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As It Was: Weekly Ashland Tidings Traces Birth to June 1876

The weekly Ashland Tidings was the first newspaper published in Ashland, Ore., its first edition dated June 17, 1876.  The present-day newspaper’s website says it was a time when “Ashland had about 500 people but neither church (n)or saloon.”  The website quotes the first-editor, James M. Sutton, as writing,  “whiskey is sold by the bottle and preaching is done in the schoolhouse; and therefore, the people are generally happy.”

Promised the first copy, which he never got, Welborn Beeson of Talent hauled a Washington hand-press from Roseburg to print the Tidings’ first edition.

A new editor-publisher, Bert R. Greer, began daily publication in 1912 and promoted turning Ashland into a mineral water resort town.  The newspaper website states, “Ashland voters approved a $175,000 bond in 1914 to fund transporting the (lithia) sulfur water to several fountains in town and Lithia Park, but the resort concept never really took off — despite the bond campaign’s slogan, ‘Ashland grows while Lithia flows.’ ”

The newspaper has had a series of owners and editors through the years.  Rosebud Media purchased the Tidings and Medford Mail Tribune in 2017.

Sources: Turnbull, George S. History of Oregon Newspapers. Portland, Ore., Binfords & Mort, Publishers, 1939, pp. 260-61; "About Us: ." Ashland Tidings, Rosebud Media, 2019, ashlandtidings.com/station/about-ashland-tidings. Accessed 15 May 2019.

Kernan Turner is the Southern Oregon Historical Society’s volunteer editor and coordinator of the As It Was series broadcast daily by Jefferson Public Radio. A University of Oregon journalism graduate, Turner was a reporter for the Coos Bay World and managing editor of the Democrat-Herald in Albany before joining the Associated Press in Portland in 1967. Turner spent 35 years with the AP before retiring in Ashland.