Southbridge Evening News
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Southbridge Evening News | |
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Type | Daily newspaper |
Format | broadsheet |
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Owner | Stonebridge Press |
Publisher | Frank G. Chilinski |
Editor | Walter C. Bird Jr. |
Founded | 1923 |
Political allegiance | center-right |
Price | USD .60 |
Headquarters | 25 Elm Street, Southbridge, Massachusetts 01550 USA |
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Website: [1] |
The Southbridge Evening News is a weekday (Monday-Friday) afternoon daily newspaper in Southbridge, Massachusetts. It is the flagship newspaper of Stonebridge Press, a chain that also includes several weekly newspapers in central Massachusetts and northeastern Connecticut.
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[edit] The News
"The News", headquartered in the historical Manning Leonard House steps away from downtown and Town Hall,[1] focuses its coverage on the "tri-community" towns of Southbridge, Sturbridge and Charlton, and three adjoining smaller towns, Brimfield, Holland and Wales. It competes in each of these towns with the daily Worcester Telegram & Gazette, and in the three smaller towns with the daily Springfield Republican and weekly Palmer Journal.
Its owners since 1995, John E. Coots and David S. Cutler of Stonebridge Press, have played up the Evening News' local roots, relegating any news from outside its circulation area to the inside of the newspaper. Stonebridge Press also oversaw the paper's return to broadsheet newsprint and its conversion to digital photography and pagination.
The newspaper is distributed each weekday around 3 p.m. by local carriers. It is printed in Southbridge, in Building 25 of the former American Optical plant.
[edit] History
The Evening News was a cornerstone of Central Massachusetts newsmedia long before Stonebridge Press was formed in 1995. It was the flagship of Worcester County Newspapers, which included many of the same weeklies as Stonebridge.
In the mid-1990s, the rising cost of newsprint forced Worcester County Newspapers president and Evening News editor Loren F. Ghiglione to make severe cuts: the company's printing plant in Auburn, Massachusetts, was closed (the plant is now owned by Community Newspaper Company); the publishing schedule was cut from six to five days a week; several of the company's weeklies were closed; and the Evening News and remaining weeklies switched from broadsheet to tabloid paper.[2]
Mike Saucier, one of the first editors to join the reborn New York Sun, was a former Evening News editor. So was Joseph C. Capillo, a prominent Southbridge journalist and namesake of a park in that town.
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ Whitney, Dick. "Southbridge - Then and Now"
- ^ Gushue, Harold. "Local Paper Shuts Plant; Worcester County Newspapers to Contract," Worcester (Mass.) Telegram & Gazette, March 25, 1995