Memorial Press Group

Memorial Press Group
Industry Newspapers
Fate Bought, then dissolved
Successor Community Newspaper Company
Founded 1822, as Old Colony Memorial
Defunct October 1, 2006
Headquarters 9 Long Pond Road, Plymouth, Massachusetts 02360
United States
Products Several weekly newspapers along the Massachusetts South Shore
Number of employees
2004: 135
Parent Prescott Publishing, 1979-1998
Enterprise NewsMedia, 1998-2006
GateHouse Media, 2006

Memorial Press Group, based in Plymouth, Massachusetts, United States, was a chain of weekly newspapers along the South Shore near Boston, Massachusetts. Long owned by The Patriot Ledger in nearby Quincy, MPG and its daily parent were sold to GateHouse Media in 2006.

Today, several former MPG papers still publish as part of Community Newspaper Company, purchased by GateHouse at the same time. Many of the others were folded into former competitors published by CNC.

History

The Old Colony Memorial, which claims the title of oldest weekly newspaper in New England, was founded in 1822 in Plymouth, Massachusetts. The Memorial had become the flagship of a nine-paper chain stretching from Plymouth north to the Boston suburbs by the turn of the 21st century.[1]

Dailies

K. Prescott Low, whose family had published The Patriot Ledger for a century, purchased MPG in 1979 and incorporated it into the privately owned George W. Prescott Publishing Company. Thirty years later, however, in 1997, Low found that "mega-players competing with us" made family ownership of the Ledger and MPG uneconomic, and sought to sell them.[2]

A buyer quickly emerged: James F. Plugh, owner of The Enterprise, the Brockton daily newspaper that competed with the Ledger and several MPG papers. Plugh's Newspaper Media LLC, later renamed Enterprise NewsMedia, bought the Prescott Publishing for an estimated US$60 to US$70 million.[3]

Toward the end of Plugh's ownership of MPG, the company began expanding. In 2005, MPG purchased the Call Group of three weeklies in the Taunton area, as well as the Norwood Bulletin. A year later, Plugh purchased Associated and Independent Newspapers, an independent chain of 12 weeklies in the suburbs around Brockton.[4]

GateHouse

Liberty Publishing purchased Enterprise NewsMedia in 2006 as part of a mammoth deal that also included Community Newspaper Company—then owned by the Boston Herald—and a new name for the parent company, GateHouse Media.[5]

Under GateHouse, MPG was gradually folded into CNC's South Unit. In a reorganization announced October 1, 2006, MPG's executives were reassigned to CNC positions and a handful of newspapers were closed to eliminate competition within the merged company. Additionally, MPG papers that had been printed in tabloid format became broadsheets and would now be printed at CNC presses.[6]

Properties

At the time of its incorporation into CNC in 2006, Mariner Group consisted of the following weeklies:

Except where noted, these titles are still published by CNC. The papers marked "Associated" were added to MPG in 2006 after its purchase of Associated and Independent Newspapers. The "Call Group" papers were purchased in 2005.

References

  1. Haley, Sean. "Plymouth Weekly Loses 180-Year Distinction". The Patriot Ledger (Quincy, Mass.), page 30, September 21, 2002.
  2. Stewart, Colin. "Ledger Owner Explains Decision". The Patriot Ledger (Quincy, Mass.), page 21, May 24, 1997.
  3. Blanton, Kimberly. "Low Family Will Sell Patriot Ledger to the Owners of Brockton Enterprise". The Boston Globe, October 4, 1997.
  4. Noyes, Jesse. "Chain Buys Dozen Mass. Papers". Boston Herald, page 25, January 6, 2006.
  5. Gatlin, Greg. "Herald to Sell Suburban Papers". Boston Herald, May 6, 2006.
  6. "Several Weeklies Ledger Parent Owns to See Change". The Patriot Ledger (Quincy, Mass.), page 34, September 14, 2006.
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