Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Oxnard Press Courier

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Type
  
Daily

Circulation
  
17,325 (1992)

Ceased publication
  
June 16, 1994

Owner(s)
  
Thomson Newspapers (1967-94) Brush-Moore Newspapers (1963-67) George Grimes (1945-63)

Headquarters
  
Oxnard, California United States

The Oxnard Press-Courier was a newspaper located in Oxnard, California, United States. It ceased publication in June 1994 after 95 years. In 1992, its daily circulation was 17,325.

A U. S. District Court in Los Angeles awarded the Associated Press a $3,780 judgement against Press-Courier publisher, Dan W. Emmett, on June 20, 1942, for attempting to withdraw from the A.P. without giving two year's notice as required by the association's bylaws. Judge Leon R. Yankwich stated that when Emmett refused to accept service and, without notice, failed to pay his weekly assessment, he became liable for 104 weeks assessments in a lump sum based on the rate Emmett paid in May 1940 when he entered the contract.

George and Eva Grimes purchased the paper in 1945, when it had a circulation of 1,200.

In 1963, the Brush-Moore Newspapers group bought the paper. In 1967, Brush-Moore sold the paper to Thomson Newspapers as part of a sale of 12 papers, for $72 million, in what was the largest ever newspaper transaction at that time. Thomson owned the paper until it shut down in June 1994, citing a poor economy and a competitive newspaper market in Ventura County. That competition included the Los Angeles Times, who in 1990 began publishing a daily Ventura County edition, replacing a weekly Ventura County section of the paper.

References

Oxnard Press-Courier Wikipedia