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The Cincinnati Enquirer

The Cincinnati Enquirer is a morning daily newspaper published by Gannett in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States.

The Cincinnati Enquirer
The Cincinnati Enquirer front page on March 6, 2019
TypeDaily newspaper
FormatCompact
Owner(s)Gannett
EditorBeryl Love
Founded1841
(183 years ago)
 (1841)
HeadquartersCincinnati, Ohio
Circulation
  • 30,138 daily
  • 46,542 Sunday
(as of Q3 2022)[1][2]
OCLC number41881827
Websitecincinnati.com

First published in 1841, the Enquirer is the last remaining daily newspaper in Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky, although the daily Journal-News competes with the Enquirer in the northern suburbs. The Enquirer has the highest circulation of any print publication in the Cincinnati metropolitan area. A daily local edition for Northern Kentucky is published as The Kentucky Enquirer.

The Enquirer won the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for local reporting for its project titled "Seven Days of Heroin".[3][4]

In addition to the Cincinnati Enquirer and Kentucky Enquirer, Gannett publishes a variety of print and electronic periodicals in the Cincinnati area, including 16 Community Press weekly newspapers, 10 Community Recorder weekly newspapers, and OurTown magazine. The Enquirer is available online at the cincinnati.com website.

In the 1864 presidential election, the newspaper opposed the reelection of Abraham Lincoln. On his second inauguration the paper wrote, "Mr. Lincoln commences today, a second term unfettered by constitutional restraint as if he were the Czar of Russia or the Sultan of Turkey."[5] From 1920 to 2012, the editorial board endorsed every Republican candidate for United States president. By contrast, the current editorial board claims to take a pragmatic editorial stance. According to then-editor Peter Bhatia, "It is made up of pragmatic, solution-driven members who, frankly, don't have much use for extreme ideologies from the right or the left. ... The board's mantra in our editorials has been about problem-solving and improving the quality of life for everyone in greater Cincinnati."[6] On September 24, 2016, the Enquirer endorsed Hillary Clinton for president,[7] its first endorsement of a Democrat for president since Woodrow Wilson in 1916.[6]

The Kentucky Enquirer consists of an additional section wrapped around the Cincinnati Enquirer and a remade Local section. The front page is remade from the Ohio edition, although it may contain similar elements.

Reader-submitted content is featured in six zoned editions of Your HomeTown Enquirer, a local news insert published twice-weekly on Thursdays and Saturdays in Hamilton, Butler, Warren, and Clermont counties.[8]

Since September 2015, the Enquirer and local Fox affiliate WXIX-TV have partnered on news gathering and have shared news coverage and video among the paper, broadcasts, and online media.[9] In 2016, the Enquirer launched a true crime podcast called Accused that reached the top of iTunes' podcasts chart.

Under then-editor Peter Bhatia, the Enquirer became the first newsroom in the nation to dedicate a reporter to covering the heroin epidemic full time.[10] That reporter, Terry DeMio, and reporter Dan Horn helped lead a staff of about 60 journalists to report the heroin project that won the newspaper its second Pulitzer Prize.[11] The award was the first the newsroom won for its reporting, but its second win overall. The first Pulitzer win was awarded to Jim Borgman for editorial cartoons in 1991.[12]

History edit

Early years edit

 
The first issue of the Daily Cincinnati Enquirer

The Enquirer's predecessor was the Phoenix, edited by Moses Dawson as early as 1828. It later became the Commercial Advertiser and in 1838 the Cincinnati Advertiser and Journal. By the time John and Charles Brough purchased it and renamed it the Daily Cincinnati Enquirer, it was considered a newspaper of record for the city. The Enquirer's first issue, on April 10, 1841, consisted of "just four pages of squint-inducing text that was, at times, as ugly in tone as it was in appearance". It declared its staunch support for the Democratic Party, in contrast to the three Whig papers and two ostensibly independent papers then in circulation.[13][14] A weekly digest edition for regional farmers, the Weekly Cincinnati Enquirer, began publishing on April 14 and would continue until November 25, 1843, as The Cincinnati Weekly Enquirer.[15][16]

In November 1843, the Enquirer merged with the Daily Morning Message to become the Enquirer and Message (the Daily Enquirer and Message beginning in May 1844).[17][18] In January 1845, the paper dropped the Message name, becoming The Cincinnati Daily Enquirer.[19] Finally, in May 1849, the paper became The Cincinnati Enquirer.[20]

McLean ownership and Washington trust edit

In 1844, James J. Faran took an interest in the Enquirer. In 1848, Washington McLean and his brother S. B. Wiley McLean acquired an interest in the Enquirer.[16]

On March 22, 1866, a gas leak caused Pike's Opera House to explode, taking with it the Enquirer offices next door. A competitor, the Cincinnati Daily Times, allowed the Enquirer to print on its presses in the wake of the disaster. As a result, the Enquirer missed only one day of publication.[21] However, archives of the paper's first 25 years were lost.[13]

Washington McLean was a leading Copperhead whose editorial policies led to the suppression of the paper by the United States government during the Civil War. After the war, McLean pursued an anti-Republican stance. One of his star writers was Lafcadio Hearn, who wrote for the paper from 1872 to 1875. James W. Faulkner served as the paper's political correspondent, covering the Ohio State Legislature and Statehouse, from 1887 until his death in 1923. The Faulkner Letter was a well-known column often carried in regional newspapers.

In the 1860s, Washington McLean bought out Faran's interest in the Enquirer. In 1872, he sold a half interest in the newspaper to his son, John Roll McLean, who assumed full ownership of the paper in 1881.[16] He owned the paper until his death in 1916. Having little faith in his only child, Ned, John Roll McLean put the Enquirer and another paper he owned, The Washington Post, in trust with the American Security and Trust Company of Washington, D.C., as trustee.[22] Ned successfully broke the trust regarding The Post, an action that led to its bankruptcy and eventual sale to Eugene Meyer in 1933. The Enquirer, however, continued to be held in trust until 1952.

 
The Enquirer front page, June 19, 1910. A headline beginning with "Three shakes" is typical of the Enquirer's style during this period.

In the 1910s, the Enquirer was known for an attention-getting style of headline in which individual words or phrases cascaded vertically, beginning with a single word in large type. According to a 1912 college textbook on newspaper making, "The Enquirer has printed some masterpieces replete with a majesty of diction that is most artistic; but there are few papers that can imitate it successfully."[23][24] During the 1930s and 1940s, the Enquirer was widely regarded among newspapers for its innovative and distinctive typography.

