Heppner Gazette-Times
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The ''Heppner Gazette-Times'' is a weekly newspaper serving Morrow County in the U.S. state of
Oregon Oregon ( , ) is a U.S. state, state in the Pacific Northwest region of the United States. It is a part of the Western U.S., with the Columbia River delineating much of Oregon's northern boundary with Washington (state), Washington, while t ...
. It has a circulation of 1,430.


History

The ''Heppner Gazette'' was established on March 30, 1883, by John A. Stine. It was the first newspaper published in Morrow County. At the time of its launch, the city of Heppner had a population of 370; the newspaper was started with contributions from a number of citizens. Stine brought a Washington handpress from Portland via railroad and set up shop in the pioneer town. He ran the paper for a short time before transferring his interests to Colonel John W. Redington, a former volunteer Indian scout who fought in the
Bannock War The Bannock War of 1878 was an armed conflict between the U.S. military and Bannock and Paiute warriors in Idaho and northeastern Oregon from June to August 1878. The Bannock totaled about 600 to 800 in 1870 because of other Shoshone peoples ...
. Redington was an eccentric who painted signs outside his shop that read "Hell on Horse Thieves and Hypocrites" and another proclaimed "The Heppner ''Gazette'' Bangup for Bustles." Redington ran the paper for five years and was succeeded by Rev. Henry Rasmus, church pastor at Heppner Methodist Episcopal. Within the year he was replaced by teacher Otis Patterson. He ran the paper with his brother Alva until 1898. Editorship was then passed to Corliss Merritt, then back to Redington in 1900. A year later the ''Gazette'' was sold in 1901 to Fred Warnock, formerly of the ''Silverton Appeal'', and E. P. Mitchell. Warnock later bought out Mitchell. In 1910, Vawter Crawford, formerly of the ''Morrow County Record,'' purchased the ''Gazette''. The ''Heppner Times'' was established on Nov. 18, 1897 by E. M. Shutt. Shutt got into a fist fight on Main Street with rival newsman Redington of the ''Gazette'' in March 1901 and "thrashed" him. Redington had published a story claiming Shutt was attracted to a woman he employed. Shutt, the larger of the two, flattened Redington in a rage. Shutt ran the ''Times'' until he was elected sheriff in 1902. He sold the paper to A. J. Hicks who ran if for about a decade before selling it back to Shutt. Vawter Crawford purchased the ''Times'' and consolidated it with the ''Gazette'' to form the ''Heppner Gazette-Times'' on Feb. 15, 1912. It was a consistently Republican newspaper throughout its early history. Part of the merger announcement read: "We do not enter upon this new venture with the idea that we have a picnic, or that it is a bonanza. But we do take up the work with new energy and sincere pride." Vawter Crawford died in April 1935. The ''Gazette-Times'' was inherited by his son Spencer Crawford, who died in 1942. The paper was then operated by Vawter's brother Otheo G. Crawford, who sold the paper in 1951 to Mr. and Mrs. Robert Penland, formerly of the '' Lebanon Express''. Almost a decade later the couple sold the paper in 1961 to Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Wildman, who less than a year later sold it to Wesley A. Sherman and his wife Helen. After her husband suffered a fatal heart attack in 1969 while on a visit to Washington D.C., Helen Sherman operated the ''Gazette-Times'' herself. The former teacher worked 80 hours a week to keep the paper functioning. Charlie and Dorothy Heard become the owner around that time. In 1973, Ernest V. Joiner purchased the ''Gazette-Times'' from the Heards. Joiner sold the paper in 1976 to G. M. Reed, owner of '' The Hermiston Herald''. In March 1979, Reed merged his business with Eagle Newspapers. He then sold the ''Gazette-Times'' to Jerome Sheldon in August 1979. In 1980, Jane and Jerome Sheldon sold the paper to David Sykes. About four decades later he appointed his son Chris Sykes as publisher in 2022.


Archive

Archives from 1951 through 1976, as well as many pages from its predecessor newspapers, are available through the Oregon Digital Newspaper Program at the
University of Oregon The University of Oregon (UO, U of O or Oregon) is a Public university, public research university in Eugene, Oregon, United States. Founded in 1876, the university is organized into nine colleges and schools and offers 420 undergraduate and gra ...
.


References


External links


Information at Heppner.net
(Official web site)
Entry at Chronicling America
U.S. Library of Congress. {{Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association Newspapers published in Oregon Morrow County, Oregon 1883 establishments in Oregon Newspapers established in 1883