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Early Efforts to Start a
Newspaper-Growth and Progress of the
Oregonian- The Evening Telegram-The Western
Star--Democratic Standard-Portland Daily
News -Pacific Christian Advocate-Daily
Evening Tribune-Oregon Herald-Portland Daily
Bulletin-Daily Bee-Daily Evening
Journal-Evening Post-Northwest News -Oregon
Deutsch Zeitung-Staats Zeitung-Freie-
Press-List of Newspapers which Appeared from
1870 to 1880-Catholic Sentinel-The New
Northwest-Portland Journal of Commerce-North
Pacific Rural Spirit-East- Portland
Papers-The West Shore-Sunday
Mercury--Sunday Welcome-Pacific
Express-Oregon Times-The World-Newspaper
Mortuary Record from 1880 to 1890.
Portland has always had an
industrious and vigorous press. The fathers
of the city were not slow to perceive that
among the things necessary to build up the
city and make it known to the world was an
active and enterprising press, and very soon
after the city was started there was an
effort to establish a newspaper here. The
project was talked of for a considerable
time before means were found of carrying it
into execution. It was no easy matter to
find a man who would undertake the
publication of a newspaper in so young and
small a community, and who at the same time
possessed the ability and energy necessary
for such a work. In those days there was not
a newspaper in every village, as now. The
business was yet to be created. Finally,
towards the end of the year 1850, Col. W. W.
Chapman, Hon. H. W. Corbett and others
resolved that Portland must not wait longer
for a newspaper, and that measures must be
taken to establish one.
In the autumn of 1850, Messrs. Chapman and
Corbett were in San Francisco on a variety
of business relating to the new city of
Portland. The newspaper was not forgotten.
Their desire was to find a man who had the
means of establishing a weekly newspaper and
experience in conducting the business. Such
a man fortunately was found in Thomas J.
Dryer, the founder of the Oregonian.
Dryer was a native of Ulster County, New
York. He had worked on the country press in
his State, and had become known as a
vigorous writer. He was not a man of much
literary culture, but had high intelligence
and great energy, and by nature belonged to
the west rather than to the east. He had
just arrived in California and had brought
with him a hand press and a small lot of
printing material. Mr. Corbett, in pursuit
of a man who would establish a paper in
Portland, fell in with Mr. Dryer, and
undertook to show him that Portland was just
the place for him; just the place where he
could make an outfit like his own available.
Colonel Chapman joined in the effort, and
Mr. Dryer was induced to come to Portland to
start a newspaper.
There was delay in getting the press and
material shipped to Portland, but it finally
arrived and was hastily put in order, and
the first number of the Oregonian
appeared December 4, 1850. It was a sheet of
four pages, six columns to the page, and was
to be published weekly. From that day to
this it has never missed a weekly issue. Mr.
Dryer was an aggressive and spirited, though
not a scholarly or polished writer. The
journals of that day gave little attention
to reporting the ordinary incidents or
affairs of their locality; news-gathering
had not yet been developed into a science or
business, and petty political discussion,
consisting largely of personalities, and
often descending to grossness, was the
staple of the newspaper's work. Soon after
the Oregonian was started at Portland
the Statesman was started at Oregon
City, and as one was Whig and the other
Democrat, controversies soon became hot
between them. During a long period their
columns were filled with bitter articles
against each other, and the personalities of
journalism were carried to an extreme seldom
witnessed elsewhere. Their remote positions
from centre of news, and the fact that few
things of importance were transpiring in so
small a community, were other causes that
led the Oregon journals of that period to
devote their space so largely to petty
contention and personal vituperation. But
the " Oregon style" passed away in course of
years, with the conditions that produced it.
The Oregonian, it is needless to say,
was not a prosperous paper. Its earnings
were small and debts accumulated, but means
were found to carry it on from year to year.
In 1853, Henry L. Pittock, who had just
arrived in Oregon, across the plains, was
engaged to work upon the paper. He was a
practical printer, a youth of steady habits
and great industry, and upon him gradually
fell the duty of publishing the paper. Mr.
Dryer gave little attention to details; he
wrote editorials when in the humor-usually
when he wished to assail or retort on
opponents-and yet the paper was a positive
force in Portland and throughout Oregon,
chiefly because it suited the humor of a
considerable number of the people, and there
was nothing else to take its place. Mr.
Dryer, through its columns and through his
activity in the small politics of the day,
kept himself continually before the people;
he was several times a member of the
territorial legislature, where he was as
aggressive as . in the columns of his
newspaper; and later he was a member of the
convention that framed the constitution of
the State. Meantime, Mr. Pittock, with the
industry, perseverance and judgment that
have since made him so conspicuous as a
manager in journalism, was attending to the
details and " getting out" the paper week
after week. In 1860, Mr. Dryer was chosen
one of the electors on the Lincoln
presidential ticket. The next year he was
appointed minister to the Hawaiian Islands,
and as he owed Mr. Pittock quite a sum for
services, the latter took the paper and soon
started it upon that career which has since
made it so successful and famous in
journalism. Mr. Dryer, after several years
of residence abroad, returned to Portland,
where he died in 1879.
Upon undertaking to publish the paper on his
own account, Mr. Pittock's first resolve was
to start a daily. Two daily papers were
already published in Portland-the Times
and Advertiser; and each of these
appeared to have a better chance for life
than the Oregonian. But the patience,
industry, application and skill of Mr.
Pittock soon decided the contest in his
favor. The first number of the Daily
Oregonian appeared February 4, 1861. It
was a sheet of four pages, with four columns
to the page. As the civil war was just then
breaking out great efforts were made to get
news, and the energy of the Oregonian
put it in the lead of its competitors. It
was assisted also by its vigorous espousal
of the cause of the Union, and people began
to look to it not only for the news but for
expression of their sentiments upon the
great crisis. Simeon Francis, a veteran
newspaper man from Springfield, Illinois,
became editor, and held the place about one
year, when he withdrew to accept a position
in the army. He was succeeded by Amory
Holbrook, a very able man but an irregular
worker, who held the position two years.
During 1864 and part of 1865, various
persons did editorial work on the paper,
among whom John P. Damon, now of Seattle,
and Samuel A. Clarke, of Salem, deserve
mention. In May, 1865, Harvey W. Scott was
engaged as editor, and has ever since held
the position, with the exception of the
interval from October, 1872 to April, 1877,
during which the paper was under the charge
of W. Lair Hill.
In 1872, Hon. H. W. Corbett bought an
interest in the paper, which he held till
1877, when he sold it to Mr. Scott, who
resumed editorial charge. Since that time
the paper, under Mr. Pittock as manager and
Mr. Scott as editor, has grown with the
country, has increased in circulation and
has fully established itself at the head of
journalism in the Northwest. Of the
importance of Portland as a city, of the
extent of the business of Portland and of
the super-eminent position of the city in
the Northwest, there is no surer attestation
than the pages of the Oregonian.
The Evening Telegram was started in
April, 1877. It was under-taken by an
association of printers and was helped by
the proprietors of the Oregonian.
This arrangement lasted not much more than a
year, when the printers who had engaged in
it decided to go no further. The proprietors
of the Oregonian thereupon took up
the paper and have published it ever since.
The Western Star was started at
Milwaukie shortly after the Oregonian
was started at Portland. Milwaukie was a
rival of Portland for commercial eminence,
but it was soon perceived that the race was
hopeless and the Western Star was
brought down to Portland, where it was
published as the Oregon Times. This
paper was started by John Orvis Waterman,
who remained with it several years. He was
succeeded by Carter & Austin, who published
the paper till 1861, when it was suspended.
In 1854, the Democratic Standard appeared.
Under the management of Alonzo Leland, who
now lives at Lewiston, Idaho, it wielded
some power in local politics. James O'Meara
succeeded Leland in 1858. A year thereafter
it suspended publication, but was soon after
revived and for a few months continued the
struggle for existence, making its last
appearance on June 6, 1859.
On April 18, 1859, the first number of a
daily newspaper was issued in this city. It
bore the title of Portland Daily News,
and was published by S. A. English & Co.,
with E. D. Shattuck as editor. It soon
ceased to exist, and the material upon which
it was printed was moved to Eugene City. The
advent of the News was quickly
followed by the appearance of the Oregon
Advertiser, a weekly journal, under the
editorial and proprietary control of Alonzo
Leland. This paper continued to be published
until October, 1862. Toward the end of its
career S. J. McCormick became editor. He was
succeeded by George I. Curry, the last
editor of the paper, who had been one of
Oregon's territorial governors. The
Advertiser was uncompromisingly
democratic in its utterances and to such an
extent did it support the anti-war attitude
of its party during the early period of the
war of the rebellion that its suspension was
not entirely voluntary.