In the 1920s, the Enquirer ran a promotion that offered a free plot of land near Loveland, Ohio, along the Little Miami River, after paying for a one-year subscription to the daily. The Loveland Castle was built on two such plots. The surrounding community is now known as Loveland Park.[25]

By the late 1940s, sales of the Enquirer, Cincinnati's last remaining morning daily, had increased dramatically, fueled in part by the success of its Sunday morning monopoly; meanwhile, The Cincinnati Post and especially The Cincinnati Times-Star faced a declining afternoon market.

Employee ownership edit

In February 1952, The Cincinnati Times-Star offered to buy the Enquirer from the American Security and Trust Company for $7.5 million.[22] In response, the 845 employees of the paper pooled their assets, formed a committee, and obtained loans to successfully outbid the Times-Star with an offer of $7.6 million, with the Portsmouth Steel Company as their agent. The deal closed on June 6, 1952.[26][27] In its first year under employee ownership, the Enquirer reported a net earnings of $349,421.[28]

Scripps ownership edit

The employees lacked sufficient capital and managerial expertise to run the paper. City editor John F. Cronin led a revolt against management on November 25, 1955; he was fired the following month.[29][30] Beset by financial problems and internal strife, they sold the paper to The E. W. Scripps Company, owner of The Cincinnati Post, on April 26, 1956. Scripps purchased a 36.5% controlling interest in the Enquirer for $4,059,000, beating out The Times-Star Company's $2,380,051 and Tribune Publishing's $15 per share, or $2,238,000.[31][32] Two years later, Scripps also acquired the Times-Star, merging the afternoon paper with the Post.[33]

With the Times-Star and Enquirer acquisitions, the Scripps family owned all of Cincinnati's dailies, along with WCPO-AM, WCPO-FM, and WCPO-TV.[34] The E. W. Scripps Company operated the Enquirer at arm's length, even omitting the Scripps lighthouse logo from the Enquirer's nameplate. Nevertheless, the United States Department of Justice filed an antitrust suit against the company in 1964.[35][36]

Gannett ownership and joint operating agreement edit

In 1968, Scripps entered into a consent decree to sell the Enquirer. It was sold to influential Cincinnati millionaire Carl Lindner Jr.'s American Financial Corporation on February 20, 1971.[37] In turn, Lindner sold the Enquirer to a Phoenix-based company of his, Combined Communications, in 1975, for $30 million plus 500,000 shares of common stock and 750,000 shares of common stock warrants in Combined Communications.[38] Combined Communications merged with Gannett Company in 1979.

On September 22, 1977, the Enquirer signed a joint operating agreement (JOA) with The Cincinnati Post.[39] For two years, the Enquirer had secretly negotiated the terms of the JOA with the Post while securing concessions from labor unions. The two papers petitioned the Justice Department for an antitrust exemption under the Newspaper Preservation Act of 1970. This was the second JOA application under the Newspaper Preservation Act; the first, involving the Anchorage Daily News and Anchorage Times, was summarily approved but already seen as a failure.[40]

The EnquirerPost agreement was approved on November 26, 1979,[41] taking effect after negotiations and legal battles with unions.[40] As the more financially sound paper, the Enquirer received an 80% stake in the business and handled all business functions of both papers, including printing, distribution, and selling advertising.[42] Gannett opened a new printing press off Western Avenue in the West End to print both papers.[43]

In August 1980, William J. Keating appointed George Blake to serve as the Enquirer's first new editor since the Gannett acquisition. Blake, who was previously editor at The News-Press of Fort Myers, Florida, had a tendency to delegate that contrasted with the hands-on style of his predecessor, Luke Feck. The Enquirer underwent a staff reorganization and introduced a new format in September 1982.[44]

Under Blake, the Enquirer had a reputation for friendliness to corporate interests,[45] exemplified in its weak coverage of the savings and loan crisis that engulfed financier Charles Keating, brother of Enquirer publisher William J. Keating. The paper's approach changed dramatically in January 1993 with the arrival of president and publisher Harry Whipple and editor Lawrence Beaupre from Gannett Suburban Newspapers in White Plains, New York. Beaupre emphasized investigative reporting, beginning with aggressive coverage of Charles Keating's conviction. By 1995, he had brought his team of aggressive investigative reporters from White Plains to the Enquirer. The paper won awards for Michael Gallagher's 1996 investigation into Fluor Daniel's cleanup of the uranium processing plant at Fernald Feed Materials Production Center.[46]

On May 3, 1998, the Enquirer published a special 18-page section, titled "Chiquita Secrets Revealed", that accused the Cincinnati-based fruit company of labor abuses, polluting, bribery, and other misdeeds.[47] Chiquita, owned by former Enquirer owner Lindner, denied all of the allegations. Gallagher was charged and convicted for illegally obtaining some of the evidence through voicemail hacking, and the Enquirer fired him for lying about his sources. Faced with a potential lawsuit over the voicemail hacking, the Enquirer settled with Chiquita out of court, paying the company $14 million. Under the terms of the agreement, the paper published an unprecedented three-day-long, front-page retraction of the entire series, destroyed any evidence they had gathered against Chiquita, and transferred Beaupre to Gannett headquarters.[46][48][49] The paper largely reverted to its former approach to business coverage.[45]

On April 10, 2000, the Enquirer and Post downsized from a traditional 12+516-inch-wide (313 mm) broadsheet format to an 11+58-inch-wide (300 mm) format similar to Berliner. They also began publishing in color every day of the week. Gannett promoted the narrower format as being "easier to handle, hold, and read" but also cited reduced newsprint costs.[50][51]

In May 2003, Gannett replaced Harry Whipple with Cincinnati native Margaret E. Buchanan as president and publisher. Buchanan, previously publisher of the Idaho Statesman, was the newspaper's first woman publisher. The same year, Tom Callinan became editor of the Enquirer after stints as editor of The Arizona Republic, the Democrat and Chronicle of Rochester, New York, and the Lansing State Journal.[52] One of his first moves was to reassign media critics to reporting positions.[45]

