Laurel Leader-Call

Laurel Leader-Call
Type Tri-weekly newspaper
Format Broadsheet
Owner(s) Gin Creek Publishing
Publisher Jim Cegielski
Editor Sean Murphy
Founded August 11, 1911, as The Laurel Daily Argus
Headquarters 318 North Magnolia Street, Laurel, Mississippi 39440, United States
Circulation 8,000
Website www.leader-call.net

The Laurel Leader-Call is a thrice-weekly newspaper published Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays in Laurel, Mississippi, United States, covering Jones County.

It is owned by Gin Creek Publishing, which purchased the name and subscriber list from CNHI in April 2012.

For a century Laurel's only daily newspaper, the paper was founded as The Laurel Daily Argus August 11, 1911, by Edgar G. Harris (1876-1953).[1] It later changed its name to the Laurel Daily Leader The Laurel Morning Call and the Laurel Daily Leader combined to form an evening newspaper called The Laurel Leader-Call on February 2, 1930.[2][3]

The papers were owned by Thomson Newspapers for several years. Thomson sold it in 1993 to American Publishing Company.[4] American Publishing sold to Community Newspaper Holdings in 1999.[5]

On September 1, 2011, the paper's owner, Community Newspaper Holdings Inc., announced that the Laurel Leader-Call would begin publishing on a four-day schedule: Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Sunday.[6] The newspaper's website continued to provide news, features, sports, photos and video on a daily basis until it shut down nearly seven months later.

CNHI folded the Leader-Call on March 29, 2012.[7]

In April the Leader-Call name and subscriber list was purchased by Gin Creek Publishing, a local business that had published the weekly The ReView of Jones County since 2007. The ReView ceased operation and the Laurel Leader-Call was reborn as a three-day-a-week publication, beginning with the April 19, 2012, edition. New publisher-editor Mark Thornton said that "People who remember when the Leader-Call was family-owned remember that it was a much better paper then. We plan to restore that proud tradition."[8]

References

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