Houston Press (Scripps Howard) Explained
Houston Press |
Owners: | --> |
Founder: | Paul Carroll Edwards (1882–1962) |
Publisher: | Scripps-Howard |
Maneditors: | --> |
Staff: | 320 (1963) |
Ceased Publication: | (-year run) |
Headquarters: | 1928–1964: |
Circulation: | 90,400 (1963) |
Oclc: | 14353651 |
The Houston Press was a Scripps Howard daily afternoon newspaper, founded in 1911, in Houston, Texas. Under the leadership of founding editor Paul C. Edwards (1911–16), Marcellus E. Foster, known as "Mefo" (1927–37), and George Carmack (1946–64), the newspaper developed a reputation for flashy stories about violence and sex and for exposés of political malfeasance. It ceased publication in 1964.
History
The Houston Press was first issued September 25, 1911, from a plant at 709 Louisiana Street, for 1 cent a copy. For the first fiftyeight days, the Press had no advertising; its management asserted that its circulation had yet to warrant investment of any advertiser's money.
Notable former staff members included Walter Cronkite, who later became the CBS news anchor; Thomas Thompson, author of Hearts and Blood and Money; Donald Forst, later editor of Newsday and The Village Voice; Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter and biographer Vance Trimble; columnists Sig Byrd ("The Stroller") and Carl Victor Little (1894–1959) ("By The Way"); gossip columnist Maxine Mesinger; and television crusader Marvin Zindler, who once worked there as a photographer covering crime stories. Joseph Agris, who became Zindler's biographer, called the Houston Press "a paper that, by journalistic standards, had no standards at all" and Clyde Waddell who was a chief photographer in 1943.
Closure of the Press in 1964
In 1963, the year before it closed, the Press had an average daily circulation (Monday–Saturday) of 90,400, and employed 320 people. On March 20, 1964, editor Carmack and Business Manager Ray L. Powers announced that the newspaper, plant, and facilities had been sold to the larger of its two rivals Houston Chronicle for $4.5 million (equivalent to $ million in). The Press had never missed a publication since it was founded. Following the closure of the Press, two Houston daily newspapers remained, the morning Houston Post and the evening Houston Chronicle (1964 average daily circulation of 226,600). Houston, before the closing of the Press, had been the only city west of the Mississippi River with more than two daily newspapers.
Houston Press selected personnel
Editors
In its 52-year history The Press had six editors:
Business managers
Houston Press buildings
Beginning May 1913, the Press moved from 709 Louisiana Street to a new building at Capitol Avenue and Bagby Street. In 1928, the Houston Press erected a $500,000 (estimated equivalent of $ in) two-story, 45000sqfoot building (which formally opened February 14, 1928) at the corner of Rusk and Chartres Streets (2001 Rusk Street). It was designed in an Italianate-style by Howell & Thomas, a Cleveland firm.
Selected articles
- News: . Byrd . Sigman . October 1, 1947 . Those Flowering Shrubs Do Her Inspire – So of Making Rhymes She Doesn't Tire . Houston Press . en-US . May 14, 2021 . .
- News: . Byrd . Sigman . October 2, 1947 . Doctor Fears for America; Her Soil Is Fed by the Wrong Type of 'Monopolistic' Fertilizer . Houston Press . en-US . May 14, 2021 . .
- News: . Byrd . Sigman . October 3, 1947 . Proud Sam Houston Walks on Soil in Full Uniform, But Busy Historians Fail to Stare . Houston Press . en-US . May 14, 2021 . .
- News: . Byrd . Sigman . October 4, 1947 . Jim Dudley Lifts Bray's Bayou Drawbridge, Hopes Young 'Gad-About' Never Gets His Job . Houston Press . en-US . May 14, 2021 . .
- News: . Byrd . Sigman . October 6, 1947 . 'Take a Card,' Phones Mysterious Howard; 'It's the Nine of Diamonds – Right?' Right! . Houston Press . en-US . May 14, 2021 . .
- News: . Byrd . Sigman . October 7, 1947 . Persons Who Can't Roll Spaghetti Should Wear Bibs, Junior Decided – They Do, and Like Them . Houston Press . en-US . May 14, 2021 . .
- News: . Byrd . Sigman . December 31, 1951 . A Cup of Kindness at the Big Casino . Houston Press . en-US . May 14, 2021 . .
- News: . Byrd . Sigman . July 31, 1952 . Blondie La Guera Puts Away Her Whip . Houston Press . en-US . May 14, 2021 . .
- Web site: . Digital Sig Byrd Archive – Houston Press Columnist Sigman Byrd, a Mid-Century Chronicler of Houston People and Places Long Gone . May 14, 2021 . .