Callinan originally attempted to address declining circulation by focusing on lifestyle content aimed at younger readers; however, this approach alienated the paper's older core audience. The paper responded by reemphasizing national news in the newspaper and creating niche, crowdsourced products online for younger audiences.[45][53] In October 2003, The Enquirer began publishing and distributing CiN Weekly, a free lifestyle magazine aimed at younger readers, to compete against Cincinnati CityBeat. In 2004, Gannett purchased local magazines Design and Inspire and increased coverage in The Kentucky Enquirer.[54] In November 2004, Gannett purchased HomeTown Communications Network, publisher of a daily newspaper and 62 weekly and biweekly newspapers branded The Community Press in Ohio and The Community Recorder in Kentucky.[55] The Department of Justice cleared the purchase the following March.[56]

In January 2004, the Enquirer informed the Post of its intention to let the JOA expire.[39][57] The Post published its final print edition upon the JOA's expiration on December 31, 2007,[58] leaving the Enquirer as the only daily newspaper in Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky. Following the Post's closure, the Enquirer made efforts to appeal to The Kentucky Post's former readership, for example referring to the Cincinnati metropolitan area as "Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky" rather than simply "Greater Cincinnati".[59]

In April 2006, The Enquirer was cited by The Associated Press with the news cooperative's General Excellence Award, naming The Enquirer as the best major daily newspaper in Ohio. Earlier that year, parent Gannett Co. named The Enquirer the most improved of the more than 100 newspapers in the chain.[citation needed]

In December 2010, Callinan left for a professorship at the University of Cincinnati[52] and was succeeded by Carolyn Washburn as editor.[60]

In October 2012, the online version of the Enquirer went behind a metered paywall.

In March 2013, Gannett closed its West End printing facility and contracted with The Columbus Dispatch to print the Enquirer in Columbus. Shortly after, the Enquirer began publishing in a smaller compact tabloid format.[61] Former Post and Enquirer pressman Al Bamberger purchased the former Enquirer facility that June and sold it to Wegman Company, an office furniture installation company.[43]

Buchanan retired in March 2015. Gannett named Rick Green, the editor of The Des Moines Register and a former Enquirer assistant editor, as president and publisher.[60] In August 2016, Gannett eliminated the Enquirer's Publisher position, transferring Green to the North Jersey Media Group in New Jersey.[62][63]

Facilities edit

 
Former Cincinnati Enquirer headquarters building (1992-2022) at 312 Elm Street
 
Cincinnati Enquirer Building at Third and Elm streets

The Enquirer has published from many downtown Cincinnati locations. From Fifth Street between Main and Sycamore, it moved to Third Street, then to the corner of Third and Main, then to Main between Third and Pearl. In 1866, the Enquirer began publishing from offices in the 600 block of Vine Street, near Baker Street.[64] From 1916 to 1928, the newspaper constructed a new headquarters and printing plant, the Cincinnati Enquirer Building, on this property.[65] In 1992, the newspaper moved to 312 Elm Street. [66]

At the end of 2022, the newspaper's 30-year lease agreement at Elm Street expired, and the Enquirer's news operation moved one block west, to 312 Plum Street.[67]

The Enquirer operated two news bureaus until July 2013. The Northern Kentucky bureau produced The Kentucky Enquirer and The Community Recorder, while the West Chester bureau covered Butler and Warren counties for The Cincinnati Enquirer's northern zones and produced some editions of The Community Press.[59][68]

From 1977 to 2013, the Enquirer was printed from a 130,000-square-foot (12,000 m2) press off Western Avenue in the West End. Until 2007, this facility also printed The Cincinnati Post under a joint operating agreement.[43] Since March 2013, Gannett has contracted with The Columbus Dispatch in Columbus to print all its Cincinnati publications, including the Enquirer.[61] Similarly, Gannett has contracted with the Lafayette, Indiana, Journal & Courier to print Community Press and Community Recorder editions since 2007.[69]

Online presence edit

The Enquirer launched its first website, Enquirer.com, on November 1, 1996. Due to a joint operating agreement with The Cincinnati Post, it launched concurrently with the Post's site, @The Post. A shared website, GoCincinnati!,[70] located at gocinci.net, displayed classified advertising and offered dial-up Internet access subscriptions. Local access numbers were available in cities throughout the country through a network of Gannett publications.[71] Both papers' home pages moved to a more memorable domain, Cincinnati.com, on November 1, 1998.[72] The new brand encompassed about 300 local commercial sites and some community organizations.[73]

From May 2002 to March 2007, Cincinnati.com also included WCPO.com, the website of Post sister company WCPO-TV.[74] The Post closed at the end of 2007, ending Scripps' involvement in Cincinnati.com. The CiN Weekly, Community Press, and Community Recorder weekly newspapers have also been online partners with the Enquirer.

In October 2005, the Enquirer launched NKY.com, a website covering news from Boone, Campbell, and Kenton counties in Northern Kentucky. NKY.com was one of the first newspaper-published websites to make extensive use of user-created content, which it featured prominently on 38 community pages. In August 2006, Cincinnati.com launched 186 community pages covering towns and neighborhoods in Ohio and Indiana and began soliciting and publishing stories and articles from readers, which appear in Your Hometown Enquirer inserts.

 
Former Cincinnati.com logo

Since October 2012, Cincinnati.com has operated behind a metered paywall that allows readers to view 10 stories a month before paying a subscription fee. As a Gannett property, Cincinnati.com is branded as "part of the USA Today Network". Its primary competitor in the market is WCPO-TV's website, WCPO.com.[75]

Archives of Enquirer articles can be found in online subscription databases. ProQuest contains full text of articles from 1841 to 1922 and from 1999 to present, as well as "digital microfilm" of articles from 2010 to 2012.[76] As of September 2016, Newspapers.com has scans of 4.2 million pages from 1841 to present.[77]

Notable people edit

Current employees:

Former employees and contributors:

Former Enquirer owners and publishers:

References edit

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  71. ^ . GoCinci.Net Internet Access Company. 1997. Archived from the original on June 6, 1997.
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  73. ^ . The Cincinnati Post. October 31, 1998. Archived from the original on November 23, 2004.
  74. ^ . WCPO.com. Archived from the original on May 5, 2002.
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Further reading edit

  • Nicholas Bender. "Banana Report." Columbia Journalism Review. May/June 2001.
  • Graydon Decamp. The Grand Old Lady of Vine Street. Cincinnati: The Cincinnati Enquirer, 1991. (Official history).
  • Douglas Frantz. "After Apology, Issues Raised In Chiquita Articles Remain." The New York Times. July 17, 1998. p. A1, A14
  • Douglas Frantz. "Mysteries Behind Story's Publication." The New York Times. July 17, 1998. p. A14.
  • Lew Moores. "Media, Myself & I". Cincinnati CityBeat. January 7, 2004.
  • Lew Moores. "The Day the Music Critic Died." Cincinnati CityBeat. February 11, 2004.
  • Randolph Reddick. The Old Lady of Vine Street. Ohio University Ph.D. dissertation, 1991. (A study of the four years of employee ownership).
  • Nicholas Stein. "Banana Peel." Columbia Journalism Review. September/October 1998.
  • Taft, Robert Jr. (October 1960). "Epilogue For a Lady: The Passing of the Times-Star" (PDF). Bulletin of the Historical and Philosophical Society of Ohio. 18 (4): 260–277. OCLC 52305709.

