Content-Type: text/html An Early Hostile Corporate Takeover: The Split of the Scripps Newspaper Empire 1920-1922 In July 1996, the Scripps League consummated a deal with the Pulitzer Company to sell its sixteen daily and thirty non-daily newspapers for $216 million. The sale came almost seventy-five years after Jim Scripps left his father, E.W. Scripps and the Scripps McRae chain, and took seven west coast newspapers in August of 1921 to start his own chain. This breakaway company would eventually become the Scripps League. Scripps McRae would reorganize in 1922 after the break and become Scripps Howard. The separate organizations stemmed from an early corporate split in the Scripps newspaper empire between 1920 and 1922, during a time of consolidation of the Scripps interests. Prior to 1920 the Scripps Empire consisted of three groups, which became two because of the simultaneous consolidation and split. The consolidation and split changed the power held by founder E.W. Scripps. The separated company held by his son left him with a minority interest and little voice in the operation of the new company. The split involved seven newspapers that consisted of one-fourth of the Scripps interests. A number of studies have addressed the issue of media ownership and the organizations established, but most have simply chronicled the establishment and maintenance of chains.[1] Research on newspaper owners and managers has been primarily in the form of individual biographies. There are numerous biographies of William Randolph Hearst, Joseph Pulitzer, William Allen White, and E.W. Scripps. These books provide valuable insight into the decisions made by newspaper management, but rarely review details of the papers and chains they managed.[2] Books on E.W. Scripps contain few details on the corporate split, only that it occurred.[3] Trimble's recent biography on E.W. Scripps, Astonishing Mr. Scripps: The Turbulent Life of America's Penny Press Lord, includes some information about the chain, but it deals with information only from the perspective of E.W. Scripps through his correspondence. Trimble discusses the corporate split, but he views it as an issue of a family squabble and reflects the undeviating decision-making between the key members of family. The participation of the management in the different parts of the chain is not considered.[4] Another recent book by Casserly, Scripps, The Divided Dynasty: A History of the First Family of American Journalism, reviews little of the circumstances surrounding the split other than it occurred. The book then develops a story around the Scripps League newspapers.[5] Although trends in corporate media splits and consolidation continue to develop, little information is known about early historical events and developments in this area. Media economic history contains few details on the business of chain journalism. There is little mention of corporate consolidation or splits in media history textbooks. There are only brief mentions on chain ownership and media concentration.[6] The purpose of this historical study is to examine an early corporate split and consolidation within the Scripps newspaper empire. It also will examine reasons for the split and the effects upon employees, management, stockholders, and the corporate structure. It further provides an illustration of E.W. Scripps disintegrating power and his attempts to retain power. This paper will look at the Scripps West Coast Newspapers, Harper Group of Scripps, and the Scripps McRae League and the consolidation of the twenty-one newspapers in these groups into Scripps McRae. The consolidation was a preparatory step for reorganization into what would become Scripps Howard. However, the consolidation was hampered by the split of seven newspapers into the ownership of son Jim Scripps. The Scripps Corporate Structure E.W. Scripps began his newspaper career with an investment of $600 and one share of stock in the Detroit News, a newspaper owned by his brother James. In a move for independence E.W. started the Cleveland Press in 1878 with some financial backing from his brothers James and George. In 1880 Scripps moved on to St. Louis and purchased the Chronicle. After a brief set back in Buffalo, New York and the loss of a paper in that city, Scripps turned his attention to Cincinnati in 1883 and took over a struggling penny paper which became the Post. These were the formative years of the Scripps newspaper empire. In 1887 Scripps made Milton McRae managing director in St. Louis.[7] Scripps managed the Post and the chain in Cincinnati. While there he launched another venture in the Kentucky Post, across the Ohio River in Covington. This paper would be a derivative paper of the Cincinnati Post. In 1889 at age 36 Scripps was ready for retirement. He had become a wealthy man for his age. Scripps was confident of McRae's sense as a business manager and made him a partner. This new organization took the name Scripps-McRae League of Newspapers. Scripps retired to California in 1890, leaving the management of the newspaper group to McRae. Scripps retirement on the west coast did not last long. He formed another group known in the correspondence as Scripps-Blades, which was publicly known as Scripps West Coast Group. This new chain of newspapers started or acquired papers in San Diego, Los Angeles, San Francisco and many other West Coast cities that were not part of the Scripps McRae League. He later invested money into papers his attorney J.C. Harper bought, thus forming the Harper group of Scripps. He had a fourth venture which he held a minority interest. With a former employee he formed Scripps-Kellogg, which would later be known as Clover Leaf Newspapers.