The Madison Times Explained

The Madison Times
Founder:Betty Franklin-Hammonds
Publishing City:Madison, Wisconsin
Readership:Minorities in Dane County
Website:https://themadisontimes.themadent.com/

The Madison Times Weekly is a weekly African-American newspaper in Madison in the U.S. state of Wisconsin. Civil rights activist Betty Franklin-Hammonds established the paper in April 1991. It was initially a sister publication of the Milwaukee Times, which had bought the Wisconsin Free Press, a Black-focused paper that published sporadically in Madison in the 1980s.[1] Hammonds stated that the paper operated separately within its first few months. Hammonds started the paper as a resource for the under-served African-American community; the paper soon expanded its focus to various minority communities.[2] In 1992 the paper joined with WORT radio, WYOU community television, and the online service DANEnet to create the Neighborhood Network, to cover local news and serve local activists.[3]

Following Hammonds' death at age 56 in 1999,[4] her husband David became publisher, and remained majority owner. Jonathan Gramling, a "longtime friend and associate" of the Franklin-Hammonds family, took over as editor. Under Gramling's direction, the paper added more full color photography, and increased its event coverage. In 2002, amid a nationwide industry slump, the paper experienced financial challenges, prompting staffing cuts. David described the newspaper as a community-oriented enterprise, rather than a financial investment. The paper's circulation was about 8,500 in 2004.[5]

Local politician and bureaucrat Ray Allen purchased the paper in 2005.[6] Though Allen stated at the time that he did not plan significant personnel changes, Gramling, who had recently won a human rights award, announced his intention to leave the paper shortly after the acquisition.[7] [8]

Allen sold it to Courier Communications, the parent company of the Milwaukee Courier and WNOV-AM radio, in 2014.[9] The two newspapers had been sharing editorial and advertising content for about a year prior to the sale; at the time of the acquisition, the two papers had a combined circulation of 55,000.[10] [11]

Notes and References

  1. News: TIMES PUTS SPOTLIGHT ON BLACKS . June 15, 1992 . Jonnel . LiCari . .
  2. News: CHANGING TIMES - CITY'S MINORITY NEWSPAPER TACKLES NEW CHALLENGES . March 7, 2002 . Lynn . Welch . .
  3. News: NEIGHBORHOODS TO HAVE THEIR OWN NEWS NETWORK . September 24, 1996 . Gail . Perry-Daniels . .
  4. News: PUBLISHER'S LIFE, GOOD WORKS BRING MORE ACCOLADES . May 15, 1999 . Anita . Clark . .
  5. https://archive.org/details/isbn_9780965654562/page/272/mode/2up African American Yearbook
  6. News: RAY ALLEN IS NEW OWNER OF MADISON TIMES . August 3, 2005 . Bill . Novak . .
  7. News: EDITOR GETS HUMAN RIGHTS AWARD . July 22, 2005 . Pat . Schneider . .
  8. News: GRAMLING LIKELY TO LEAVE TIMES . September 2, 2005 . Judith . Davidoff . .
  9. News: COURIER COMMUNICATIONS BUYS MADISON TIMES . December 9, 2014 . . KAREN . RIVEDAL .
  10. News: Madison Times newspaper sold to Milwaukee's Courier Communications . December 7, 2014 . . MIKE . IVEY .
  11. News: The Milwaukee Courier forms joint venture with The Madison Times - Deal In Brief . October 30, 2013 . Datamonitor Financial Deals Tracker .