Guy Gannett Communications

Guy Gannett Communications

Infobox Defunct Company
company_name = Guy Gannett Communications
company_logo =
slogan =
fate = Broken up and sold in 1998
successor = Ackerley Group Blethen Maine Newspapers Sinclair Broadcast Group
foundation = 1921
defunct = September 1998
location = Portland, Maine USA
industry = Newspapers and television stations
key_people = Guy P. Gannett, founder Madeleine G. Corson, chairman James B. Shaffer, president, CEO
products = Three daily newspapers in Maine and seven television stations in the eastern United States
num_employees = 1998: 1,400

Guy Gannett Communications -- no relation to the larger Gannett communications chain -- was a family-owned business consisting of newspapers in Maine and a handful of television stations in the eastern United States. The company was founded by its namesake, Guy P. Gannett, in 1921, and managed by a family trust from 1954 to 1998, when it sold most of its properties to The Seattle Times Company and Sinclair Broadcast Group.

History

William Howard Gannett, of Augusta, Maine, first published "Comfort" magazine in 1888 -- an eight-page advertisement for a patent medicine -- but it was his son, Guy P. Gannett, who headed the push into daily journalism. After a stint helping with the magazine after his 1901 graduation from Yale University, the junior Gannett went into local politics. By 1920, he was a prominent citizen in Portland and two daily newspaper owners -- representing the "Portland Herald" and the "Portland Daily Press" -- had asked him to buy them out. Gannett invested in both companies.Wickenheiser, Matt. [http://pressherald.mainetoday.com/redesign/040608history.shtml "A Rich History, and a Proud History"] . "Portland Press Herald", June 8, 2004. Accessed October 29, 2007.]

In 1921, he completed his purchase of the two Portland papers, merging them into one "Portland Press Herald", and also bought the "Waterville Morning Sentinel" in Waterville, Maine. In 1925 he added, for US$550,000, the Portland "Evening Express and Daily Advertiser" and "Portland Sunday Telegram". Four years later, Guy Gannett Publishing Co. tacked on the "Kennebec Journal" in Augusta. [http://pressherald.mainetoday.com/about/timeline.shtml "History of the Portland Press Herald and Maine Sunday Telegram"] , accessed October 29, 2007.]

At first, the company expanded beyond newspapers with WGAN radio (1938) and television (1954) stations in Portland only (WGAN-TV was renamed WGME in the 1980s). In 1967, Guy Gannett began to buy television properties outside Maine.

In 1990, succumbing to industry-wide declines in revenues at afternoon newspapers, Guy Gannett closed the "Evening Express" and merged it with the "Portland Press Herald". Daily circulation of the "Express" was given at 22,000 to 23,000. ["Portland Dailies Plan to Merge". "Telegram & Gazette" (Worcester, Mass.), page C5, September 26, 1990.]

Sales

In early 1998, the family trust decided to sell the company, leading to worries among some, such as "Press Herald" managing editor Curt Hazlett, that the Guy Gannett papers could lose the qualities he associated with family-owned journalism:

Although they entertained offers from Journal Register Company and MediaNews Group, which had strong properties in nearby Massachusetts, Guy Gannett's managers decided to sell their newspapers to The Seattle Times Company, which had previously operated only within the state of Washington. Seattle Times, run by the fourth generation of the Blethen family, which had its roots in Maine, won out because of shared values.

"Of all the companies in the newspaper business, The Seattle Times is one most like our company in the sense of independence, of family ownership, and commitment to the community," said Guy Gannett spokesman Tim O'Meara. Frank Blethen, the "Seattle Times" publisher, agreed: "One of our key phrases is that we make money to print newspapers, not the other way around," he said.Wilmsen, Steven. "Seattle Times Co. Buys Maine Newspapers from Guy Gannett". "The Boston Globe", page D1, September 2, 1998.]

Blethen said he had developed "a real emotional connection" to the Maine papers after making several "family pilgrimages" to the home of his ancestor, Col. Alden Blethen, who had been a schoolteacher and lawyer in Maine before purchasing "The Seattle Press-Times" in 1896. The "Kennebec Journal", "Maine Sunday Telegram", "Morning Sentinel" and "Portland Press Herald", along with associated weeklies, were reorganized as Blethen Maine Newspapers, an independent division of The Seattle Times Company.

A week after the Blethen sale, Guy Gannett unloaded most of its television stations in a US$310 million deal with Sinclair Broadcast Group."Highlights of the Week: Sept. 6-12". "The Boston Globe", page K2, September 13, 1998.]

Properties

At the time of its sale in 1998, Guy Gannett Communications consisted of three daily newspapers in Maine, a few related publishing products, and seven television stations, including: ["Guy Gannett Communications Puts Media Business Up for Sale". "Telegram & Gazette" (Worcester, Mass.), page E3, April 2, 1998.]

* KGAN, Channel 2, of Cedar Rapids, Iowa (CBS affiliate)
* WGGB, Channel 40, of Springfield, Massachusetts (ABC affiliate)
* WGME-TV, Channel 13, of Portland, Maine (CBS affiliate, flagship station)
* WICS, Channel 20, of Springfield, Illinois and semi-satellite WICD, Channel 15, of Champaign, Illinois (NBC affiliates)
* WOKR, Channel 13, of Rochester, New York (ABC affiliate)
* WTWC-TV, Channel 40, of Tallahassee, Florida (NBC affiliate)

The newspapers and related companies were sold to The Seattle Times Company and reorganized as a subsidiary company, Blethen Maine Newspapers. Six of the television stations were sold to Sinclair Broadcast Group; WOKR was sold to Ackerley Group.

References

External links

* [http://www.mainetoday.com MaineToday.com (Blethen Maine Newspapers Website)]


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