External links edit

cincinnati, enquirer, morning, daily, newspaper, published, gannett, cincinnati, ohio, united, states, front, page, march, 2019typedaily, newspaperformatcompactowner, gannetteditorberyl, lovefounded1841, years, 1841, headquarterscincinnati, ohiocirculation30, . The Cincinnati Enquirer is a morning daily newspaper published by Gannett in Cincinnati Ohio United States The Cincinnati EnquirerThe Cincinnati Enquirer front page on March 6 2019TypeDaily newspaperFormatCompactOwner s GannettEditorBeryl LoveFounded1841 183 years ago 1841 HeadquartersCincinnati OhioCirculation30 138 daily46 542 Sunday as of Q3 2022 1 2 OCLC number41881827Websitecincinnati wbr comFirst published in 1841 the Enquirer is the last remaining daily newspaper in Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky although the daily Journal News competes with the Enquirer in the northern suburbs The Enquirer has the highest circulation of any print publication in the Cincinnati metropolitan area A daily local edition for Northern Kentucky is published as The Kentucky Enquirer The Enquirer won the 2018 Pulitzer Prize for local reporting for its project titled Seven Days of Heroin 3 4 In addition to the Cincinnati Enquirer and Kentucky Enquirer Gannett publishes a variety of print and electronic periodicals in the Cincinnati area including 16 Community Press weekly newspapers 10 Community Recorder weekly newspapers and OurTown magazine The Enquirer is available online at the cincinnati wbr com website In the 1864 presidential election the newspaper opposed the reelection of Abraham Lincoln On his second inauguration the paper wrote Mr Lincoln commences today a second term unfettered by constitutional restraint as if he were the Czar of Russia or the Sultan of Turkey 5 From 1920 to 2012 the editorial board endorsed every Republican candidate for United States president By contrast the current editorial board claims to take a pragmatic editorial stance According to then editor Peter Bhatia It is made up of pragmatic solution driven members who frankly don t have much use for extreme ideologies from the right or the left The board s mantra in our editorials has been about problem solving and improving the quality of life for everyone in greater Cincinnati 6 On September 24 2016 the Enquirer endorsed Hillary Clinton for president 7 its first endorsement of a Democrat for president since Woodrow Wilson in 1916 6 The Kentucky Enquirer consists of an additional section wrapped around the Cincinnati Enquirer and a remade Local section The front page is remade from the Ohio edition although it may contain similar elements Reader submitted content is featured in six zoned editions of Your HomeTown Enquirer a local news insert published twice weekly on Thursdays and Saturdays in Hamilton Butler Warren and Clermont counties 8 Since September 2015 the Enquirer and local Fox affiliate WXIX TV have partnered on news gathering and have shared news coverage and video among the paper broadcasts and online media 9 In 2016 the Enquirer launched a true crime podcast called Accused that reached the top of iTunes podcasts chart Under then editor Peter Bhatia the Enquirer became the first newsroom in the nation to dedicate a reporter to covering the heroin epidemic full time 10 That reporter Terry DeMio and reporter Dan Horn helped lead a staff of about 60 journalists to report the heroin project that won the newspaper its second Pulitzer Prize 11 The award was the first the newsroom won for its reporting but its second win overall The first Pulitzer win was awarded to Jim Borgman for editorial cartoons in 1991 12 Contents 1 History 1 1 Early years 1 2 McLean ownership and Washington trust 1 3 Employee ownership 1 4 Scripps ownership 1 5 Gannett ownership and joint operating agreement 2 Facilities 3 Online presence 4 Notable people 5 References 6 Further reading 7 External linksHistory editEarly years edit nbsp The first issue of the Daily Cincinnati EnquirerThe Enquirer s predecessor was the Phoenix edited by Moses Dawson as early as 1828 It later became the Commercial Advertiser and in 1838 the Cincinnati Advertiser and Journal By the time John and Charles Brough purchased it and renamed it the Daily Cincinnati Enquirer it was considered a newspaper of record for the city The Enquirer s first issue on April 10 1841 consisted of just four pages of squint inducing text that was at times as ugly in tone as it was in appearance It declared its staunch support for the Democratic Party in contrast to the three Whig papers and two ostensibly independent papers then in circulation 13 14 A weekly digest edition for regional farmers the Weekly Cincinnati Enquirer began publishing on April 14 and would continue until November 25 1843 as The Cincinnati Weekly Enquirer 15 16 In November 1843 the Enquirer merged with the Daily Morning Message to become the Enquirer and Message the Daily Enquirer and Message beginning in May 1844 17 18 In January 1845 the paper dropped the Message name becoming The Cincinnati Daily Enquirer 19 Finally in May 1849 the paper became The Cincinnati Enquirer 20 McLean ownership and Washington trust edit In 1844 James J Faran took an interest in the Enquirer In 1848 Washington McLean and his brother S B Wiley McLean acquired an interest in the Enquirer 16 On March 22 1866 a gas leak caused Pike s Opera House to explode taking with it the Enquirer offices next door A competitor the Cincinnati Daily Times allowed the Enquirer to print on its presses in the wake of the disaster As a result the Enquirer missed only one day of publication 21 However archives of the paper s first 25 years were lost 13 Washington McLean was a leading Copperhead whose editorial policies led to the suppression of the paper by the United States government during the Civil War After the war McLean pursued an anti Republican stance One of his star writers was Lafcadio Hearn who wrote for the paper from 1872 to 1875 James W Faulkner served as the paper s political correspondent covering the Ohio State Legislature and Statehouse from 1887 until his death in 1923 The Faulkner Letter was a well known column often carried in regional newspapers In the 1860s Washington McLean bought out Faran s interest in the Enquirer In 1872 he sold a half interest in the newspaper to his son John Roll McLean who assumed full ownership of the paper in 1881 16 He owned the paper until his death in 1916 Having little faith in his only child Ned John Roll McLean put the Enquirer and another paper he owned The Washington Post in trust with the American Security and Trust Company of Washington D C as trustee 22 Ned successfully broke the trust regarding The Post an action