[8] Over the next thirty years the Scripps empire would grow to twenty-one newspapers and would increase twenty times in revenues. The move in 1920 toward consolidation was an attempt to unite all of the Scripps interests for greater profitability. Analyzing the simultaneous split and consolidation of the company is difficult. The tone of correspondence in the E.W. Scripps Papers at Ohio University, and the Roy Howard papers at the Library of Congress suggests that the issues were complicated involving developments in the Scripps chain between 1920 and 1922. The letters are not consistent on issues of the change. The analysis is further complicated by the management organization established by E.W. Scripps. By 1906, the newspapers were under three different shell organizations -- the Scripps West Coast Newspapers, Harper Group of Scripps, and the Scripps McRae League, and remained that way until 1920 (see Table 1). Table 1 Scripps Newspaper Empire - 1920 Scripps McRae Scripps West Coast Harper Group Cleveland Press San Diego Sun Evansville Press Cincinnati Post Los Angeles Record Terre Haute Post Akron Press San Francisco News Denver Express Toledo News-Bee Sacramento Star Dallas Dispatch Columbus Citizen Spokane Press Memphis Press Des Moines News Tacoma Times Houston Press Oklahoma News Portland News Seattle Star The papers in these organizations represented a mixture of ownership. E.W. owned different percentages of each newspaper. The balance of the stock was held by family, managers, or editors of the respective newspapers. In the instance of the Harper Group, E.W. sometimes held no stock, instead he held large notes for money he had lent, thus he received interest payments rather than dividends. The proposed change in the corporate organization was intended to realign the papers under an umbrella company to make management of the different interests easier. However, the separation of several newspapers by son Jim at the time of proposed consolidation, created a far different arrangement that E.W. had envisioned (see Table 2). Table 2 Scripps Newspaper Empire - 1921 Scripps McRae League Jim Scripps Cleveland Press San Diego Sun Portland News Cincinnati Post Evansville Press Los Angeles Record Terre Haute Post Akron Press Denver Express Toledo News-Bee Columbus Citizen Dallas Dispatch Sacramento Star Memphis Press Spokane Press Des Moines News Houston Press Tacoma Times Oklahoma News Seattle Star San Francisco News The split in the company involved different issues to different people. The split did not happen overnight. It involved a two-year process of vacillating decisions and counter-decisions. To Jim Scripps it was an issue of authority. He had run the empire for twelve years, from 1906 to 1918, with little interference. In 1918 the promotion of younger brother Bob to editor-in-chief over other qualified men by his father E.W. appeared as usurping authority from Jim. Later it became an issue of power as E.W. transferred his durable power of attorney, granting vast authority in the business, from Jim to Bob. Lastly, Jim's concern was independence from his father in operating newspapers. After Jim's death in 1921, his wife Josephine was concerned with making the correct investment decision. This involved honoring her deceased husband's desires, while securing her own welfare and the future of her children. Motivating her decision-making was a lack of understanding of the complicated issues involving varying percentages of stockholdings in the different newspapers and a general distrust of her father-in-law, E.W. The issue to E.W. was at first power. E.W. had started and built the organization and he wanted his wishes to be abided by, even if it meant restructuring. Later, his concern became uniting the split organization to protect the shareholders. Finally, the issue became one of mending family relationships even at a substantial cost to himself. Bob Scripps's motive was primarily to abide by his father's wishes. In this respect the issues surrounding Bob were similar to his father's. Roy Howard's issue was different than the others. At first he wanted to appease Jim and Josephine to reunite the companies. When that did not appear to be likely, Howard desired to destroy the break-off or "belligerent" papers as he referred to them. Because this involved family, pressures were exerted from other family members who were also major shareholders in the Scripps empire. The changing issues, organizations, and management created complicated situations that were not easily resolved. Power struggles for control In 1920, Jim Scripps was general manager of the largest newspaper chain in America - The Scripps Concern, which consisted of twenty-one papers. The financial records reveal that Jim accomplished what his father and previous general manager Milton McRae could not - consolidate the corporate growth and build an organization. Prior to Jim's arrival as general manager in 1908, the chain started or acquired twenty-five papers in thirty years of existence. Four papers were sold or died. The chain also had full use of its own services in the syndicated Newspaper Enterprise Association (NEA) and United Press (UP). As general manager, Jim began to sell or eliminate unprofitable papers and added only two in the next twelve years. Receipts from the papers more than quadrupled from $3,472,000 in 1908 to $17,000,000 in 1920.[9] Jim promoted growth differently than his predecessors. It appears that prior to his arrival as general manager that corporate growth was measured in number of papers, not revenue. Jim successfully reduced the number of papers while producing substantial increases in revenue. The growth may have occurred anyway regardless of the policies Jim implemented. Alfred McClung Lee's book of the newspaper industry in the first quarter of the twentieth century, explored industry trends on newspaper advertising. In 1908 total newspaper advertising revenue was $148 million, by 1920 the amount was $521 million.[10] These figures suggest that the newspaper industry as a whole increased more than three times. Jim could have potentially done little in terms of management and administration and the Scripps newspapers may have still thrived. The year 1920, yielded large revenues for the Scripps newspapers, but it also represented the last full year of Jim's management with the chain. Two years previous in 1918, his father, E.W. Scripps worked and lobbied to keep his two sons - Jim and Bob out of the Great War in Europe. World War I was fully under way and E.W., being sixty-two years old, wanted his sons around to manage his empire. They were the last two sons alive. Ted, his second son had died in 1899, weeks before his eighth birthday. John Paul, his third son had died in 1914 at age thirty-six. Jim, the oldest, had ten years experience as general manager of the Scripps newspapers. Bob was twenty-three and had spent time under his father's tutelage, primarily at the family ranch in Miramar, California. His only experience in the newspaper business was as a reporter for the Humboldt Times in Eureka, California, which provided early experiences in newswriting with Bret Harte and Mark Twain.