The July 27, 2005 front page
of The Press-Enterprise |
|
Type | Daily newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Broadsheet |
Owner(s) | Digital First Media |
Publisher | Ron Hasse |
Editor | Frank Pine |
Founded | 1878 |
Language | English |
Headquarters | 1825 Chicago Ave, Suite 100 Riverside, California 92507, United States |
Circulation |
2011 2009 Ranked 65 of 100 172,593 Daily 178,062 Sunday |
Sister newspapers | La Prensa (Spanish-language weekly) |
ISSN | 0746-4258 |
Website | pe.com |
2011
92,697 Daily
114,405 Sunday
2009 Ranked 65 of 100
149,608 Daily
160,016 Sunday2008 Ranked 63 of 100
164,189 Daily
172,730 Sunday
The Press-Enterprise is a paid daily newspaper published by Digital First Media that serves the Inland Empire in Southern California. Headquartered in downtown Riverside, California, it is the primary newspaper for Riverside County, with heavy penetration into neighboring San Bernardino County. The geographic circulation area of the newspaper spans from the border of Orange County, California to the west, east to the Coachella Valley, north to the San Bernardino Mountains, and south to the San Diego County line. The Press-Enterprise is a member of the Southern California News Group.
The newspaper traces its roots to The Press, which began publishing in 1878, and The Daily Enterprise, which started publishing in 1885. The two papers were merged into one company in 1931, but the company did not begin publishing a daily morning paper named The Press-Enterprise until 1983. A. H. Belo acquired the company in 1998. In October 2013, A.H. Belo announced that it had reached an agreement to sell The Press-Enterprise's assets to Freedom Communications, parent company of the Orange County Register, for $27 million; after some delays, the transaction closed in late November. Freedom declared bankruptcy in 2016, the Register and the Press-Enterprise were sold in a bankruptcy auction to Digital First Media in March 2016.
The Press-Enterprise's local competitors are the San Bernardino Sun and the Inland Valley Daily Bulletin, along with sharing some of its western circulation areas with the Orange County Register and The Californian (of Temecula) in the southwest area.