Alexandria Town Talk

From Conservapedia

The Town Talk, started as The Daily Town Talk in 1883 and later named the Alexandria Daily Town Talk, is the major newspaper of Central Louisiana. It is published by Gannett in Alexandria.

The daily newspaper has a circulation of some 19,500 daily and 27,500 on Sundays. It covers the news primarily in seven parishes with a population of approximately 400,000. The coverage area reaches from the Mississippi River on the east to the Texas border on the west. The Town Talk is now published only on Sunday, Wednesday, and Friday.

The Town Talk was born on St. Patrick’s Day, March 17, 1883.[1] It was owned by the original Irish-American founders, including Edgar Hammond McCormick and Henarie Morrison Huie, and their heirs until 1996, when it was sold to Central Newspapers of Indianapolis, Indiana, then the 15th-largest newspaper company in the United States. The parent company was called “McCormick & Company, Inc.” Central Newspapers was purchased in 2000 by Gannett of McLean, Virginia,[2] was owned until his death by Eugene S. Pulliam, the maternal uncle of former Vice President of the United States J. Danforth Quayle.

In 1962, Joe D. Smith, Jr., became publisher of The Town Talk. He was the husband of Jane Wilson Smith (1922–1992), a McCormick heir whose family owned the newspaper. Over the years, Smith was also the general manager, president, and chairman of the board. Under his tutelage, The Town Talk became the first daily newspaper in Louisiana to become computerized. He took the view that newspapers were expected to foster growth and improvement in the community as well as report the news.[3] Some four years after the death of Jane Smith, Smith sold to Central Newspapers for $62 million.

On the acquisition of The Town Talk, Louis A. Weil III, Central Newspapers' chief executive officer, said that under Smith’s leadership, “the newspaper has become one of the premier medium-sized dailies in the South. It fits with our goal of acquiring newspaper properties with a strong position in their market area and a proven history of journalistic integrity."[4] Weil's analysis was in sharp contrast to that of Adras LaBorde, who in 1945 launched a 32-year career with the newspaper. At the time, LaBorde described The Town Talk as "an overgrown country weekly published on a six-day basis." The publication had indeed changed little in the years between 1925 and 1945.[5]

Paul Vincent Carty (born 1952) became the executive editor of The Town Talk on July 7, 2003. Prior to his appointment, he was managing editor of Gannett’s Star-Gazette in Elmira, New York, since 2001. Carty started his journalism career in 1980 at the Clearwater Sun in Clearwater, Florida, owned by Jefferson-Pilot Communication. He has since worked for newspapers owned by Landmark Communications Inc. in Norfolk, Virginia, and Elizabethtown, Kentucky; and for Knight Ridder Inc. in Pennsylvania, and Bradenton, Florida. He is a former instructor in the Pennsylvania State University's College of Communications.[6]He now resides in Newtown Square, Pennsylvania.[7]

Under the McCormick heirs, The Town Talk considered itself a politically Independent newspaper and did not endorse candidates. Since Gannett Co. Inc. purchased the newspaper in 2001, the paper has begun endorsing candidates. In 2004, for example, it endorsed Alexandria Republican Jock Scott in his unsuccessful race for the U.S. House of Representatives. In 2007, it supported Republican Bobby Jindal in his successful race for governor.[8]

Contents

  • 1 Notable staffers
  • 2 References
  • 3 Further reading
  • 4 External link

Notable staffers[edit]

References[edit]

  1. The Town Talk. Retrieved on May 19,2008; no longer on-line.
  2. [1];"Star sold to Gannett," no longer on line.
  3. [2]; no longer on-line.
  4. Central Newspapers to acquire Alexandria Daily Town Talk. Business Wire (January 10, 1996).
  5. Adras LaBorde, quoted in Fredrick M. Spletstoser, Talk of the Town: The Rise of Alexandria, Louisiana, and the Daily Town Talk, Louisiana State University Press, 2005, p. 130.
  6. [3]; no longer on-line.
  7. Paul Carty (Vincent), 68 - Newtown Square, PA Has Court Records at MyLife.com™, accessed May 26, 2021.
  8. "Central La. Politics: Alexandria Town Talk Endorses Jindal," centrallapolitics.blogspot.com, October 2007; no longer accessible on-line.
  9. Billy Gomila. Manship School of Mass Communication celebrates 100 years of journalism education. sites01.lsu.edu. Retrieved on December 11, 2013; no longer on-line..
  10. Social Security Death Index Interactive Search
  11. Chanan Gerald Hambleton. The Town Talk. Retrieved on July 31, 2012.
  12. The Mystique of Tiger Stadium: 245 Greatest Games: The ascension of LSU Football. WestBowPress, ISBN 1449752691. Retrieved on September 10, 2012.
  13. Minden Press-Herald, February 20, 1974
  14. Meet the staff: Bret H. McCormick, sports editor. The Town Talk. Retrieved on July 24, 2014.
  15. Marilyn Miller, Sons of Darkness, Sons of Light, a True Crime Story, Many, Louisiana: Sweet Dreams Publishing Company, 2000 ISBN 1-893693-09-0
  16. Nixon, John Travis. Louisiana Historical Association. Retrieved on April 21, 2015.
  17. Meet the staff: Richard Sharkey, reporter. The Town Talk. Retrieved on July 24, 2014.
  18. Meet the staff: Bob Tompkins, sportswriter. The Town Talk. Retrieved on July 24, 2014.

Further reading[edit]

Talk of the Town: The Rise of Alexandria, Louisiana, and the Daily Town Talk. By Frederick M. Spletstoser. (Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, c. 2005. Pp. xvi, 325. $27.95, ISBN 0-8071-2934-8.)

External link[edit]


Categories: [Newspapers] [Louisiana]


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