[11] Keeping Jim out of the war would not be particularly difficult since he was general manager of the Scripps newspapers; Bob's case proved to be more difficult because he was draft age and had a lack of practical newspaper management experience. To accomplish his desires, E.W. needed to give a position to Bob that could show the draft review board of his necessity to the company. E.W. tried to let Jim make most of the decisions, but to keep Bob out of the war he appointed him editor-in-chief. As chief shareholder E.W. could make this move, but to the chagrin of Jim, who felt many more men were qualified for the position. E.W. was able to keep his sons out of the Great War only at the cost of precipitating a family war.[12] To E.W. the move was necessary to preserve the chain for future generations and for him to maintain control. Jim was outraged. He felt his younger brother was not ready either to manage men or produce editorial copy. Jim immediately set forth to undermine his father's decision. He could do it, too. He was general manager, and held a sizable block of stock. He also held a broad durable power-of-attorney granted to him by his father. Politically, he held much power among the cadre that surrounded him within the Scripps chain. Much of E.W.'s power elite had become his personal advisors and were no longer involved in the management of the chain. Early editors and confidants to E.W. were able to live on stock dividends and had retired to advising positions or directors' chairs. Over the intervening years, Jim built a new power group supporting his methods.[13] Jim made sure that Bob as editor-in-chief could exercise no real authority.[14] Jim corresponded with Seattle attorney John Perry to see how much power he had. Perry handled much of the legal affairs for the west coast papers and was minority shareholder in several of them. Jim did not consult the corporate attorneys, J.C. Harper or Thomas Sidlo, because he knew word would get back to his father. Jim then exercised his control and made changes of his own. He elevated Jay Curts, a former Scripps McRae corporate attorney, Jim's personal attorney, and a man E.W. thoroughly disliked, to be regional manager to the west coast group of papers. Jim promoted Byron Canfield from head of the NEA to his own staff as assistant chairman of the concern. He did not invite E.W. to attend the annual editorial conference. E.W. did not always attend, but he had always received the invitation. E.W. was deeply disappointed with his son's actions.[15] E.W. did not like the power struggle. For years he had stayed out of the affairs of the chain, but occasionally he had to come back to exert his power. This previously occurred in 1908 when he felt McRae had become to "cocksure" and was exerting power and influence far outside his domain. His answer that time was to replace McRae with his son Jim. McRae somewhat resolutely accepted the change realizing that he was tired of the business.[16] Now E.W. had the same dilemma with Jim and he took the same steps. He elevated Jim to chairman at a salary of $36,000 a year but curtailed all his powers. Jim would be a figurehead conducting business and collecting dividends. Bob now held the power-of-attorney and title of general manager. Bob would manage control of the chain, family trusts, and dividends. Jim had the title and Bob the power.[17] Trimble suggests that this move was made because of the stubbornness and bitterness of the father and son. That explanation is too simplistic. To make this move E.W. would have required more than bitterness to remove Jim from authority. With the rise in revenues and twelve years as general manager of the chain, E.W. would not remove Jim from authority based on bitterness alone. E.W. was losing control of the chain because Jim was challenging him. If E.W. did nothing, then Jim would have demonstrated his ability to undermine E.W.'s decisions. E.W. stepped forward to take steps to curtail Jim's power and show to the family, the chain, and the industry who was in charge. In earlier years, E.W. had replaced himself and retired, and then later replaced McRae when the timing was right. These previous experiences had shown him that no one was indispensable. To E.W., if Jim simply followed in the footsteps of himself and McRae there would be no further problems. Jim's sizable salary and dividends, amounting annually to between $45,000 and $80,000 would give him a comfortable living. E.W. knew that the newspaper industry was riding a wave of popularity with subscribers and advertisers and that Jim's future would be secure.[18] Reorganization The stress of the situation caused E.W. to consider consolidating all the papers into a trust and the management of all papers under Scripps McRae. The papers had been divided between the West Coast Group, Scripps McRae, and the Harper Group of Scripps. E.W. did not want to lose control and he was desirous of management consistency. He considered this move fifteen years earlier because he felt the organization had grown too difficult to manage in its current form.[19] In the early months of 1920 E.W.'s attorneys devised a plan where a living trust and holding company would be established. The money involved would be sizable. The receipts in 1919 were almost thirteen million dollars.[20] Jim was an integral part of the reorganization. In correspondence with McRae, E.W. recorded that Jim balked and said, "that he would never let any of his stock go into a holding company....that he would take his own properties and run them separately if he had to." Jim often referred to the west coast papers as his because his early days in the newspaper business were spent at these papers.[21] E.W. tried to pacify his son by suggesting he take a year off from the pressures of work.[22] June of 1920 became a decisive month. Jim threatened to smash his father's control and take away everything. With Jim causing trouble, E.W. realized Bob needed help and elevated Roy Howard, former United Press director, to general manager of the concern.[23] Shortly thereafter, Jim's west coast manager, John Perry, notified E.W. that he no longer had authority over several of the west coast papers. The papers were the Los Angeles Record, Seattle Star, Spokane Press, Tacoma Times, San Francisco News, and the Portland News-Telegram. Perry's pronouncement was reinforced when Bob gave an order for all papers to follow and the west coast group of papers ignored it. E.W. inquired of Jim what it all meant. According to E.W.'s account, Jim told E.W., "that you do not have legal control over these papers, and I do not recognize your right to control."