Type | Daily newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Broadsheet |
Owner(s) | Digital First Media |
Publisher | Ron Hasse |
Editor | Frank Pine |
Founded | 1897 |
Language | English |
Headquarters | Long Beach, California |
Circulation | 41,038 Daily 60,286 Sunday (Sep 2014) |
Website | presstelegram.com |
The Press-Telegram is a paid daily newspaper published in Long Beach, California. Coverage area for the Press-Telegram includes Long Beach, Lakewood, Signal Hill, Artesia, Bellflower, Cerritos, Downey, Hawaiian Gardens, Norwalk, and Paramount.
The Press-Telegram's precursor, the Press, was first published in 1897. The Press was purchased in the early 20th century by Charles H. Prisk and William F. Prisk, Charles being the owner and William the editor and publisher. Sometime after 1918 the Press was merged with another paper, the Daily Telegram; the combined paper was first published under the name Daily Press then, from 1924, the Press-Telegram.
On September 30, 1933, the Press-Telegram published what David Dayen called "One of the more influential letters to the editor in American history": Francis Townsend's letter outlining the Townsend Plan, a proposal that sparked a national campaign which influenced the establishment of the Roosevelt administration's Social Security system.
Later, the Independent (founded in 1938) was merged into the Press-Telegram, creating the Independent-Press-Telegram with the Independent being the paper's morning edition and the Press-Telegram the evening edition. The Independent was discontinued in 1981, leaving only the Press-Telegram (now published in the morning) as the paper's only edition.
The paper was owned by Ridder Publications and its successor Knight Ridder from 1952 to 1997, when it was acquired by its current owner, the Los Angeles Newspaper Group (then a division of newspaper conglomerate MediaNews Group). In 2013, MediaNews Group and 21st Century Media merged into Digital First Media.
An online version of the paper began web publication in 1995. In 2011, the paper eliminated its sports, photography, and features departments. Some of the eliminated positions were picked up by the Torrance Daily Breeze, another Los Angeles Newspaper Group paper.