that led to its bankruptcy and eventual sale to Eugene Meyer in 1933 The Enquirer however continued to be held in trust until 1952 nbsp The Enquirer front page June 19 1910 A headline beginning with Three shakes is typical of the Enquirer s style during this period In the 1910s the Enquirer was known for an attention getting style of headline in which individual words or phrases cascaded vertically beginning with a single word in large type According to a 1912 college textbook on newspaper making The Enquirer has printed some masterpieces replete with a majesty of diction that is most artistic but there are few papers that can imitate it successfully 23 24 During the 1930s and 1940s the Enquirer was widely regarded among newspapers for its innovative and distinctive typography In the 1920s the Enquirer ran a promotion that offered a free plot of land near Loveland Ohio along the Little Miami River after paying for a one year subscription to the daily The Loveland Castle was built on two such plots The surrounding community is now known as Loveland Park 25 By the late 1940s sales of the Enquirer Cincinnati s last remaining morning daily had increased dramatically fueled in part by the success of its Sunday morning monopoly meanwhile The Cincinnati Post and especially The Cincinnati Times Star faced a declining afternoon market Employee ownership edit In February 1952 The Cincinnati Times Star offered to buy the Enquirer from the American Security and Trust Company for 7 5 million 22 In response the 845 employees of the paper pooled their assets formed a committee and obtained loans to successfully outbid the Times Star with an offer of 7 6 million with the Portsmouth Steel Company as their agent The deal closed on June 6 1952 26 27 In its first year under employee ownership the Enquirer reported a net earnings of 349 421 28 Scripps ownership edit The employees lacked sufficient capital and managerial expertise to run the paper City editor John F Cronin led a revolt against management on November 25 1955 he was fired the following month 29 30 Beset by financial problems and internal strife they sold the paper to The E W Scripps Company owner of The Cincinnati Post on April 26 1956 Scripps purchased a 36 5 controlling interest in the Enquirer for 4 059 000 beating out The Times Star Company s 2 380 051 and Tribune Publishing s 15 per share or 2 238 000 31 32 Two years later Scripps also acquired the Times Star merging the afternoon paper with the Post 33 With the Times Star and Enquirer acquisitions the Scripps family owned all of Cincinnati s dailies along with WCPO AM WCPO FM and WCPO TV 34 The E W Scripps Company operated the Enquirer at arm s length even omitting the Scripps lighthouse logo from the Enquirer s nameplate Nevertheless the United States Department of Justice filed an antitrust suit against the company in 1964 35 36 Gannett ownership and joint operating agreement edit In 1968 Scripps entered into a consent decree to sell the Enquirer It was sold to influential Cincinnati millionaire Carl Lindner Jr s American Financial Corporation on February 20 1971 37 In turn Lindner sold the Enquirer to a Phoenix based company of his Combined Communications in 1975 for 30 million plus 500 000 shares of common stock and 750 000 shares of common stock warrants in Combined Communications 38 Combined Communications merged with Gannett Company in 1979 On September 22 1977 the Enquirer signed a joint operating agreement JOA with The Cincinnati Post 39 For two years the Enquirer had secretly negotiated the terms of the JOA with the Post while securing concessions from labor unions The two papers petitioned the Justice Department for an antitrust exemption under the Newspaper Preservation Act of 1970 This was the second JOA application under the Newspaper Preservation Act the first involving the Anchorage Daily News and Anchorage Times was summarily approved but already seen as a failure 40 The Enquirer Post agreement was approved on November 26 1979 41 taking effect after negotiations and legal battles with unions 40 As the more financially sound paper the Enquirer received an 80 stake in the business and handled all business functions of both papers including printing distribution and selling advertising 42 Gannett opened a new printing press off Western Avenue in the West End to print both papers 43 In August 1980 William J Keating appointed George Blake to serve as the Enquirer s first new editor since the Gannett acquisition Blake who was previously editor at The News Press of Fort Myers Florida had a tendency to delegate that contrasted with the hands on style of his predecessor Luke Feck The Enquirer underwent a staff reorganization and introduced a new format in September 1982 44 Under Blake the Enquirer had a reputation for friendliness to corporate interests 45 exemplified in its weak coverage of the savings and loan crisis that engulfed financier Charles Keating brother of Enquirer publisher William J Keating The paper s approach changed dramatically in January 1993 with the arrival of president and publisher Harry Whipple and editor Lawrence Beaupre from Gannett Suburban Newspapers in White Plains New York Beaupre emphasized investigative reporting beginning with aggressive coverage of Charles Keating s conviction By 1995 he had brought his team of aggressive investigative reporters from White Plains to the Enquirer The paper won awards for Michael Gallagher s 1996 investigation into Fluor Daniel s cleanup of the uranium processing plant at Fernald Feed Materials Production Center 46 On May 3 1998 the Enquirer published a special 18 page section titled Chiquita Secrets Revealed that accused the Cincinnati based fruit company of labor abuses polluting bribery and other misdeeds 47 Chiquita owned by former Enquirer owner Lindner denied all of the allegations Gallagher was charged and convicted for illegally obtaining some of the evidence through voicemail hacking and the Enquirer fired him for lying about his sources Faced with a potential lawsuit over the voicemail hacking the Enquirer settled with Chiquita out of court paying the company 14 million Under the terms of the agreement the paper published an unprecedented three day long front page retraction of the entire series destroyed any evidence they had gathered against Chiquita and transferred Beaupre to Gannett headquarters 46 48 49 The paper largely reverted to its former approach to business coverage 45 On April 10 2000 the Enquirer and Post downsized from a traditional 12 5 16 inch wide 313 mm broadsheet format to an 11 5 8 inch wide 300 mm format similar to Berliner They also began publishing in color every day of the week Gannett promoted