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Sheboygan Press : ウィキペディア英語版
The Sheboygan Press

''The Sheboygan Press'' is a daily newspaper based in Sheboygan, Wisconsin. It is part of the Gannett Company chain of newspapers as part of their northeastern and north-central Wisconsin cluster of publications. ''The Sheboygan Press'' is primarily distributed in Sheboygan County.
The Sheboygan Press also publishes the ''Shoreline Chronicle'', a free shopper paper, the ''Citizen'', a weekly free "best-of" edition of the ''Press'', ''Moxie'', which features articles and news about senior citizens, and the ''Today's Real Estate'' local realty listings magazine.
== History ==
''The Sheboygan Press'' began on December 17, 1907, with the first edition of ''The Sheboygan Daily Press''.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.sheboyganpress.com/ic/forms/history.shtml )〕 At the time the area was mainly dominated by the local German language newspapers in line with the city's heavy German immigrant population, which was the main source of news in the community until after World War I and the rise of Americanization, when eventually the ''Press'' ended up the lone English-language publication in the community through a line of mergers and foldings of other papers. ''Daily'' would be removed from the nameplate as time went on.

Eventually the paper enlisted the financial help of Charles H. Weisse, a Sheboygan Falls businessman and congressman, who hired Charles E. Broughton as editor in 1908. Ownership was shared with the Bowler family, who had invested in the paper in 1912. The ''Press'' grew in circulation over the decades, outgrowing three older buildings already existing downtown before moving into their current purpose-built building at the intersection of Center Avenue and North 7th Street in 1925. Broughton's influence remains in the community, with the north side road along the Lake Michigan shoreline named Broughton Drive in his honor as part of campaigns by him and his wife and the paper for beautification of the community.
In 1928, the newspaper founded radio station WHBL (1330), which remained with the company until the 1970s.

The paper continued to be locally owned by the Bowler and extended Werner families until 1986, when ''The Press'' was sold to Ingersoll Publications. ''The Press'' added a Sunday edition on October 18, 1987. The paper was sold to the Thomson Corporation in January 1990. In May 1998, The Sheboygan Press' 50-year-old letterpress was retired, which remained in the building until it was disassembled in 2012. Around this same time the publication converted from an afternoon newspaper, which it had been for its entire existence, to morning delivery in line with the decline of afternoon papers in general. Since then, the paper was printed by the facilities of ''The Reporter'' of Fond du Lac until their closure in 2009, then under contract with the ''Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel'' from 2009 until September 2013, when ''The Post-Crescent'' in Appleton began to print all of Gannett's northeastern Wisconsin publications, including the ''Press''.
Gannett purchased The Sheboygan Press in August 2000 as part of its purchase of the Thomson newspaper assets, making it part of their network of newspapers in the northeastern and north-central parts of Wisconsin, with collaborative publications and efforts between the publications occurring often. The newspaper's website, which began as a bare-bones effort in 1998, eventually took on most of the features found on most Gannett newspaper sites. The company's main small-market 'eight free articles per month' subscription model took effect on the Press's website on June 26, 2012.
The paper's offices are expected to move in the near future, as Gannett placed the ''Press'' building on the market in May 2013, citing that the newspaper's current operations only take up an eighth of the building's existing square footage.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「The Sheboygan Press」の詳細全文を読む



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