston Democrat is a newspaper serving the Weston, West Virginia community. It is published each Wednesday.[1] It is owned by Weston Publishing,[2] and has a circulation of about 6,000.[1]

Weston Democrat
Typeweekly
FormatBroadsheet
Owner(s)NCWV Media
PublisherAndy Knicely
EditorRebecca Young
Founded1868
Headquarters306 Main Ave, Weston, WV 26452
Circulation6,000[1]
ISSN2373-1052
OCLC number11200866
Websitewestondemocrat.com
clipping from The Weston Democrat, January 1875

History

Founded as the Expositor in the days immediately after the Civil War, the paper was renamed the Democrat after a purchase and 1868 relaunch by Union veterans George Cozad and James W. Woffindin with the masthead motto "The government is best which governs least."[3] After other state papers named themselves "The Democrat" the paper added the "Weston" to its name for clarification.[3]

Cozad had left the paper in 1870, but Woffindin stayed on, despite his growing unease with the Democratic party the paper supported. In 1875, Woffindin broke with the party and with the paper.[3] Thomas A. Edwards, a local judge, bought the four page paper, and reasserted its Democratic principles.[3][4] The paper was bought by former Democrat employee Harrison and Robert Bland, although the latter sold his interest after a short period. Thomas Edwards, though selling the paper to Harrison, would remain editor until his death in 1900.[5] As publisher, Harrison expanded the publication schedule and changed the style of the paper, to the acclaim of the neighboring Weekly Register, which proclaimed "it is now a very creditable journal, and the Register wishes The Weston Democrat Publishing Company, R H. Harrison, manager, abundant success."[6]

Harrison, however, was done with the paper, selling it in 1904 to the eldest son of Thomas Edwards.

The paper was sold to Robert Billeter in 1985. Billeter made many improvements, including moving to electronic production and launching the paper's first website in 1999.[2] He retired in 2016 at the age of 90, selling the business to Weston Publishing.[2]

gollark: > popper's paradox of toleranceI have never really agreed with this. It is strategically equivocating tolerance.
gollark: There are standards about illegally obtained evidence. This discourages people from going around obtaining evidence illegally.
gollark: > he was let free because he was recorded without consentThat seems reasonable.
gollark: I mean, we've messed up the COVID-19 response fairly apiologically, and also Boris Johnson is Borising Brexit.
gollark: UK often also bad but in different ways.

See also

References

  1. 2016 West Virginia Press Association Newspaper Directory (PDF). West Virginia Press Association. 2016.
  2. Young, Rebecca. "The Weston Democrat Shares Rich History With Area". Weston Democrat.
  3. "About The democrat. (Weston, W. Va.) 1868-1874". Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Retrieved 22 July 2018.
  4. Smith, Edward Conrad (1920). A History of Lewis County, West Virginia. The author. p. 341. james edwards weston democrat.
  5. Men of West Virginia ... Biographical publishing Company. 1903.
  6. "Items". The Weekly Register. 18 February 1903. Retrieved 22 July 2018.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.