the narrower format as being easier to handle hold and read but also cited reduced newsprint costs 50 51 In May 2003 Gannett replaced Harry Whipple with Cincinnati native Margaret E Buchanan as president and publisher Buchanan previously publisher of the Idaho Statesman was the newspaper s first woman publisher The same year Tom Callinan became editor of the Enquirer after stints as editor of The Arizona Republic the Democrat and Chronicle of Rochester New York and the Lansing State Journal 52 One of his first moves was to reassign media critics to reporting positions 45 Callinan originally attempted to address declining circulation by focusing on lifestyle content aimed at younger readers however this approach alienated the paper s older core audience The paper responded by reemphasizing national news in the newspaper and creating niche crowdsourced products online for younger audiences 45 53 In October 2003 The Enquirer began publishing and distributing CiN Weekly a free lifestyle magazine aimed at younger readers to compete against Cincinnati CityBeat In 2004 Gannett purchased local magazines Design and Inspire and increased coverage in The Kentucky Enquirer 54 In November 2004 Gannett purchased HomeTown Communications Network publisher of a daily newspaper and 62 weekly and biweekly newspapers branded The Community Press in Ohio and The Community Recorder in Kentucky 55 The Department of Justice cleared the purchase the following March 56 In January 2004 the Enquirer informed the Post of its intention to let the JOA expire 39 57 The Post published its final print edition upon the JOA s expiration on December 31 2007 58 leaving the Enquirer as the only daily newspaper in Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky Following the Post s closure the Enquirer made efforts to appeal to The Kentucky Post s former readership for example referring to the Cincinnati metropolitan area as Greater Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky rather than simply Greater Cincinnati 59 In April 2006 The Enquirer was cited by The Associated Press with the news cooperative s General Excellence Award naming The Enquirer as the best major daily newspaper in Ohio Earlier that year parent Gannett Co named The Enquirer the most improved of the more than 100 newspapers in the chain citation needed In December 2010 Callinan left for a professorship at the University of Cincinnati 52 and was succeeded by Carolyn Washburn as editor 60 In October 2012 the online version of the Enquirer went behind a metered paywall In March 2013 Gannett closed its West End printing facility and contracted with The Columbus Dispatch to print the Enquirer in Columbus Shortly after the Enquirer began publishing in a smaller compact tabloid format 61 Former Post and Enquirer pressman Al Bamberger purchased the former Enquirer facility that June and sold it to Wegman Company an office furniture installation company 43 Buchanan retired in March 2015 Gannett named Rick Green the editor of The Des Moines Register and a former Enquirer assistant editor as president and publisher 60 In August 2016 Gannett eliminated the Enquirer s Publisher position transferring Green to the North Jersey Media Group in New Jersey 62 63 Facilities edit nbsp Former Cincinnati Enquirer headquarters building 1992 2022 at 312 Elm Street nbsp Cincinnati Enquirer Building at Third and Elm streetsThe Enquirer has published from many downtown Cincinnati locations From Fifth Street between Main and Sycamore it moved to Third Street then to the corner of Third and Main then to Main between Third and Pearl In 1866 the Enquirer began publishing from offices in the 600 block of Vine Street near Baker Street 64 From 1916 to 1928 the newspaper constructed a new headquarters and printing plant the Cincinnati Enquirer Building on this property 65 In 1992 the newspaper moved to 312 Elm Street 66 At the end of 2022 the newspaper s 30 year lease agreement at Elm Street expired and the Enquirer s news operation moved one block west to 312 Plum Street 67 The Enquirer operated two news bureaus until July 2013 The Northern Kentucky bureau produced The Kentucky Enquirer and The Community Recorder while the West Chester bureau covered Butler and Warren counties for The Cincinnati Enquirer s northern zones and produced some editions of The Community Press 59 68 From 1977 to 2013 the Enquirer was printed from a 130 000 square foot 12 000 m2 press off Western Avenue in the West End Until 2007 this facility also printed The Cincinnati Post under a joint operating agreement 43 Since March 2013 Gannett has contracted with The Columbus Dispatch in Columbus to print all its Cincinnati publications including the Enquirer 61 Similarly Gannett has contracted with the Lafayette Indiana Journal amp Courier to print Community Press and Community Recorder editions since 2007 69 Online presence editThe Enquirer launched its first website Enquirer com on November 1 1996 Due to a joint operating agreement with The Cincinnati Post it launched concurrently with the Post s site The Post A shared website GoCincinnati 70 located at gocinci net displayed classified advertising and offered dial up Internet access subscriptions Local access numbers were available in cities throughout the country through a network of Gannett publications 71 Both papers home pages moved to a more memorable domain Cincinnati com on November 1 1998 72 The new brand encompassed about 300 local commercial sites and some community organizations 73 From May 2002 to March 2007 Cincinnati com also included WCPO com the website of Post sister company WCPO TV 74 The Post closed at the end of 2007 ending Scripps involvement in Cincinnati com The CiN Weekly Community Press and Community Recorder weekly newspapers have also been online partners with the Enquirer In October 2005 the Enquirer launched NKY com a website covering news from Boone Campbell and Kenton counties in Northern Kentucky NKY com was one of the first newspaper published websites to make extensive use of user created content which it featured prominently on 38 community pages In August 2006 Cincinnati com launched 186 community pages covering towns and neighborhoods in Ohio and Indiana and began soliciting and publishing stories and articles from readers which appear in Your Hometown Enquirer inserts nbsp Former Cincinnati com logoSince October 2012 Cincinnati com has operated behind a metered paywall that allows readers to view 10 stories a month before paying a subscription fee As a Gannett property Cincinnati com is branded as part of the USA Today Network Its primary competitor in the market is WCPO TV s website WCPO com 75 Archives of Enquirer articles can