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The Lincoln Journal Star: A history

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Tuesday, Apr 10, 2007 - 04:53:12 pm CDT

September 7, 1867 - First edition of the Nebraska Commonwealth. Founded by Charles H. Gere. Printed in Nebraska City, delivered to Lincoln and Omaha

November 2, 1867

Nebraska Commonwealth printed in Lincoln

May 22, 1869

Gere changes newspaper name to Nebraska State Journal

January 8, 1871

First Sunday edition

December 11, 1882

Sunday edition renamed Sunday State Journal

Nov 28, 1887

First Monday edition of Nebraska State Journal

April 1890

A.W. Lee purchases and becomes publisher of the Ottumwa, Iowa Daily Courier

1881

The State Journal moves into a new building at Ninth and P streets, the present site of the Lincoln Journal Star

1893-1896

Willa Cather wrote for The Nebraska State Journal, serving as fine arts critic

1897

J. C. Seacrest (former Journal reporter) buys Lincoln Evening News, which is printed by State Journal as an evening edition

1889-1901

Three other Lincoln Dailies fold

July 1, 1899

Lee acquisition of Davenport Times marks beginning of newspaper syndicate

1899

Journal Sports Editor Cy Sherman tagged the term "Cornhuskers" because he hated seeing the Nebraska teams called Bugeaters and Rattlesnake Boys.

1901

Only year in Lincoln's history in which Lincoln had only one newspaper (until merging in 1995)

October 1902

Lincoln millionaire and utility magnate D. E. Thompson establishes Lincoln Daily Star, located at 11th and M Streets

1910

Thompson sells Star to Lincoln grain operator Herbert E. Gooch

Nov. 1, 1917

Evening News becomes Lincoln Evening Journal

June 1922

Seacrest majority owner of State Journal Company

June 1930

Depression forces Gooch to sell Star to Lee Group of Davenport, Iowa for $1 million

September 1931

Financial conditions force Journal and Star owners into legal arrangement, with each owning minority interest in the other. The arrangement permits each paper to control its own content.

November 1931

Sunday Journal and Star editions merge

1931

Editor James Lawrence received Pulitzer honorable mention for editorial writing for a piece titled "Iowa's Disgrace"

1935

J.C. Seacrest turns over leadership of Journal to sons Joe W. and Fred S. Seacrest

1937

J.C. Seacrest creates trust that ensures that the State Journal Co. would  remain in family hands throughout the lifetimes of his sons, Joe W. and Fred S. Seacrest and their children

1942

J.C. Seacrest dies; sons become co-publishers

1949

The Lincoln Journal wins Pulitzer Prize for Public Service for sponsorship of the "all-star presidential primary" an open presidential nomination

1950

State Journal Printing Company and Star Printing Company merge to form Journal-Star Printing Company. Newspapers retain competing news and editorial staffs for the morning Star and evening Journal

September 22, 1950

Lee Enterprises Inc., created

January 8, 1951

Morning and Evening Journal merge into the Lincoln Evening Journal and Nebraska State Journal. The evening Lincoln Star becomes the morning Lincoln Star.

1958

Joe R. Seacrest becomes managing editor of Journal

March, 1971

Joe W. Seacrest retires, hands reigns to son Joe R. and Fred's son, Mark

December 1990

Journal and Star merge Saturday and holiday editions

March, 1995

The Seacrest family sells its interest in the newspaper to Lee Enterprises

August 4, 1995

The Lincoln Journal and The Lincoln Star, already combines for Saturday and Sunday editions, print their final separate editions

August 7, 1995

Lincoln Star and Lincoln Journal merge to become the Lincoln Journal Star and first edition is printed

May, 2000

Production moves to new building at Ninth and Q, using a new Flexoman press

July, 2000

Newspaper was redesigned, adding numerous new sections

Factoids

* Charles Gere was founder, publisher and editor of Nebraska State Journal 1867-1904.

* Charles (C.H.) Gere, editor, was a founder of the Lincoln City Library in 1875 (The Gere Branch, named after him, was built in 1971), a founder of the Nebraska State Historical Society, the Lincoln postmaster and was instrumental in getting Lincoln named as Nebraska's capital city

* Journal Sports Editor Cy Sherman tagged the term "Cornhuskers" in 1899 because he hated seeing the Nebraska teams called Bugeaters and Rattlesnake Boys

* Mari Sandoz was a proof reader for the Nebraska State Journal

* The Lincoln Star established Nebraska's first broadcast station in its 12th and M building (year unknown)

* Pulitzer-prize winning author Willa Cather writes for the Nebraska State Journal as a fine arts critic (1893-1896)

* 1901 was the only year Lincoln had one newspaper until the merging in 1995

* Lincoln Journal won Pulitzer Prize in 1949 for sponsorship of the "all-star presidential primary" an open presidential nomination

* August 7, 1995 was first printed merged edition of the Lincoln Journal Star

* The Nebraska State Journal moved into the 900 P Street building in 1881; in 1950 work began the 926 P Street building, where the Lincoln Journal Star is still located today.

* Many Journal and Star editors and reporters went on the University of Nebraska: Will Owen Jones (Cather's Journal editor) went on to start the first journalism classes; Charles H. Gere (The Nebraska State Journal's founder, publisher and editor) was one of the founders of NU; J.E. Lawrence (editor of The Star) taught classes; R. Neale Copple (Journal city editor) became Dean of the College of Journalism and Mass Communications   

Sources: articles from The Lincoln Journal Star, The Lincoln Star, The Nebraska State Journal and The Lincoln Evening Journal


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