| Type | Daily newspaper |
|---|---|
| Format | Tabloid |
| Owner | Advance Publications[1] |
| Publisher | David Blomquist[2] |
| Editor | Margaret Schmidt |
| Founded | May 2, 1867 |
| Ceased publication | February 1, 2025 |
| Headquarters | Harmon Plaza Secaucus, New Jersey, U.S. |
| OCLC number | 44512660 |
| Website | NJ.com |
The Jersey Journal was a dailynewspaper, published from Monday through Saturday, covering news and events throughoutHudson County, New Jersey, which was founded in 1867.Advance Publications bought the paper in 1945. At the time it was discontinued in 2025,The Journal was a sister paper to Advance's other daily newspapers in the region,The Star-Ledger ofNewark,The Times ofTrenton and theStaten Island Advance.
Founded byCivil War veterans William Dunning and Z. K. Pangborn, theJersey Journal was originally known as theEvening Journal and was first published on May 2, 1867. The newspaper's first offices were located at 13 Exchange Place inJersey City with a reported initial capitalization of $119.

The newspaper built a new office building on 37 Montgomery Street in 1874.
Editor Joseph A. Dear changed theEvening Journal to its current name in 1909.[3]
The paper relocated again, in 1911, to a building at the northeast corner of Bergen and Sip Avenues. This building was demolished in 1923 to make room forJournal Square, which took its name from the newspaper.The Journal made its home at 30 Journal Square for the next 90 years.[4] Its weekly Spanish-language publication,El Nuevo Hudson, ceased publication after the February 26, 2009, edition.[5]
In December 2012, it was announced that the newspaper would sell the building and relocate to another location in Hudson County.[6] In August 2013, the paper announced it would move toSecaucus, which it did in January 2014.[7] It maintains offices at 30 Montgomery Street in Jersey City.[8]

On October 30, 2024, theJersey Journal announced that it would cease publication on February 1, 2025, citing rising printing costs following the recent closure of its production facility inMontville, New Jersey. In a local article announcing its closure,Jersey Journal editor and publisher David Blomquist stated '[a]n online-only publication simply would not have enough scale to support the strong, politically independent journalism that has distinguished The Journal'. The newspaper's 17 employees — eight full-time and nine part-time — would be fired when publication ends.[9][10]
TheJersey Journal's Newspapers in Education Program, supported with an additional sponsorship, comprises three annual events and awards: the Hudson County Science Fair, the Hudson County Spelling Bee, and the Everyday Heroes Awards.[11]
The Jersey Journal, flagship publication of The Evening Journal Association, covers New Jersey's Hudson County, a diverse, densely populated and exciting area with one of world's best views: the Manhattan skyline. The conveniently sized tabloid paper does community journalism right, as numerous awards from regional and state associations attest. Its focus on the highs and lows of everyday urban life gives it the edge in a media-saturated area.
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