be found in online subscription databases ProQuest contains full text of articles from 1841 to 1922 and from 1999 to present as well as digital microfilm of articles from 2010 to 2012 76 As of September 2016 update Newspapers com has scans of 4 2 million pages from 1841 to present 77 Notable people editCurrent employees Amber Hunt crime authorFormer employees and contributors Lee Allen baseball historian Peter Bhatia newspaper editor Roy Beck anti illegal immigration activist Jim Borgman Pulitzer Prize winning editorial cartoonist 78 79 O P Caylor baseball columnist George Randolph Chester writer James M Cox Governor of Ohio U S Representative and U S presidential candidate Harry M Daugherty U S Attorney General Timothy C Day U S Representative Jerry Dowling cartoonist James W Faulkner political journalist Suzanne Fournier Chief of Public Affairs for the U S Army Corps of Engineers Michael Gallagher investigative journalist Edward Gallenstein magazine editor Sloane Gordon political writer Murat Halstead newspaper editor Lafcadio Hearn writer Rudolph K Hynicka Cincinnati politician affiliated with Boss Cox Peter King sportswriter Winsor McCay cartoonist and animator Robert D McFadden journalist John McIntyre copy editor Charles Murphy owner of the Chicago Cubs Terence Moore sports journalist David Philipson Reform rabbi and orator Jacob J Rosenthal theater manager Frederick Bushnell Jack Ryder football coach and sportswriter Al Schottelkotte WCPO TV news anchor Robert F Schulkers author Bill Thomas author Whitney Tower horse racing reporter Lawson Wulsin professor of psychiatry and family medicineFormer Enquirer owners and publishers Francis L Dale publisher James J Faran owner and associate editor U S Representative William J Keating CEO and publisher U S Representative Carl Lindner Jr owner John Roll McLean publisher Washington McLean owner Carolyn Washburn Enquirer editorReferences edit Gannett Form 10 K Securities amp Exchange Commission Retrieved March 10 2023 Benton Joshua March 9 2023 The scale of local news destruction in Gannett s markets is astonishing Nieman Lab Enquirer Seven Days of Heroin reporter shares stories behind Pulitzer Prize winning story The MSN August 31 2018 Retrieved July 7 2021 Cincinnati newspaper wins Pulitzer for heroin reporting The Seattle Times April 16 2018 Retrieved September 13 2018 Edward Achorn March 3 2020 Every Drop of Blood The Momentous Second Inauguration of Abraham Lincoln Kindle ed Atlantic Monthly Press p 2364 a b Bhatia Peter September 23 2016 Why we re endorsing for president The Cincinnati Enquirer Editorial It has to be Hillary Clinton The Cincinnati Enquirer September 24 2016 Page and Photo Reprints Cincinnati com Company Retrieved September 26 2016 Kiesewetter John September 15 2016 Enquirer WXIX TV News Sharing Agreement Finalized WVXU Cincinnati Public Radio Retrieved October 2 2016 Kristen Hare April 16 2018 Two years ago the Cincinnati Enquirer started covering heroin as a beat Today it won a Pulitzer for it www poynter org The 2018 Pulitzer Prize Winner in Local Reporting www pulitzer org Retrieved September 13 2018 1991 Pulitzer Prizes www pulitzer org Retrieved September 13 2018 a b Horn Dan Suess Jeff April 10 2016 First Enquirer reveals much about Cincinnati The Cincinnati Enquirer Retrieved September 26 2016 About Advertiser and journal Cincinnati Ohio 1839 1841 Chronicling America National Digital Newspaper Program Retrieved September 26 2016 About Weekly Cincinnati enquirer Cincinnati Ohio 1841 1842 Chronicling America National Digital Newspaper Program Retrieved September 26 2016 a b c Nelson S B Runk J M eds 1894 History of Cincinnati and Hamilton County Ohio Their Past and Present S B Nelson amp Company p 385 via Internet Archive About Enquirer and message Cincinnati Ohio 1843 1844 Chronicling America National Digital Newspaper Program Retrieved September 26 2016 About Daily enquirer and message Cincinnati Ohio 1844 1845 Chronicling America National Digital Newspaper Program Retrieved September 26 2016 About The Cincinnati daily enquirer Cincinnati Ohio 1845 1849 Chronicling America National Digital Newspaper Program Retrieved September 26 2016 About The Cincinnati enquirer Cincinnati Ohio 1849 1852 Chronicling America National Digital Newspaper Program Retrieved September 26 2016 Suess Jeff July 15 2015 Tragedy of Pike s Opera House recounted in new book The Cincinnati Enquirer Retrieved September 26 2016 a b The Press Battle for the Enquirer Time Vol 59 no 23 June 9 1952 Retrieved October 30 2016 Harrington Harry Franklin Frankenberg Theodore Thomas 1912 Essentials in journalism a manual in newspaper making for college classes Ginn and Company via Internet Archive Death of John R McLean his estate of millions left in trust for son and descendants The Fourth Estate No 1164 Fourth Estate Publishing Company June 17 1916 pp 12 13 via Google Books Knights of the Golden Trail Historic Loveland Castle Museum July 18 2002 Archived from the original on September 29 2007 Retrieved July 5 2007 Cincinnati Enquirer v Amer Security amp Trust Co 107 Ohio App 526 Ohio App 1958 Employees Bid for Paper Staff of The Cincinnati Enquirer Seeks to Purchase Daily The New York Times March 21 1952 p 25 Employee Paper Thrives Cincinnati Enquirer Has Net of 349 421 Under Staff The New York Times January 3 1954 p 40 Newspaper Staff Stages a Revolt The New York Times November 26 1955 p 16 2 Ousted in Dispute on Cincinnati Paper The New York Times December 5 1955 p 24 36 of Cincinnati Enquirer Stock Sold to Affiliate of Scripps Chain Chicago Investment House Accepts Its Offer of 4 059 000 for Debentures Two Other Papers Also Bid The New York Times Associated Press April 27 1956 Taft 1960 pp 270 274 The Press Death of the Times Star Time August 4 1958 Retrieved November 17 2014 Murtha Lisa November 8 2014 Scripps Once They Bought Ink by the Barrel Cincinnati Emmis Communications Retrieved November 23 2014 Newspapers Separation in Cincinnati Time October 11 1968 Retrieved November 23 2014 Clark Paul December 28 2007 Post won PM market before decline The Cincinnati Enquirer Retrieved December 29 2014 Scripps O K s Sale of Enquirer Control Chicago Tribune Vol 124 no 31 United Press International February 20 1971 p 2 7 Cincinnati Enquirer Brings 30 Million Associated Press May 6 1975 p 80 a b Peale Cliff January 17 2004 Post pact will expire The Cincinnati Enquirer Retrieved November 19 2014 a b Dillehay Whayne October 1978 How To Succeed In Newspapering Without Really Trying Cincinnati Greater Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce 12 1 77 81 123 127 Joint Operation Backed For 2 Cincinnati Papers The New York Times Associated Press November 27 1979 