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Jack Shafer: The Great Newspaper Crackup of 1918 And what to learn from it.

[ Jack Shafer is Slate's editor at large. ]

Gravediggers earned overtime during the second decade of the last century as they shoveled earth over such expired newspapers as the Boston Journal, the Cleveland Leader, the New York Press, and the Boston Traveler. They were kept busy in Philadelphia, Chicago, Baltimore, New Orleans, and Portland, Ore., too, where newspapers either went under or consolidated with stronger competitors.

In his much remarked-on obituary for the dead dailies in the January 1918 Atlantic Monthly, Oswald Garrison Villard described the passing of these papers in language that could have been lifted from the recent eulogies for the shuttered Seattle Post-Intelligencer and Rocky Mountain News. Villard, editor and publisher of The Nation, called the Boston Journal's demise a "tragedy of journalism"—one that could potentially slay democracy, too, because multiple news sources were required to present "both sides of every issue" to the citizenry. He was appalled that in a number of big cities—including Cleveland, the nation's sixth-largest—only one morning paper had survived. (We should be so lucky today.)

The leading cause of newspaper death then as now was "the enormously increased costs of maintaining great dailies" and limited advertising. According to Villard, "scarcely half" of New York's newspapers were returning "an adequate profit." One New York daily, which Villard does not name, was suffering the astronomical loss of $500,000 a year—about $7 million in today's money.

Only $7 million a year? The executives of today's New York Times Co. would dance a jig in their skivvies down Eighth Avenue if they were on the hook for just $7 million annually instead of the $85 million in red ink their Boston Globe is expected to spout this year. The Times Co. has vowed to fold the Globe or to sell it if its workers don't make huge concessions.

Losses weren't the direct cause of newspaper death in Villard's era. It was owners' growing reluctance to sustain losses that did them in—a reluctance counter to the original premise and allure of the ownership business. Why were owners previously so willing to lose money on their newspapers? The psychic profits reaped from owning a newspaper, even one that loses great sums, exceed that of almost any other investment. This explains why, as Villard puts it, "there are few other fields of enterprise in which so many unprofitable enterprises are maintained." A newspaper owner gets a place at every table, access to all the top politicians' ears, and the power to impose his worldview on his readers—or, at least, the illusion of such influence.

This illusion isn't a cornerstone of the modern industry in the way it was in Villard's time. Although vanity newspaper owners still walk the land—I'm thinking of Mortimer B. Zuckerman (the New York Daily News), Philip Anschutz (Examiners in San Francisco and Washington, recently folded in Baltimore), convicted felon Rev. Sun Myung Moon (the Washington Times), and Rupert Murdoch (the New York Post, not his Wall Street Journal)—the impulse to throw money away on newspapers for purely psychic rewards has waned in recent decades.

What's gotten many newspapers in trouble today is not vanity purchases by outsiders but poorly timed investments by newspaper insiders....
Read entire article at Slate