Type | Daily newspaper |
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Format | Broadsheet |
Owner | RISN Operations Inc. |
Publisher | Barry M. Mechanic |
Editor | Dan Trafford |
Founded | May 31, 1892 |
Language | English |
Headquarters | 75 Main Street, Woonsocket, Rhode Island 02895 U.S. |
Circulation | 10,139 daily, 14,575 Sunday in 2006[1] |
Official website | woonsocketcall.com |
The Call is a seven-day daily newspaper based in Woonsocket, Rhode Island, U.S., covering northern Providence County, Rhode Island, and some adjacent towns in Massachusetts.
Originally an afternoon newspaper known as The Evening Call, the Woonsocket paper has published seven mornings a week since the 1990s. It is owned by RISN Operations Inc.
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The Evening Call was founded in 1892 by Samuel E. Hudson and Andrew J. McConnell, who predicted that "the people of Woonsocket will support a paper devoted to their local and business interests," "essentially, a paper for the people."
Hudson's and McConnell's descendents—Buell W. Hudson, Charles W. Palmer, Andrew P. Palmer and Nancy E. Hudson—ran the paper for nearly 90 years before selling it to Ingersoll Publications in 1984. Ingersoll in turn was bought by Journal Register Company in 1989.
In 2007, a new company, RISN, formed to purchase Journal Register's Rhode Island properties, including The Call and systematically fired a large number of employees.[2]
In its home coverage, The Call competes with the state's largest daily, the Providence Journal. It also competes in nearby Massachusetts towns with the Worcester Telegram & Gazette and the Milford Daily News.
RISN (which stands for Rhode Island Suburban Newspapers) also owns three other daily newspapers in Rhode Island, The Times of Pawtucket (which shares a publisher with The Call), the Kent County Daily Times of West Warwick, as well as several weekly newspapers. All of these properties were sold for $8.3 million to RISN in early 2007 by Journal Register Company.[3]
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