[24] This move by Jim seemed more motivated by a desire for autonomy than an issue of money.[25] At first there was some question whether Jim did have control of the papers. But with some minority shareholders and editors' holdings Jim indeed had control. Jim's plan constituted a hostile takeover of the papers. E.W. wanted the papers to reorganize into the holding company. Not only was the move hostile, but so was Jim's attitude. A review of the stock mixed showed that both Jim and E.W. held only minority interests of several of the west coast newspapers. The rest of the stock was held by the individual editors and business managers. Jim needed to persuade these men to join him and as a voting bloc the control would be under Jim, with E.W. holding a minority interest. Jim also claimed he held title to the San Diego Sun, Denver Express, and the Dallas Dispatch. E.W. had difficulty debating his ownership in Dallas and Denver because he gave Jim these properties years before, but Jim only worked for the Sun and that did not constitute ownership.[26] Regardless of the move, E.W. directed Bob to pay Jim his chairman's salary. The corporate leaders felt it would be easier to bring Jim back by cooperating and helping, rather than fighting him. E.W. wasn't really concerned with Jim having the papers. He knew Jim could manage them effectively. He was concerned about the bitterness that developed between them. Jim quickly established headquarters in Oakland, California while he retained his home at Miramar.[27] For a brief period of time, Bob Scripps and Roy Howard ignored Jim as they wasted little time in getting started in their new roles. They developed a plan to start acquiring newspapers - a lot of them. In December the announcement came of a new Scripps paper in Birmingham, Alabama to be called the Post.[28] The launching of the Post is an indication of E.W.'s diminishing involvement in the concern. He heard about the paper the day after its first issue.[29] The month of December also brought news that Jim was ill with a fever, and on January 7, 1921, he died.[30] Jim's mother, Nackie blamed E.W. for her son's death. In the days after the funeral, E.W. retired to a study to write one of his "disquisitions" about Jim, The time had come when it was no longer endurable for Jim to submit to the commands of any other man, even his own father. There was a contest lasting several years -- lasting in its acute form for nearly a year. During all of this time, I had a divided mind with regard to what I wanted my son to do. I am sure he enjoyed this strife. Perhaps I am as tough-minded as my son is tough-minded.[31] E.W. went to Jim's widow, Josephine, and offered to arrange for her and her children's security for the rest of their lives by purchasing all of Jim's stock for a million dollars.[32] The offer was extremely generous since Jim's stock was valued at $488,000.[33] At the time she was unable to make a decision of that magnitude. She felt she needed to take some time to understand every facet of Jim's affairs. Josephine had not only the burden of Jim's death to deal with but she also had the editors of the different papers under his control who were not in harmony and were vying for control of the different properties.[34] Thomas Sidlo, attorney for Scripps McRae suggested that Milton McRae might come out of retirement to assist with the management of the west coast papers. McRae agreed but stipulated he would do it for only a year. McRae would be a good choice. McRae was a partner with E.W. yet they had strong differences. He maintained a strong relationship with Jim yet questioned his recent moves. McRae let E.W. and Josephine know that he would advise Josephine on what her best interests would be, not what E.W. wanted. Actually, Milton McRae felt that having the papers united would be in Josephine's best interest, because of her lack of newspaper experience.[35] Josephine took some time and in August announced that she was proceeding with Jim's plan of a western organization for the newspapers. Josephine was intelligent. E.W., Bob, and Roy admitted that, but they were unsure if she could pull the whole thing off. Josephine was disturbed to find that her associates had previously borrowed money from the Scripps McRae central office for various phases of expansion. To clear these amounts off the books cost her twice what she had estimated. The move to separate the papers from E.W. was becoming increasingly more costly.[36] In October, a new Hearst paper appeared in Seattle. This development lessened E.W.'s desire to retrieve this market.[37] Meanwhile, in Oakland, McRae continued to work strenuously at keeping the operations similar in hope of merging the two back together.[38] Across the bay from Josephine Scripps's corporate office remained one of the last Scripps McRae papers on the west coast. The San Francisco News initailly followed Jim, but with his death returned to Scripps McRae and was taking directives from the officers in Cincinnati. The News had battles trying to be successful against the Hearst-owned San Francisco Call, and now Josephine and her partners were making attempts to secure the News. News editor Eugene McLean held firm to his allegiance with Scripps McRae.[39] Attempting to reinforce MacLean's decision, Mosher wrote, Josephine Scripps is headed for all kinds of trouble. Knowing the indifference of Canfield and Sanders and Flagg [west coast newspaper editors] to rules and principles and methods, and knowing the laziness of Curts and his carelessness to details, Josephine is bound to have a world of trouble.[40] Josephine was not having trouble. She lured away several other Scripps McRae employees from the Cincinnati central office. She moved forward with her plans and renamed the Coast papers the James G. Scripps newspapers. Bob Scripps was adamant the papers stay with Scripps McRae, and he stated that he did not want them renamed because the split would then be known industry-wide and could be damaging for the whole chain.[41] Josephine balked at the move of renaming, she was still dependent on Scripps McRae. She did not feel she had enough control or had the financial backing necessary to anger Bob. She still needed to negotiate her holdings in NEA, the Cleveland Press, and settle the ownership issue on the Dallas Dispatch and Denver Express. The sale of stock from these enterprises would give her the money she needed to continue with her plans, besides she still needed access to information within Scripps McRae and to keep communication channels open with Bob Scripps.