Driehaus Bob February 21 2007 Cover Story The Deal That Changed Everything Cincinnati CityBeat Retrieved November 17 2014 a b c Lambert Lance April 19 2014 Former Enquirer printing building sold again The Cincinnati Enquirer Company Retrieved September 26 2016 Robson Britt April 1983 The Man Behind the News What Is He Really Aiming For Cincinnati Vol 16 no 7 CM Media Cover pp 34 39 via Google Books a b c d Zimmerman Julie Irwin June 2008 Enquirer 2 0 Cincinnati Vol 41 no 9 Emmis Communications pp 99 103 174 176 via Google Books a b Vaccariello Lina Tate Skip October 1998 The rise and fall of an editor a reporter and a newspaper Cincinnati Vol 33 no 1 Emmis Communications pp 112 114 153 168 ISSN 0746 8210 via Google Books Gallagher Mike McWhirter Cameron May 3 1998 Chiquita SECRETS Revealed The Cincinnati Enquirer Fox John May 11 2000 Press Clips Two Years and Counting Cincinnati CityBeat Retrieved October 30 2016 Oberlander Lynn July 28 2011 The Chiquita Phone Hacking Scandal The New Yorker News for the New Century Cincinnati com Retrieved November 24 2014 Bushee Ward April 9 2000 Enquirer launches new look The Cincinnati Enquirer Retrieved December 29 2014 a b Callinan to retire as Enquirer editor Cincinnati Business Courier American City Business Journals November 23 2010 Retrieved October 31 2016 Howe Jeff July 24 2007 To Save Themselves US Newspapers Put Readers to Work Wired Vol 15 no 8 Retrieved October 31 2016 Stealth CEO Cincy February March 2006 Retrieved October 31 2016 Enquirer parent to buy Community Press Recorder owner Cincinnati Business Courier American City Business Journals November 19 2004 Retrieved October 2 2016 Gannett gets OK to buy Community Press Recorder Cincinnati Business Courier American City Business Journals March 8 2005 Retrieved October 2 2016 Newspaper JOA in Cincinnati will not be renewed after 2007 Press release E W Scripps Company January 16 2004 Archived from the original on July 16 2011 Winternitz Felix Bellman Sacha DeVroomen November 18 2008 Insiders Guide to Cincinnati 7th ed Globe Pequot Press p 381 ISBN 978 0 7627 4180 9 ISSN 1527 1188 Retrieved August 1 2013 a b Lopez German August 2 2013 Enquirer Restructures Kentucky West Chester Offices Cincinnati CityBeat SouthComm Retrieved October 2 2016 a b Wetterich Chris February 18 2015 Enquirer publisher retires this former editor will replace her Cincinnati Business Courier American City Business Journals Retrieved October 31 2016 a b Cincinnati Enquirer unveils new paper format WCPO March 13 2013 Archived from the original on February 19 2015 Retrieved February 19 2015 Kiesewetter John September 6 2016 The End Of An Era At The Enquirer WVXU Cincinnati Public Radio Retrieved October 2 2016 Enquirer drops publisher position Cincinnati Business Courier American City Business Journals September 6 2016 Retrieved October 2 2016 Kenny Daniel J 1879 Cincinnati Illustrated A Pictorial Guide to Cincinnati and the Suburbs Robert Clarke amp Company p 81 via Google Books Owen Lorrie K ed Dictionary of Ohio Historic Places Vol I St Clair Shores Somerset 1999 574 About Us The Cincinnati Enquirer 2008 Accessed 2010 12 03 From the editor The Enquirer and its pipe smoking pug have a new home USA TODAY Retrieved April 27 2023 Brownfield Andy August 2 2013 Enquirer restructures bureaus lays off journalists Cincinnati Business Courier American City Business Journals Retrieved October 2 2016 Gannett to switch community papers printing cut 31 jobs Cincinnati Business Courier American City Business Journals January 22 2007 Retrieved October 2 2016 Gannett Company Inc is eliminating 31 jobs in the former Community Press newspaper operation as it transfers the printing of its 27 neighborhood newspapers to a Gannett paper in Lafayette Ind and moves to a new page format The move affects all Community Press and Community Recorder newspapers in the Tri State as well as several specialty publications that used the Para Drive printing plant in Bond Hill Brewer Charles October 27 1996 Most papers tiptoeing onto Internet The Cincinnati Enquirer Other U S Cities GoCinci Net Internet Access Company 1997 Archived from the original on June 6 1997 Eckberg John November 1 1998 GoCincinnati gets a new name The Cincinnati Enquirer Retrieved December 29 2014 Web site has a new address The Cincinnati Post October 31 1998 Archived from the original on November 23 2004 Welcome to WCPO com WCPO com Archived from the original on May 5 2002 Wang Shan August 27 2015 A Cincinnati TV station with a paywalled site is challenging the city s leading daily newspaper Nieman Journalism Lab Nieman Foundation for Journalism Retrieved September 26 2016 Magazine amp Newspaper Articles Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County Retrieved September 26 2016 The Cincinnati Enquirer Newspapers com Retrieved September 26 2016 Zits cartoonist Borgman takes Ohio newspaper buyout USA Today September 3 2008 Retrieved October 2 2016 Cartoonist Borgman to leave Enquirer Cincinnati Business Courier American City Business Journals September 3 2008 Retrieved October 2 2016 Further reading editNicholas Bender Banana Report Columbia Journalism Review May June 2001 Graydon Decamp The Grand Old Lady of Vine Street Cincinnati The Cincinnati Enquirer 1991 Official history Douglas Frantz After Apology Issues Raised In Chiquita Articles Remain The New York Times July 17 1998 p A1 A14 Douglas Frantz Mysteries Behind Story s Publication The New York Times July 17 1998 p A14 Lew Moores Media Myself amp I Cincinnati CityBeat January 7 2004 Lew Moores The Day the Music Critic Died Cincinnati CityBeat February 11 2004 Randolph Reddick The Old Lady of Vine Street Ohio University Ph D dissertation 1991 A study of the four years of employee ownership Nicholas Stein Banana Peel Columbia Journalism Review September October 1998 Taft Robert Jr October 1960 Epilogue For a Lady The Passing of the Times Star PDF Bulletin of the Historical and Philosophical Society of Ohio 18 4 260 277 OCLC 52305709 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to The Cincinnati Enquirer Cincinnati Com official site Cincinnati Com official mobile site official iPhone site NKY com official site Enquirer com official site Cinweekly com official site Gannett Co Inc official site Gannett Co Inc profile of The Cincinnati Enquirer Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County Newsdex an index to historical newspapers in the Cincinnati area http newsdex cincinnatilibrary org uhtbin cgisirsi x 0 0 49 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Cincinnati Enquirer amp oldid 1195854340, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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