Bibliography
References
- . Broadcasting . July 7, 1941 . Webb C. Artz . May 10, 2021 . obituary . New York City . 21 . 1 . 47 . . Broadcasting (magazine) .
- Book: . Byrd . [Lyman] Sigman . 1955 . Sig Byrd's Houston . . .
- News: . Connelly . Richard (Richard Francis Connelly; 1957–2020) . July 20, 2009 . Walter Cronkite's Houston, Or What's Left Of It . . en-US . May 16, 2021 .
- Book: . Cottrell . T[aylor] C[osby], Jr. (born 1944) . 2019 . Vol. 1: Cottrell Ancestry . [{{GBurl|pyS7DwAAQBAJ|p=102|dq=clarence}} Cottrell–Lashbrook–Brashear–Campbell Family Lineage – Ancestry of Taylor Cosby Cottrell, Jr. ]. en-US . Rockledge, Florida . . 102 . May 17, 2021 . ., .
- Web site: . Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800– . . January 1, .
- . Editor & Publisher . September 20, 1924 . Retiring City Editor Honored . May 10, 2021 . New York City . 57 . 17 . 34 . . Editor & Publisher .
- . Editor & Publisher . November 30, 1929 . New M.E. in Houston – Dudley Davis Gets Press Promotion Following Resignation of Artz . May 10, 2021 . New York City . 62 . 28 . 22 . . Editor & Publisher .
- . Editor & Publisher . March 19, 1932 . Joins Houston Press . May 10, 2021 . New York City . 64 . 44 . 8 . . Editor & Publisher .
- . Editor & Publisher . March 28, 1964 . Houston Press Dies at 52; Chronicle Buys Its Assets – Jones Family Paper Gains Edge in Circulation Race With Post . May 10, 2021 . New York City . 97 . 13 . 13 & 127 . . Editor & Publisher .
- News: . El Paso Herald-Post . March 4, 1939 . New Managers Named on Two Newspapers . en-US . 59 . 54 . 11 . May 14, 2021 . . subscription . El Paso Herald-Post .
- . Handbook of Texas Online . Houston Press . July 11, 2011 . en-US . . Handbook of Texas Online .
- Book: . 1942 . Houston – A History and Guide . sponsored by the Houston County Historical Society, Inc. . . en-US . Houston . The Anson Jones Press, founded 1929 by Herbert Herrick Fletcher (1892–1968) . 208 . May 17, 2021 . . → compiled by the Writers Program of the Work Projects Administration in the State of Texas. .
- News: . Houston Chronicle . June 25, 1993 . Ex-Houston Press Reporter, Bonnie Carmack, Dead at 86 . en-US . A31 . Houston Chronicle . (U.S. Newsstream database).
- News: . Houston Post . September 26, 1911 . New Afternoon Paper . en-US . 27 . 4 (column 2, bottom) . May 17, 2021 . . Houston Post .
- Book: . Letter – From N[oel] S[tones] Macneish (1900–1964) (assistant to Roy W. Howard) to Mr. G[eorge] B[ertrand] Parker [Sr.] (1886–1949) . April 21, 1927 . Regarding the Resignation of C.J. Lilley from the Houston Press Company . letter . en-US . . May 10, 2021 . Indiana University Bloomington Library, Roy W. Howard Papers, 1892–1964 .
- Book: . Letter (confidential) – Roy W. Howard to George Burnett Carmack and Ray Powers . January 16, 1950 . Regarding a Lunch Conversation With Oveta Culp Hobby of the Houston Post With an Eye on the Possibility of Acquiring the Newspaper . en-US . . May 10, 2021 . Indiana University Bloomington Library, Roy W. Howard Papers, 1892–1964 . (see Oveta Culp Hobby). .
- News: . Lomax . John Nova (born 1970) . November 20, 2009 . Houston 101: Sig Byrd, Houston's King of True-Life Noir . . en-US . May 14, 2021 . .→ The author, is (i) a great grandson of musicologist John Lomax (1867–1948) and educator/folklorist Ruby Terrill Lomax (1886–1961) (ii) grandnephew of musicologist Alan Lomax, (iii) grandnephew of musician and folklorist Bess Lomax, and (iv) son of country music journalist John Marable Lomax III (born 1940). .
- Book: . Nimmo . Dan D[ean], PhD (1933–2004) . Newsome . Chevelle [Angelette] . 1997 . Walter (Leland) Cronkite (Jr.) . [{{GBurl|UZkC2D6WkHEC|p=73|dq=cronkite}} Political Comentators in the United States in the 20th Century ]. en-US . . 71–79 . May 16, 2021 . .,, .
External links