[42] Josephine could not take a risk on angering anybody. Her stock holdings represented only a minority interest in the West Coast papers. She needed the continued support of her colleagues. Her holdings in the different West Coast papers represented: Los Angeles 36.5% San Francisco 31.0% Tacoma 41.0% Portland 21.3% Seattle 36.0% Spokane 25.0% She relied on the editors of the respective papers to vote with her to give her control in the split. This point was crucial since E.W. and his group, consisting of Ellen Scripps and Bob Scripps, held a sizable amount of stock in some of these properties: Los Angeles 15.0% San Francisco 20.0% Tacoma 5.7% Portland 44.0% Seattle 33.0% Spokane 49.0% Josephine had every west coast editor voting her way except MacLean of the San Francisco News. E.W. was still hopeful that he could persuade Canfield to vote with him. Canfield's holdings in Los Angeles and Seattle could sway the ownership issue either way. The difficulty to overcome would be Canfield's chief involvement in the split. He figured to be a key member in the new organization. Josephine intimated for some time that she was selling her majority share of the stock in the Dallas Dispatch. McRae wired Bob Scripps on November 22, 1921 that Josephine was willing to trade stock in Dallas for San Francisco. Having no offers she announced she would run the Dallas Dispatch.[43] Frustrated, McRae realized that she was being advised by someone else and that he would need to distance himself from her at this point. McRae realized he was being used. The information and advice he gave only helped her accomplish the original plans of breaking away. Disappointed, McRae returned home to Ohio.[44] In December Josephine formalized the takeover. Meetings of shareholders and trustees were now held in the new west coast newspaper company. The west coast papers withdrew from the Cincinnati office, appointed Curts as treasurer, and made Canfield and Sanders officers. They repudiated their contract with NEA and the Scripps Editorial Service with the possibility of doing some future business.[45] Bob Scripps responded with a shareholder's complaint against the move. Bob also threatened Josephine that if she did not reconsider selling the Dallas paper that Scripps McRae would be prepared to enter that market in the future and then they would be competing.[46] Josephine responded by appointing a publisher of the Dallas Dispatch. The formal split changed the company slightly from when Jim had pulled away. MacLean, editor of the San Francisco News trusted Jim's ability to run a group of newspapers, but not Josephine's ability.[47] Roy Howard and Bob Scripps felt Josephine was being manipulated by her associates. Her associates realized they would be out of jobs if the companies reunited. Bob Scripps was still on friendly terms with Josephine and he worked with her on the hope that she would bring the papers back. Howard wrote to Bob, It will probably be difficult for you to fully estimate the extent of bad advice (bad partly because it will be malicious and partly because it will be brainless) of which Josephine is victim. However, I feel it is inevitable that as Josephine sees your de velopment and progress and contrasts it with the chaos and confusion into which the machinations of her own self-seeking co-partners are certain to plunge her properties, she will in time appreciate the desirability of a reconciliation and a welding of the current breach.[48] The assumption by Bob and Roy that Josephine was being manipulated is strongly supported by the correspondence. Josephine changes her stance on issues in favor of decisions for independence of the west coast papers without being able to explain why. In meeting minutes with Scripps McRae she appears to want to support E.W. and Bob's desires. Upon her return to the West Coast her view changed and she advocated separation.[49] Bob Scripps was reluctant to compete with Josephine in Dallas. He knew that competition would just strengthen the ties with her partners.[50] Besides, in the last year Bob and Roy worked hard to continue to build the chain in spite of the difficulties with Josephine. During 1921, They launched or acquired six papers in Birmingham, Alabama; Norfolk, Virginia; Fort Worth, Texas; Knoxville, Tennessee; Des Moines, Iowa; and Washington D.C.[51] Howard felt they needed a paper in Dallas. Bob felt differently about Dallas than Howard, so he sent men to survey the situation. While they were surveying the market they came across some of Hearst's men in Dallas. Scripps McRae papers had competed with Hearst papers before and usually lost the battle. There was no formal policy, but they attempted to stay clear of the cities where Hearst had papers or was interested in starting one.[52] In December Bob felt that E.W. needed to go West to attempt to settle matters with Josephine. The two organizations were on the brink of war. Josephine was threatening to sell stock in NEA and United Press to outsiders. The threat of the West Coast papers canceling their services with these syndicates would only precipitate lawsuits.[53] In February 1922 Josephine had control of a sizable group consisting of the Los Angeles Record, Seattle Star, Spokane Press, Tacoma Times, Portland News-Telegram, and the Dallas Dispatch. She made another attempt to purchase the San Francisco News. All of her current properties were profitable except the Spokane Press. She had the necessary capital, and now she wanted the San Francisco News. MacLean had his stock for sale in the News and was willing to deal. Bob Scripps was interested in Josephine purchasing the stock if she was willing to relinquish her holdings in Dallas in exchange for the San Francisco stock.[54] MacLean refused to sell to Josephine, and Bob bought the stock. The move infuriated her. E.W., attempting to reconcile with his daughter-in-law, offered her enough stock to give her control, but Bob Scripps and Howard blocked the move. San Francisco was dominated by Hearst's Evening Call with Fremont Older as editor. Hearst domination of the evening field only pleased Howard, realizing that if there were to be a strong morning audience it would belong to the Scripps McRae owned - News.