The Herald-Times

Newspaper in Bloomington, Indiana From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Herald-Times

The Herald-Times is a daily newspaper serving Bloomington, Indiana and surrounding areas. The newspaper won the Blue Ribbon Daily award in 1975, 1984 2007,[2] and 2014,[3] naming it the best daily newspaper in the state of Indiana in those years. The newspaper is currently owned by newspaper conglomerate Gannett.

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The Herald-Times
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The March 27, 2011 front page
of The Herald-Times
TypeDaily newspaper
FormatBroadsheet
Owner(s)Gannett
Founder(s)Walter S. Bradfute
EditorJill Bond
Founded1877; 148 years ago (1877) as the Bloomington Telephone[1]
LanguageEnglish
Headquarters1900 South Walnut Street
Bloomington, Indiana 47401
United States
Circulation27,540 Daily
44,197 Sunday (as of 2016)[1]
Websiteheraldtimesonline.com
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History

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Perspective

The newspaper is the current incarnation of a business started in 1877, the Bloomington Telephone, named for the new invention. In 1943, the Telephone merged with the Evening World to become the Bloomington World-Telephone. Another paper, the Bloomington Daily Herald, was started in 1947 and three years later those papers merged into the Daily Herald-Telephone.

In 1966, the Schurz family, via their company Schurz Communications, acquired the newspaper from Dagmar Riley.[4] Scott C. Schurz served as its publisher and chief editor from 1966 to 2002.[5] The word Daily was dropped in 1977 and the name changed to the Herald-Times in 1989 while the newspaper switched from an evening publication to a morning publication.[6]

Starting in 1966, the newspaper produced a joint Sunday-only publication with its sister newspaper, the Times-Mail, in neighboring Bedford called the Sunday Herald-Times that was distributed to the expanded readership of both communities. In 2001, the name of the Sunday newspaper was changed to the Hoosier Times and distributed to a much larger area.[7]

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Bloomington Herald Times office

Schurz Communications exited the publishing business in January 2019 and sold the newspaper to GateHouse Media,[8][9] which merged with Gannett seven months later.[10] Its building sold to the school district in 2022.[11]

In April 2024, the newspaper switched from carrier to postal delivery.[12]

References

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