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The Pendleton Times is a newspaper serving Franklin, West Virginia, and surrounding Pendleton County.[2] Published weekly, it has a circulation of 4,226 and is owned by Pendleton Times LLC.[3]

The paper is Pendleton County's only newspaper and considered by the Pendleton County Commission as the local paper of record.[4]

History

Founded in 1913 as an independent newspaper by resident William McCoy,[5][6] by 1921 it had a circulation of 1,715.[7]

On April 17, 1924, the gasoline engine of the press at the Times ran out of fuel. The operator, rather than wait for the engine to cool, put the gasoline into the tank hot, causing it to burst into flames.[8] The townspeople went to the fire control reservoir to try to contain the fire, only to find the supply, which had been nearly exhausted for months, was not even enough to provide water pressure in the hose.[9] Unchecked, the flames quickly spread across the downtown of Franklin.[10] The rapid spread of the conflagration combined with inadequate water supply protection resulted in a blaze fierce enough that the town was reduced to using dynamite to check its advance.[10] By the morning, as the Associated Press put it, the town was "all but eliminated from the map".[10]

William McCoy, Jr., who began in 1952 as manager of the paper, took over the paper fully after his father's death from stroke in 1965.[11] The younger William McCoy died in 2008, at 87, after a long tenure as the paper's publisher. The paper remains in the McCoy family to this day, the current owner and publisher being John McCoy.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ 2016 West Virginia Press Association Newspaper Directory (PDF). West Virginia Press Association. 2016.
  2. ^ "Newspapers Currently Received in the West Virginia Archives and History Library" (PDF). West Virginia Division of Culture and History. State of West Virginia. December 2016.
  3. ^ a b 2016 West Virginia Press Association Newspaper Directory (PDF). West Virginia Press Association. 2016.
  4. ^ "MEMORANDUM DECISION" (PDF). West Virginia Judiciary. State of West Virginia, Supreme Court of Appeals. 16 October 2015.
  5. ^ Harris, John T. (1920). West Virginia Legislative Hand Book and Manual and Official Register. Charleston, West Virginia: Tribune Printing Company. p. 795.
  6. ^ "About Pendleton times". Chronicling America: Historic American Newspapers. Retrieved 15 August 2018.
  7. ^ Ayer Directory, Newspapers, Magazines and Trade Publications. 1921.
  8. ^ "Three Persons Injured In Franklin Fire". The News Leader. 19 April 1924. Retrieved 15 August 2018. (the cited Saturday paper said that the fire started on Thursday night)
  9. ^ "Pendleton County's Clerk Now a Jail, Bankers Work in a Methodist Parsonage". The News Leader. 25 April 1924. Retrieved 15 August 2018.
  10. ^ a b c "W.Va Town Is Swept by Fire; $600,000 Loss". The News Leader. 19 April 1924. Retrieved 15 August 2018.
  11. ^ "Pendleton Times Founder Dies". The Cumberland News. 7 October 1965. Retrieved 15 August 2018.