[55] They further felt a necessity of maintaining a paper and strategic position for expansion on the West Coast. A feud was in the making. Bob Scripps and Howard wanted the West coast papers and were tired of pacifying Josephine.[56] Howard advised against the sale of the News by MacLean or E.W. He previously wanted conciliation but now he was ready to fight the break-away papers. Howard felt relinquishing anymore papers would be surrendering to Josephine. He wanted those markets back and needed San Francisco as a leaping-off point. Howard now advocated overt action and going on the offensive by severing ties.[57] If the papers did not return to the Scripps Concern, Scripps McRae would expand to the west coast markets with new papers and compete. E.W. had a plan for all U.S. cities with populations over 100,000 to have a paper from the Scripps chain.[58] The plans for expansion did not stop, but the working relationship with Josephine did. In March 1922, Howard sent orders from the New York office that Josephine would receive only brief sanitized financial statements in the future on those papers she still held an interest in Scripps McRae.[59] When Howard went to the West coast to assess the situation. He found the Portland News-Telegram vulnerable. In Los Angeles the Record had a small circulation and was messy typographically. Hearst's Herald dominated the Los Angeles market in the evening. Howard advocated starting a morning paper to go up against the Record. The new Scripps McRae tabloid in Los Angeles could sell at a penny. Howard's plan included withholding NEA, United Press, and Scripps Editorial Board features from the Record and transferring the services to the new paper. Howard even identified key men with the Record to lure away. At most Howard felt it would take eighteen months to be number two in the market.[60] Bob Scripps and Howard did not blame Josephine for the split. They felt she was continuing to be manipulated by Curts and Canfield. Howard and Bob Scripps now referred to their enemy as the Curts-Canfield papers or the C-C group. In his review of western cities and newspapers, Howard related, I am infinitely more certain of the vulnerability of the C-C papers than I have ever been before. I would suggest early consideration by us on the advisiblity of an ultimatum to the belligerent papers....For my own part, all other considerations being equal, I would today rather take my chance on a new start in Los Angeles and Seattle than I would to take on the devitalized and demoralized properties in those cities.[61] Their strategy for attacking the "belligerent" papers would be to cut their services from Scripps McRae. The United Press (UP) and Newspapers Enterprise Association (NEA) would be cut off and made available to the new start-up Scripps McRae papers. Since Hearst had papers operating in Los Angeles, Seattle, and Portland the company services from the Hearst Corporation would not be available. This would eliminate the International News Service (INS) and King Features Syndicate as viable alternatives. Associated Press already had its service tied-up in these markets since it gave customers exclusive service. Cutting the features would create an inferior paper to compete against.[62] In March of 1922 Howard wanted to give the Curts-Canfield group one last opportunity to stay in the Concern and play by the chain's rules and terms. Withdrawing the services from the West Coast papers would draw lawsuits, and Howard wanted to move ahead with full force to find out what moves the West Coast papers would make against the chain.[63] This stance by Howard was either a bluff or naive ignorance. The income from these services was so large that to just withdraw services would have financially crippled NEA, United Press, and Scripps Editorial Service. The lawsuits against Scripps McRae would have emphasized the monopolistic control of services by the chain, creating a difficult case to win in an era that just finished "trustbusting". E.W. certainly did not wabt any more friction with his daughter-in-law, as all of his suggestions were to mend any bad feelings. Whatever the motivation may have been, Scripps Howard never did start competing papers against Josephine, nor was their any evidence of lawsuits found in the correspondence in the E.W. Scripps archive or the Roy Howard papers. The loss of the markets to the West Coast group concerned Bob Scripps and Howard. Dallas was one of the cities in which the aggressive Scripps McRae company wanted to expand even though the West Coast group had a paper there. In May they sent Bill Culver to survey the South for cities ready for expansion. He identified twenty-seven markets for potential expansion. The plan called for Scripps McRae to wait for already established papers willing to sell out, and then buy the property for a reduced price.[64] Culver also surveyed and recommended immediate expansion into Baltimore with a tabloid paper with further expansion into Philadelphia, Wilmington, and Newark.[65] Plans also were in the works for United Press to produce a weekly newsreel.[66] In November 1922 Scripps McRae became Scripps Howard. The new chain encompassed twenty-five newspapers. The only papers missing from the chain were the five west coast papers now under control of the newly-named Scripps League of newspapers.[67] The plan they developed was based on E.W.'s vision and called for expansion or acquisition of up to one hundred papers. Their future plans were large even grandiose - a paper in 100 markets (including papers located in the former west coast cities), a newsreel, and national weeklies.