Hudson Dispatch
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The Hudson Dispatch was originally called the Harrison Dispatch, starting around 1874, started in East Newark, New Jersey by Trelease, Simonds & Company. [1]
[edit] References
- ^ Hudson Dispatch. New Jersey City University. Retrieved on 2007-08-26. “The Hudson Dispatch began as the Harrison Dispatch, circa 1874. It was a local independent newspaper in Harrison, New Jersey, said to have started in East Newark by publisher Trelease, Simonds & Company. In 1877, the newspaper was sold to a printer who convinced the political leader and Hudson County Sheriff Robert "Bob" Davis to invest in the Dispatch. It moved to Jersey City in 1887, relocated to Union Hill (now Union City) in 1890 and finally took residence in the Dispatch Building at 400 Thirty-eight Street in Union City. As the Hudson Dispatch, the newspaper was noted for its investigative reporting of Hudson County politics and primarily served the communities of Union City, Weehawken, West New York and North Bergen. Sold to Media News Group of Houston in 1986, the Dispatch was taken over by its competitor, the Jersey Journal, in 1991. By that time the newspaper had been in existence for approximately 117 years, but its circulation had slipped to 30,000 and suffered from a loss of revenue and advertising. Mindful of the Dispatch's journalistic tradition in the county, the Jersey Journal for a while printed the Hudson Dispatch logo along with its own name on its masthead.”