Saugus Advertiser
The Saugus Advertiser is the oldest newspaper covering the town of Saugus, Massachusetts still in print. It is the newspaper of record in Saugus as it is currently the only place Saugus legal notices are printed.
Type | Weekly newspaper |
---|---|
Owner(s) | GateHouse Media New England |
Publisher | GateHouse Media New England |
Editor | Mike Gaffney |
Founded | 1946 |
Headquarters | 75 Sylvan Street, C 105, Danvers, Massachusetts 01923 United States |
Website |
History
The Saugus Advertiser was founded by Colonel Alfred Woodward in 1946. He remained the newspaper's publisher until his death in 1970. He was succeeded by his wife, Virginia.[1] In 1983 she sold the paper to Andrew P. Quigley, who also published the Chelsea Record, the Winthrop Sun Transcript and the East Boston Sun-Transcript.[2] It was later purchased by Neil P. Collins and Mary L. N. McGrew. In 1990 they sold the paper to North Shore Weeklies.[3] In 1996, North Shore Weeklies was dissolved by its parent company, Community Newspaper Company. CNC was later purchased by GateHouse Media, who dissolved CNC into GateHouse Media New England in 2011.
References
- AP (December 28, 1987). "Boy Pleads innocent in ex-publisher's death". The Lewiston Journal. Retrieved October 19, 2012.
- Kevin Dotson; Don Aucoin (May 27, 1990). "Andrew P. Quigley, 64, A Force in Chelsea Politics, Journalism". The Boston Globe.
- Bushnell, Davis (October 27, 1991). "Newspaper wars being waged in Medford and Woburn". The Boston Globe.