[68] Conclusion The plan of moving into markets held by the Scripps League of Newspapers did not appear feasible. Roy Howard and Bob Scripps used their energies exploring other markets. This was primarily due to the fact that E.W. Scripps and other family members still held a financial investment in the newspapers in the new Scripps League. To compete with a paper they had an investment in would cut into their own dividends. Bob and Roy turned their attention to other markets. In 1922 and 1923 they expanded to Youngstown, Ohio, Indianapolis, El Paso, Baltimore, Pittsburgh, and Albuquerque. This new expansion brought their total to twelve new markets. The acquisition of these markets took time to organize and administer. With each new expansion by Scripps Howard, the Scripps League became a lessening concern. Although the split separated the chain, the potential loss of income from the separation was not the main issue. The issue was one of control and potential industry perception. It is possible that Jim Scripps would have rejoined his efforts with Scripps McRae, but his death makes the point insignificant. Josephine kept the papers separate for two reasons; she distrusted her father-in-law and thus wanted to protect her investment and income, and her colleagues recommended separation as the best course, which, for them separation would be the best option. The problem for Bob Scripps and Howard was perceived industry perception of the split situation. Both were new in the industry elite and wanted to demonstrate their influence and control, and the problems with Josephine could potentially look to others as if these two newcomers could not handle the Scripps empire. The issue for these men became egocentricity. They were out maneuvered by a woman with no newspaper experience. The greater importance may lie in that the separation of the Scripps empire into two chains constitutes a casualty ocorporate journalism. Prior to the onset of corporations and stockholders, newspapers were closely held by individuals or within a family. The varying percentages allocated to many different parties made it feasible for the first time for a group of individuals to realign property against the wishes of founder or another primary shareholder. The chain concept worked well for Scripps as it helped provide capital for growth and provided stability for papers running in the red. In this instance the chain concept worked against him, and the newspaper industry experienced a taste of what would come over the next several decades as the industry shifted from sole-ownership to corporate ownership. Endnotes [1] See Edward E. Adams, "Secret Combinations and Collusive Agreements: The Scripps Newspaper Empire and the Early Roots of Joint Operating Agreements," Journalism Quarterly 73 (Spring 1996): 195-205; Carolyn Stewart Dyer, "Economic Dependence and Concentration of Ownership Among Antebellum Wisconsin Newspapers," Journalism History 7 (Summer 1980): 42-46; Marion Reynolds King, "One Link in the First Newspaper Chain, The South Carolina Gazette," Journalism Quarterly 9 (September 1932): 257-268; Ralph Frasca, "Benjamin Franklin's Printing Network," American Journalism (1988), 5:145-158; Richard Ruetten, "Anaconda Journalism, The End of an Era," Journalism Quarterly 37 (Winter 1960): 3-12, 104; Cathy Packer, "Conglomerate Newspaper Ownership: International Paper Company, 1928-1929," Journalism Quarterly 60 (Autumn 1983): 480-483, 567. [2] James Wyman Barrett, Joseph Pulitzer and his World (New York: Vanguard, 1941), and George Britt, Forty Years - Forty Millions: The Career of Frank Munsey (New York, Farrar & Rinehart, Inc., 1935), and Negley D. Cochran, E.W. Scripps (New York City: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1933), and Copley Press (Aurora, Illinois: The Copley Press, Inc., 1953), and Gilson Gardner, Lusty Scripps (New York City: Vanguard Press, 1932), and Loren Ghiglione, Gentlemen of the Press (Indianapolis: RJ Berg, 1984), and Roy Hoopes, Ralph Ingersoll (New York: Anthenum, 1985)and Oliver Knight, I Protest (Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press, 1966), and Ferdinand Lundberg, Imperial Hearst (New York: Equinox Cooperative Press, 1936), and Milton A. McRae, Forty Years in Newspaperdom, (New York City: Bretano's, 1924), and Charles McCabe, Damned Old Crank: A Self Portrait of E.W. Scripps (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1951), and Daniel W. Pfaff, Joseph Pulitzer II and the Post-Dispatch: A Newspaperman's Life (The Pennsylvania State University Press: Pennsylvania, 1991), and George Seldes, Lords of the Press (New York: Montouak Bookbinder Corporation), and John Tebbel, The Life and Good Times of William Randolph Hearst (New York: Ed Dutton & Company, Inc. 1952), and Vance Trimble, Scripps-Howard Handbook, (Cincinnati: E.W. Scripps Company, 1981), and Vance Trimble, The Astonishing Mr. Scripps: The Turbulent Life of America's Penny Press Lord (Ames Iowa: Iowa State Press, 1992) and Samuel T. Williamson, Frank Gannett (Duell, Sloan, and Pearce: New York, 1940). [3] See Gilson Gardner, Lusty Scripps (New York City: Vanguard Press, 1932), and Negley D. Cochran, E.W. Scripps (New York City: Harcourt, Brace and Company, 1933), and Charles McCabe, Damned Old Crank: A Self Portrait of E.W. Scripps (New York: Harper and Brothers, 1951), and Oliver Knight, I Protest (Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press, 1966). [4] Vance Trimble, Astonishing Mr. Scripps: The Turbulent Life of America's Penny Press Lord (Iowa State University Press: Ames, Iowa, 1992). [5] Jack Casserly, Scripps, the Divided Dynasty: A History of the First Family of American Journalism, (Donald I Fine, Inc.: New York, 1993). [6] See Edwin Emery and Michael Emery, The Press in America, An Interpretative History of the Mass Media, (Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice Hall, Inc., 1984), and William D. Sloan, James G. Stovall, and James D. Startt, The Media in America, (Worthington, Ohio: Publishing Horizons, Inc., 1989), and Jean Folkerts and Dwight Teeter, Voices of a Nation (New York: Macmillan Publishing Company, 1989). [7] Cochran, "E.W. Scripps," p. 59. [8] E.W. Scripps Autobiography, E.W. Scripps papers, Archive Collection, Ohio University, Athens, Ohio, series 4, box 10, volume 1, hereafter known as E.W. Scripps papers. [9] Financial statement on total receipts from circulation and advertising, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.2, box 20, folder 6, [10] Alfred M. Lee, The Daily Newspaper in America (The Macmillan Company: New York, 1937), 61-81. [11] "Scripps McRae becomes Scripps Howard," Editor & Publisher, November 4, 1922, pp. 3-6. [12] See E.W. Scripps to Nackie Scripps, Sept. 23, 1917, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.2, box 18, folder 5; and "Wilson exempts Scripps's Son," Los Angeles Times, Oct 17, 1917. [13] E.W. Scripps Diary, January 25, 1919, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 2.1, box 19, folder 3. [14] E.W. Scripps to Ellen B. Scripps, Feb 1, 1919, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.2, box 19, folder 4. [15] Trimble, "Astonishing Mr. Scripps," p. 410 [16] E.W. Scripps to Lemuel T. Atwood, December 6, 1906, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.2, box 8, folder 5. [17] James G. Scripps to Charles F. Mosher, October 14, 1919, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 