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Asheville Citizen-Times

Coordinates:35°35′44″N82°33′27″W / 35.595496°N 82.557400°W /35.595496; -82.557400 (Asheville Citizen Times)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Newspaper published in Asheville, North Carolina, United States
"AC-T" redirects here. For other uses, seeAC-T (disambiguation).

The Asheville Citizen Times
Front page on June 16, 2009
TypeDailynewspaper
FormatBroadsheet
OwnerGannett
EditorKaren Chávez, Executive Editor[1]
Founded1870
LanguageEnglish
Headquarters1 Haywood Street
Asheville, North Carolina 28801 United States
Circulation26,347 Daily
36,208 Sunday (as of 2018)[2]
ISSN1060-3255
OCLC number24097281
Websitecitizen-times.com

TheAsheville Citizen-Times is a dailynewspaper ofAsheville, North Carolina. It was formed in 1991 as a result of a merger of the morningAsheville Citizen and the afternoonAsheville Times. It is owned byGannett.[3]

History

[edit]
Exterior of the headquarters, 2012
1922 advertisement "The Asheville Times" in the Asheville, North Carolina City Directory of 1922

Founded in 1870 as a weekly, theNorth Carolina Citizen[4] became a daily newspaper in 1885. WritersThomas Wolfe,O. Henry, both buried in Asheville, andF. Scott Fitzgerald, a frequent visitor to Asheville, frequently could be found in the newsroom in earlier days. In 1930 theCitizen came under common ownership with theTimes, which was first established in 1896 as theAsheville Gazette. The latter paper merged with a short-lived rival, theAsheville Evening News, to form theAsheville Gazette-News and was renamedThe Asheville Times by new owner Charles A. Webb.[5]

TheCitizen was in a formerYMCA and the press was in the swimming pool. TheTimes was in theJackson Building. TheCitizen had to leave shortly afterChristmas 1938 and publisher D. Hiden Ramsey asked Tony Lord to design a new building, which went up in 15 months at 14O. Henry Avenue and also housed theTimes. Charles Webb became president of both papers and the local radio station located on top of the building.[6]

In 1954, the Citizen-Times Publishing Company which owned the newspapers and radio stationWWNC was purchased by theGreenville News-Piedmont Company. In 1968 Greenville News-Piedmont merged with Southern Broadcasting Corporation to formMultimedia.[5]

In 1986, $12 million was invested in offsetprinting presses and a new 44,000-square-foot (4,100 m2) production building in nearbyEnka, with composed pages transmitted electronically from the downtown Asheville building located nine miles (14 km) away.[citation needed]

On June 28, 1991, the finalAsheville Times was published. From that time, theCitizen and theTimes were called theAsheville Citizen-Times seven days a week.[7]

In 1995, Multimedia was acquired byGannett.[8] In April 1997, theCitizen-Times became the first daily newspaper in Western North Carolina to launch awebsite; the site now receives tens of thousands of hits a day.

In Jan 2009, the press was shut down and shortly after sold off as scrap metal. Now theCitizen-Times is printed inGreenville, South Carolina, alongsideThe Greenville News and shipped to a distribution center.

Gannett sold the Citizen-Times building in 2018. On March 31, 2024, the lease expired and the newspaper moved[9] to theco-working space called The Collider in theWells Fargo building[10] at 1 Haywood Street.[11]

See also

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References

[edit]
  1. ^Asheville Citizen Times website. 2020.
  2. ^Editor & Publisher Newspaper DataBook. 2018. p. I-197.
  3. ^"Member Directory". North Carolina Press Association.Archived from the original on March 20, 2017. RetrievedMarch 20, 2017.
  4. ^Honosky, Sarah (February 18, 2024)."Region's history forever preserved: The Citizen Times donates prized photo collection from 1870-2000 to UNC Asheville's Ramsey Library".Asheville Citizen-Times.
  5. ^abMultimedia, Inc. History
  6. ^Neufeld, Rob (October 29, 2017)."Visiting Our Past: Assessing Asheville Architecture".Asheville Citizen-Times. RetrievedOctober 30, 2017.
  7. ^"Citizen, Times merge editions Monday".Asheville Times. June 28, 1991. p. 1A – via newspapers.com.
  8. ^Gannett, Multimedia announce merger agreementArchived December 28, 2013, at theWayback Machine
  9. ^Chávez, Karen (March 8, 2024)."Asheville Citizen Times to relocate from downtown building after 85 years; paper continues".Asheville Citizen-Times.
  10. ^Honosky, Sarah (April 15, 2024)."Answer Woman: Where will Asheville Citizen Times staff relocate to?".Asheville Citizen-Times.
  11. ^"The Collider Asheville". RetrievedJuly 5, 2024.

External links

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