The
Chicago Daily News was an afternoon daily
newspaper published between 1876 and 1978
in Chicago
, Illinois
, United States
. It earned thirteen
Pulitzer Prizes.
History

Daily News Building
The
Daily News was founded by
Melville E. Stone in 1875 and began publishing early
the next year. It strove for mass readership in contrast with its
primary competitor, the
Chicago
Tribune, which was more influential among the city's
elites; for many years, the
Daily News boasted a 1¢
newsstand price.
As an independent newspaper
During the tenure of longtime owner/editor
Victor F. Lawson,
the Chicago Daily News pioneered certain areas of
reporting, opening one of the first foreign bureaus among U.S.
newspapers in 1898 and starting one of the first
columns devoted to radio in 1922. It was known for its
distinctive, aggressive writing style which 1920s editor
Henry Justin Smith likened to a daily
novel. In its heyday from the 1930s to 1950s it was widely
syndicated and boasted a first-class foreign news service.
In 1922
the rival Chicago Tribune
began to experiment with radio news at Westinghouse-owned KYW-AM
.
The
Daily News entered into a partnership with Fair Department Store to launch
WGU-AM, which would eventually be renamed
WMAQ-AM
. The
newspaper would eventually take full ownership of the station and
absorb shared band rival
WQJ-AM. WMAQ would
pioneer many firsts in radio -- one of them the first complete
Chicago Cubs season broadcast on radio
in 1925, hosted by sportswriter-turned-sportscaster Hal Totten.
The
Chicago Tribune, not to be left out of radio, purchased
WDAP and WJAZ to form
WGN-AM
. In 1931
The Daily News sold WMAQ
to
NBC.
In 1929 it moved into a new 26-floor headquarters building at 400
West Madison Street. Designed by architects
Holabird & Root, the
Art Deco structure became a Chicago landmark, and
stands today under the name
Riverside Plaza. It featured a
mural by
John W. Norton depicting the newspaper production
process.
Knight Newspapers and Field Enterprises

Sun Times & Daily News
Headquarters
After a
long period of ownership by Knight Newspapers (later Knight Ridder), the paper was acquired in 1959
by Field Enterprises, owned by
heirs of the former owner of the Marshall Field
and Company
department store
chain. Field already owned the morning
Chicago Sun-Times, and the
Daily
News moved into the
Sun-Times' building on North
Wabash Avenue. A few years later
Mike
Royko became the paper's lead columnist, and quickly rose to
local and national prominence. However, the Field years were mostly
a period of decline for the newspaper, partly due to management
decisions but also due to demographic changes; the circulation of
afternoon dailies generally declined with the rise of television,
and downtown newspapers suffered as readers moved to the
suburbs.
In 1977 the
Daily News was redesigned and added features
intended to increase its appeal to younger readers, but the changes
did not reverse the paper's continuing decline in circulation. The
Chicago Daily News published its last edition on Saturday,
March 4,
1978.
There was
a subsequent attempt to make it as an afternoon daily, by a
Rosemont
-based company called CDN Publishing Co.,
Inc. The paper went back into publication with a weekend
edition dated August 4-5 1979. The publisher of the revival was
former Illinois governor
Richard
B. Ogilvie. This final
attempt to gain popularity was not successful and the paper finally
went back out of publication a few months later.
Pulitzer Prizes
The
Chicago Daily News was awarded the Pulitzer Prize
thirteen times.
- 1925 Reporting
- 1929 Correspondence
- 1933 Correspondence
- 1938 Editorial
Cartooning
- 1943 Reporting
- 1947 Editorial
Cartooning
- 1950 Meritorious Public
Service
- 1951 International
Reporting
- 1957 Meritorious Public
Service
- 1963 Meritorious Public
Service
- 1969 Editorial
Cartooning
- 1970 National Reporting
- 1972 Commentary
External links