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Type | Weekly newspaper |
---|---|
Founder(s) | Frank M. Dallam |
Founded | 1877 |
Ceased publication | 1940s |
City | Hayward, California |
The Hayward Journal was a newspaper that used to serve Hayward, California. It was Hayward's first newspaper.
History
Frank M. Dallam founded the paper in 1877 and edited it in an old storehouse until it was taken over by editor George Oakes in 1882. During that period, it was occasionally rendered as Haywards Journal. When the Hayward Review was founded in the 1890s, the two papers sparred frequently on local issues.
By 1892, it was an independent weekly with a circulation of 250, publishing out of Hayward, California. In 1914, it went to publishing once a week instead of bi-weekly, and by the 1940s it had folded. The name was temporarily revived for an unrelated project in the mid-2000s.
References
- ^ "New Journal on Hayward's block". East Bay Times. May 28, 2005.
- ^ "Untitled Item". Oakland Tribune – via Newspapers.com.
- "The Haywards Journal". Oakland Tribune. 25 September 1879.
- Lord & Thomas' Pocket Directory for ... Lord & Thomas Newspaper Advertising. 1892.
- "Hayward Papers May Both Be Weeklies". Oakland Tribune. 3 July 1914.
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