Nothing Special   »   [go: up one dir, main page]

The Washington Herald

(Redirected from Washington Herald)

The Washington Herald was an American daily newspaper in Washington, D.C., from October 8, 1906, to January 31, 1939.

The Washington Herald
A Paper of Quality
border
December 25, 1922 edition
TypeDaily newspaper
FormatBroadsheet
Owner(s)
Founder(s)Scott Cordelle Bone
Editor
FoundedOctober 8, 1906; 118 years ago (1906-10-08)
LanguageEnglish
Ceased publication1939
Headquarters734 Fifteenth Street
CountryUnited States
CirculationPeak circulation of 50,000
ISSN1941-0662
OCLC number9470809

History

edit

The paper was founded in 1906 by Scott C. Bone, who had been managing editor of The Washington Post from 1888 until that paper was taken over by John Roll McLean in 1905.

Clinton T. Brainard, president of the McClure Newspaper Syndicate, bought the paper in 1913. William Randolph Hearst, who already owned the Washington Times, took over the paper in November 1922.[1][2] Though he consolidated the operations of the papers, they still published separately except for a joint Sunday edition.

Cissy Patterson was appointed editor by Hearst in 1930.[3]

The Herald was merged with the Times on February 1, 1939, with the combined publication known as the Washington Times-Herald. In 1954, the Times-Herald was purchased by and merged with The Washington Post.

Fictional depictions

edit

The Washington Herald appears as a fictional newspaper in the 1993 film The Pelican Brief, in The X Files (3x15) 1996, the 1996 film Eraser, and in the 2013 political drama series House of Cards.[4] It is used in John Feinstein's book series featuring child reporters, including Last Shot, Vanishing Act, and Cover Up.

References

edit
  1. ^ About The Washington herald. (Washington, D.C.) 1906-1939, chroniclingamerica, Retrieved 17 February 2014
  2. ^ (18 November 1922). Washington Herald Is a Hearst Newspaper, The Fourth Estate, p.2
  3. ^ Chambers, Deborah et al. Women and Journalism, p. 45 (Routledge 2013)
  4. ^ "Debating 'House of Cards': What the Show Gets Right and Wrong About Journalism". The New York Times. Retrieved 1 March 2013.