The Pacific Christian Advocate, the
oldest religious journal in Oregon and the
only paper, exclusive of the Oregonian,
which has had an existence since the pioneer
days of Portland, has been published since
1855. It was first established at Salem as
an independent Methodist weekly with Rev. T.
H. Pearne as. editor, but in 1859 was
removed to Portland. It was published as an
independent paper until the session of the
general conference of the Methodist
Episcopal Church in 1856, when that body
adopted it as a general conference paper,
and selected Mr. Pearne as editor for four
years. Mr. Pearne continued as editor until
1864, when Rev. H. C. Benson, D. D., was
chosen as his successor. The latter was
succeeded in 1868 by Rev. Isaac Dillon, D.
D., who occupied the ' editorial chair for
eight years. In 1876 Rev. J. H. Acton became
editor and ser-ued for four years. During
all these years the paper was by no means
self-supporting and had been a source of
considerable expense to the general
conference. In view of this fact, at the
meeting of the general conference in 1880 it
was determined to discontinue the
Advocate, and after paying its
liabilities to donate the paper to the
Oregon and Columbia River General
Conference. This was done, and the
conference named turned the paper over to a
joint stock company composed of members of
the conference of which George W. Stayer is
president, Rev. Alfred Kummer, secretary and
treasurer and Rev. A. J. Hanson, business
manager. Rev. H. K. Hines was. selected as
editor under the new management. He served
for eight years and during that time the
subscription list largely increased and the
paper was placed on a good financial basis.
In 1888 Rev. W. S. Harrington became
editor-a position he still holds. The
present circulation of the Advocate
is about twenty-four hundred copies.
After the suspension of the Advertiser
the next newspaper venture in Portland, in
connection with the secular press, was the
Daily Evening Tribune, which was
first issued in January, 1865. Col. Van
Cleve and Ward Latter were its editors. It
had a brief career, suspending within a
month from date of issue.
The Oregon Herald followed the
Tribune, appearing March 17, 1866, with
H. M. Abbott and N. L. Butler as editors and
proprietors. It was started as a Democratic
organ. In June, 1866, the paper was
purchased by a stock company composed of
some of the leading Democratic politicians
of the State, among the directors being A.
E. Wait, W. Weatherford, J. K. Kelly, L. F.
Grover, J. S. Smith, N. L. Butler and Dr. J.
C. Hawthorne. Under the new management,
Beriah Brown became editor. Financially the
paper was not a success, and in November,
1868, it was sold to W. Weatherford,
Sylvester Pennoyer at the same time becoming
its editor. A few months later Mr. Pennoyer
purchased the paper, continuing as editor
and publisher until July 1, 1869, when he
disposed of it to T. Patterson & Co. For a
time thereafter Eugene Semple was editor.
The paper, however, had but a brief
existence after its last sale, and was
finally forced to suspend, the entire plant
being disposed of at auction.
Before the suspension of the Herald,
however, two new dailies entered the field,
the Portland Evening Bulletin, edited
by J. P. Atkinson and the Portland
Evening Commercial, edited by M. P.
Bull, the former appearing January 6, 1868,
and the latter July 11th, of the same year.
They pursued an independent course in
dealing with political questions, and made a
vigorous fight to secure support, but both
failed to find the road which leads to
success in journalism, and after
comparatively brief careers were added to
the death roll of Portland newspapers.
The Portland Daily Bulletin was one
of the unfortunate enterprises connected
with Ben Holladay's movements in Oregon. In
furtherance of his vast schemes he estimated
at its full value the aid of a newspaper
which would be absolutely within his
control. With this idea in view he purchased
the plant which had been used in the
publication of the San Francisco Times
and removed it to Portland. The Bulletin
made its appearance in 1870, with James
O'Meara as editor. In 1872, H. W. Scott was
associated in the editorship, but remained
only a few months when T. B. Odeneal took
charge. Under Odeneal's editorial management
the paper continued until it suspended
publication in October, 1875. It was one of
the most disastrous ventures in the history
of Portland journalism, having cost nearly
$200,000, more than its entire income during
the brief years of its existence. The plant
was sold at auction, and was scattered
throughout Oregon, Washington and Idaho and
is still doing its duty in connection with
country journalism.