Ogden Standard-Examiner

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Ogden Standard-Examiner is a daily morning newspaper published in Ogden, Utah. With 63,000 subscribers, it is the third largest daily newspaper in terms of circulation in the State of Utah after the Salt Lake Tribune and The Deseret Morning News.

Contents

[edit] History

Ogden's first newspaper began publication in 1869. but the lineage of the current Standard-Examiner dates from January 1, 1888, when the first issue of the Ogden Standard was distributed. The Ogden Examiner was established in 1904, and the two papers were merged on April 1, 1920, creating the current nameplate.

The Standard-Examiner maintained offices in the Kiesel Building in downtown Ogden until 1961, when it relocated to 455 23rd Street, a building originally constructed to serve as Ogden's National Guard armory. In 2000, the paper's offices and printing plant moved to a remodeled building at Business Depot Ogden, the former Defense Depot Ogden.

Historically an evening newspaper, the Standard-Examiner switched to morning publication in 2000.

[edit] Top of Utah

The "Top of Utah" is used to refer to the "northern part of the Beehive State, Davis, Weber, Box Elder, Morgan, Cache and Rich counties."[1][2] This term was coined by Scott Trundle in the mid-1990s[3] and used as in this example from a December 31, 2000 Ogden Standard-Examiner editorial as "the six-county Top of Utah region."[4]

[edit] References

[edit] External links