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Title:
Tri-weekly Astorian. [volume] : (Astoria, Or.) 1873-1874
Alternative Titles:
  • Astorian
  • Triweekly Astorian
Place of publication:
Astoria, Or.
Geographic coverage:
  • Astoria, Clatsop, Oregon  |  View more titles from this: City County, State
Publisher:
D.C. Ireland
Dates of publication:
1873-1874
Description:
  • Vol. 1, no. 1 (July 1, 1873)-v. 2, no. 32 (Jan. 31, 1874).
Frequency:
Three times a week
Language:
  • English
Subjects:
  • Astoria (Or.)--Newspapers.
  • Oregon--Astoria.--fast--(OCoLC)fst01217113
Notes:
  • Also issued on microfilm from University of Oregon.
  • Archived issues are available in digital format as part of the Historic Oregon Newspaper online collection.
  • Archived issues are available in digital format as part of the Library of Congress Chronicling America online collection.
LCCN:
sn 96061148
OCLC:
35655671
ISSN:
2163-7814
Succeeding Titles:
Related Links:
Holdings:
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Tri-weekly Astorian. [volume] July 1, 1873 , Image 1

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The Daily Astorian, Morning Astorian, Daily Morning Astorian and Tri-weekly Astorian

DeWitt Clinton Ireland launched the Daily Astorian on May 1, 1876. It was a four-page broadsheet with skinny columns titled “general news,” “banking and insurance,” and “miscellaneous” that ran every day except Sunday. In 1883 the title of the paper was changed to the Daily Morning Astorian, which was shortened in 1899 to the Morning Astorian. Whereas many early Oregon newspapers were founded by relative novices, D.C. Ireland was already an accomplished reporter and typesetter before coming west, having worked on such big-city papers as the Detroit Free Press and the New York Tribune.

Astoria, a port at the mouth of the Columbia River, had been the site of the first European settlement in Oregon. At the time of the paper’s founding, the town was on the brink of economic boom. Lumber was shipped to San Francisco. Salmon, an abundant local staple, was canned and exported globally. Though local coverage focused on front-page shipping news, the Astorian’s motto set the tone for what would become one of the Northwest’s most respected small papers: “Impartiality, ability, fairness, reliability. A paper for the commercial man, for the farmer, for the mechanic, for the merchant, for every person.”

That is not to say there were not divisions in Astoria. The town was at times rife with tension between the dominant Anglo-American population, the nearby Native American tribes, and immigrant laborers from Finland, Sweden, and China. Though the Daily Astorian rarely touched on race issues, it did employ demeaning racial language on occasion. The term “darkie” was used for African Americans, and an advertisement for a steam cleaning shop boasted the establishment’s employment of “all-white staffs.” Of an alleged horse thief, a reporter wrote, “Hal was a man of considerable intelligence. His wife was a squaw.”

Major advertising was split between fishing gear--rubber Mackintoshes and salmon netting--and the 40 saloons in Astoria. Despite getting most of its revenue from drinking holes, the Astorian nonetheless opined that they should be shut down to preserve the town’s morality. Smaller ads were likewise mostly oriented towards male readers, including an item about a treatment “for the weakness of men.” Even the poems featured on the inside pages usually related to man’s work at sea. One typical verse encouraged productivity: “Don’t sit down and wait for trade.”

Throughout its early history, the Astorian garnered a well-earned reputation as a leader in technical innovation. A steam engine was installed to power its press in 1877, and in 1892 the paper became the first journal west of the Missouri River to replace hand composition with automated linotype. Pressmen from all over the West Coast came to Astoria to be trained on the linotype machine.

D.C. Ireland sold the paper to John F. Halloran in 1880 for $10,000 in gold. The Astorian then changed hands several times before 1903, when experienced newspaper publisher John S. Dellinger bought it. He printed the paper until his death in 1930. After several changes of ownership, the Daily Astorian was reestablished in 1961 and remains active today.  Ireland had also published the Tri-Weekly Astorian in 1873-74.

Provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR