Brattleboro Reformer

Brattleboro Reformer

Infobox_Newspaper
name =
type = Daily newspaper
format = Broadsheet
owners = MediaNews Group
headquarters = Brattleboro, Vermont, U.S.
editor = Thomas D'Errico
publisher = Edward Woods
foundation = 19 August 1876 (weekly); 3 March 1913 (daily)
website = [http://www.reformer.com/ www.reformer.com]

The "Brattleboro Reformer" is the third largest daily newspaper in the U.S. state of Vermont. With a weekday circulation of just over 10,000 [ [http://powerreporting.com/knight/vt_brattleboro_reformer.html Official website] ] , it is behind the "Burlington Free Press" and the "Rutland Herald", respectively. It publishes six days a week, Monday through Saturday, with its "Weekend Reformer" having the largest readership; the offices of the paper are in Brattleboro, Vermont and it has a market penetration (weekday sales per 100 households) of 62.8 in its home zip code.

The newspaper covers all of Windham County, Vermont, as well as some towns in neighboring Cheshire County, New Hampshire. It is the only newspaper in the United States called "Reformer." [ [http://www.usnpl.com/United States Newspaper List] ]

The "Reformer" is owned by the Denver-based MediaNews Group, which counts the "Denver Post" as its flagship. It was bought by the chain in 1995. The "Reformer" is run by New England Newspapers, a MediaNewsGroup subsidiary that also runs the "Berkshire Eagle" in Pittsfield, Massachusetts.

History from 19th to mid-20th century

The "Reformer" published its first issue, under the name "Windham County Reformer", in 1876. Publisher Charles N. Davenport, a prominent lawyer and supporter of the Democratic Party, founded the paper in part due to dissatisfaction with what he saw as a Republican bias in the coverage by the "Vermont Phoenix", the main political paper in the state. The presidential campaign at the time, between Republican Rutherford B. Hayes and Democrat Samuel J. Tilden prompted the "Vermont Record and Farmer", the third paper in the state, to describe the new paper as dedicated to "Tilden and reform."

While local historians believe that the original conception of the paper was for it to last only for the duration of the 1876 campaign, Davenport's son, Charles H., ran the paper for twenty-five years after which it was passed on to editors unconnected with the Davenport family. The paper went from a weekly to twice-weekly publication schedule in 1897. While the paper had financial troubles for many years, it managed to maintain a continuous publication schedule.

In 1903, it was bought by the Vermont Printing Company, and its new editors turned the paper away from its partisan Democrat emphasis. The "Phoenix" and "Reformer" were merged in 1913 under the management of the Brattleboro Publishing Company, with the "Phoenix" serving as the "Reformer"'s weekly companion and the "Reformer" going to a daily publication schedule. The "Phoenix" weekly was discontinued in 1955.

The 1913 merger was considered by some to be the "true" founding date of the paper; according to an article in the 4 March 1925 issue, "Daily Reformer Now 15 Years Old":

:The Brattleboro Daily Reformer celebrated yesterday its 15th anniversary as a daily. As a weekly publication The Reformer dates back to the dim and distant date of 1876, but its debut as a daily – with that word ‘Daily’ in emphatic black-face letter-spaced Gothic type on its first page – came on Monday, March 3, 1913.

Records at the Brooks Memorial Library, the main library of Brattleboro, list the publication history of the paper in 2006 as

:"Windham County Reformer", 1876-1897:"Semi-weekly Windham County Reformer", 1897-1901:"Windham County Reformer", 1901-1912, :"Brattleboro Daily Reformer (after merger with Vermont Phoenix)", 1913-1955:"Brattleboro Daily Reformer and Vermont Phoenix", 1955-1973:"Brattleboro Reformer", 1973-present

Much of the historical information in this section comes from a special 1981 section of the "Reformer", published on the occasion of the paper's moving from downtown Brattleboro to its headquarters on Black Mountain Road.

The "Reformer" in the late-20th and 21st centuries

The "Reformer" was possibly the first newspaper in the United States to run same-sex union announcements in parallel to the usual wedding notices [ [http://www.ajr.org/Article.asp?id=2645 Same-sex marriages] ] , beginning the practice in 1989, well before the state of Vermont legalized civil unions.

In the past the paper has been controversial for running letters to the editor that many have found offensive [ [http://www.poynter.org/dg.lts/id.45/aid.52274/column.htm Poynter Online - Romenesko ] ] ; in 2003 it ran an anti-semitic letter whose publication the then managing editor Kathryn Casa defended, saying that "only by bringing [bigoted opinions] into the open can we expose and eliminate them."

Casa was replaced by Kevin Moran, who was recruited from the "North Adams Transcript" in Massachusetts, which is also owned by MediaNews Group. Moran moved to work as managing editor at the "Berkshire Eagle". [ [http://www.editorandpublisher.com/eandp/search/article_display.jsp?schema=&vnu_content_id=1001571231 Login ] ]

In November 2005, the "Reformer" hired Sabina Haskell as the new editor. She had previously been assistant editor at the "Rutland Herald" and had also run the "Bennington Banner". Haskell quit to take a PR job for Republican Vermont governor Jim Douglas in 2007. Then managing news editor Tom D'Errico was promoted to fill the editor position.

The publisher of the Reformer, Martin Langeveld, resigned after two years on the job in April 2008.Fact|date=April 2008 Ed Woods, publisher of the Bennington Banner, replaced him in the same month.

taff and union controversies

The paper was involved in a number of controversies in the years 2003-2004.

Union leaders and members of the public protested in 2003, when the management fired a reporter during a campaign to form a union at the Reformer. More than 1,000 people signed a petition that called on Media News to re-hire the union supporter. [ [http://www.newsguild.org/gr/pdf/030613.pdf Union publication] accessed March 18, 2008] [ [http://www.boston.com Boston Globe] ] [ [http://www.evacuationplans.org/eesha.htm 5/18/03 Valley Advocate] [ [http://www.valleyadvocate.com/gbase/News/content?oid=oid:18041 Valley Advocate] ]

Readers complained when the parent company fired managing editor Kathryn Casa without giving a reason in 2004 [ [http://www.poynter.org/column.asp?id=45&aid=64325 Managing Editor fired] ] . Critics asserted that the firing was in part connected to her liberal politics [ [http://www.ibrattleboro.com/article.php?story=20040420082745686 Opinion on firing] ] ; on the other hand, Casa was accused of intimidating staff into voting against a union drive. Judith Gorman, a columnist for the paper, resigned in protest following Casa's dismissal; about 150 people protested Casa's dismissal outside the "Reformer" offices on April 25 of that year.

Footnotes

References

* Kevin O'Conner, “The Reformer: From a Campaign Sheet to a Daily Newspaper.” "Brattleboro Reformer", 17 November 1981, supplement: Then and Now: The Brattleboro Reformer, pp.18-21.

External links

*The " [http://www.reformer.com/ Brattleboro Reformer] "


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