53, folder 9. [18] Financial statement on total receipts from circulation and advertising, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.2, box 20, folder 6. [19] E.W. Scripps to Milton A. McRae, October 6, 1906, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.2, box 6, folder 12. [20] Financial statement on total receipts from circulation and advertising, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.2, box 20, folder 6. [21] E.W. Scripps to Milton A. McRae, February 23, 1920, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.2, box 19, folder 2. [22] James G. Scripps to Charles F. Mosher, October 14, 1919, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 53, folder 9. [23] E.W. Scripps to Harry Smithton, June 11, 1920, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.2, box 19, folder 12. [24] E.W. Scripps Diary, August 14, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.2, box 20, folder 6. [25] Josephine Scripps to Robert P. Scripps, November 12, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 10. [26] E.W. Scripps to James G. Scripps, December 27, 1915, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.2, box 17, folder 1. [27] Trimble, "Astonishing Mr. Scripps," p. 490. [28] For history of the Birmingham Post start-up see Expenditure of new papers report, Charles F. Mosher to E.W. Scripps, May 4, 1922, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.1, box 39, folder 7. [29] E.W. Scripps to Management - Birmingham Post, January 22, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.2, box 20, folder 5. [30] Milton A. McRae to Roy W. howard, December 21, 1920, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 54, folder 11. [31] E.W. Scripps Writings, E.W. Scripps papers, series 4, box 5, volume 9. [32] E.W. Scripps dairy, January 29, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.2, box 20, folder 5. [33] Jay W. Curts to E.W. Scripps, August 5, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.1, box 39, folder 6. [34] Discussion with Josephine, E.W. Scripps diary, January 12, 1921, subseries 1.2 box 20, folder 5, page 3. [35] Milton A. McRae to E.W. Scripps, May 30, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.1, box 39, folder 6. [36] E.W. Scripps to Ellen B. Scripps, September 28, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.2, box 20. folder 6. [37] E.W. Scripps to Ellen B. Scripps, October 22, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.2, box 20, folder 11. [38] Robert P. Scripps to Harry L. Smithton, October 31, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, series 3.1, box 55, folder 9. [39] E.W. Scripps to Ellen B. Scripps, October 27, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.2, box 20, folder 11. [40] Charles F. Mosher to Eugene MacLean, November 4, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 9. [41] Robert P. Scripps to Josephine Scripps, November 4, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 10. [42] Josephine Scripps to Robert P. Scripps, November 12, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 10. [43] Milton A. McRae to Robert P. Scripps, November 23, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 10. [44] Milton McRae to Robert P. Scripps, November 23, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 10. [45] Robert P. Scripps to Spokane Newspaper Company, November 28, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 10. [46] Robert P. Scripps to Josephine Scripps, November 28, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 10. [47] J.C. Harper to Robert P. Scripps, November 30, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 10. [48] Roy W. Howard to Robert P. Scripps, December 2, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 10. [49] See Robert P. Scripps to Josephine Scripps, November 4, 1921, E.W. scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 10; and Josephine Scripps to Robert P. Scripps, November 12, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 10; Milton A. McRae to Robert P. Scripps, November 23, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 10; Robert P. Scripps to Josephine Scripps, November 28, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 10. [50] Roy W. Howard to Robert P. Scripps, December 3, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 10. [51] Charles F. Mosher to E.W. Scripps, May 4, 1922, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.1, box 39, folder 7. [52] Robert P. Scripps to Roy W. Howard, December 5, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 10. [53] Robert P. Scripps to E.W. Scripps, December 6, 1921, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 10. [54] Robert P. Scripps to E.W. Scripps, February 11, 1922, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 11. [55] Roy W. Howard to Robert P. Scripps, August 13, 1922, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 12. [56] E.W. Scripps diary, February 13, 1922, dictated by Harry Smithton, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.2, box 20, folder 5. [57] Roy W. Howard to Robert P. Scripps, March 6, 1922, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 11. [58] E.W. Scripps diary, February 13, 1922, dictated by Harry Smithton, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.2, box 20, folder 5. [59] Harry Smithton to Robert P. Scripps, March 9, 1922, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 11. [60] Roy W. Howard to Robert P. Scripps, August 15, 1922, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 12. [61] Roy W. Howard to Robert P. Scripps, April 16, 1922, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 11. [62] Roy W. Howard to Robert P. Scripps, April 15, 1922, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 56, folder 11. [63] Roy W. Howard to Robert P. Scripps, April 16, 1922, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 56, folder 11. [64] Bill Culver to Bob Scripps and Roy Howard, May 26, 1922, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 12. [65] Bill Culver to Bob Scripps and Roy Howard, May 26, 1922, 2nd letter, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 3.1, box 55, folder 12. [66] Roy W. Howard to E.W. Scripps, May 3, 1922, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.1, box 39, folder 7. [67] "Scripps McRae becomes Scripps Howard," Editor & Publisher, November 4, 1922, pp. 3-6. [68] Roy W. Howard to E.W. Scripps, May 3, 1922, E.W. Scripps papers, subseries 1.1, box 39, folder 7.