The December 20, 2016 front page
of The Wichita Eagle |
|
Type | Daily newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Broadsheet |
Owner(s) | The McClatchy Company |
Publisher | Roy Heatherly |
Editor | Steve Coffman |
Founded | 1872 |
Headquarters | 825 East Douglas Avenue Wichita, KS 67202 United States |
Circulation | 47,854 Daily 102,600 Sunday |
ISSN | 1046-3127 |
OCLC number | 20386511 |
Website | kansas |
The Wichita Eagle is a daily newspaper published in Wichita, Kansas, United States. It is owned by The McClatchy Company and is the largest newspaper in Wichita and the surrounding area.
In 1870, The Vedette was the first newspaper established in Wichita by Fred A. Sowers and W. B. Hutchinson. It operated briefly.
In April 1872, The Wichita Eagle was founded and edited by Marshall M. Murdock, and it became a daily paper in May 1884. His son, Victor Murdock, was a reporter for the paper during his teens, the managing editor from 1894 to 1903, an editor from the mid-1920s until his death in 1945.
In October 1872, The Wichita Daily Beacon was founded by Fred A. Sowers and another man. It published daily for two months, then weekly until 1884 when it went back to daily. In 1907, Henry Allen purchased the Beacon and was publisher for many years.
The Eagle and Beacon competed for 88 years, then in 1960 the Eagle purchased the Beacon. Both newspapers continued to be published, the Eagle in the morning, the Beacon in the evening, the Eagle and Beacon on Sunday.
In 1973, the Murdock family sold the paper to Ridder Publications. Ridder and Knight Newspapers merged in 1974 to form Knight Ridder, which combined the two newspapers into The Wichita Eagle-Beacon in 1980.
In 1989, the Beacon name was dropped, and the newspaper became The Wichita Eagle.
In 2006, the Eagle became part of The McClatchy Company when McClatchy bought Knight Ridder.
On November 18, 1996, the Eagle launched its first website, Wichita Online, at wichitaeagle.com. On January 22, 2000, its domain was changed to kansas.com.
In spring 2016, McClatchy Company announced that it would transfer printing of the Eagle from Wichita to its Kansas City Star printing line in Kansas City, Missouri, which already prints other newspapers such as Lawrence Journal-World and Topeka Capital-Journal. The move eliminated 27 full-time and 47 part-time jobs. The building will be sold and the editing staff will move to a smaller location in downtown Wichita. In fall 2016, Cargill announced that it would move its "Protein Group" headquarters from downtown Wichita into a new $60 Million building on the site of the former Eagle building at 825 East Douglas Avenue in old town.