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Orange County Register Information and History

The Orange County Register has left its home in Santa Ana and moved into this building at 2190 S. Towne Centre Place in Anaheim. (Photo by H. Lorren Au Jr., Orange County Register/SCNG)
The Orange County Register has left its home in Santa Ana and moved into this building at 2190 S. Towne Centre Place in Anaheim. (Photo by H. Lorren Au Jr., Orange County Register/SCNG)
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The Orange County Register is a three-time Pulitzer Prize-winning newspaper focused on serving Orange County and helping it thrive.

The newspaper portfolio includes two-dozen community newspapers serving Orange County’s 34 cities and Spanish-language weekly Excélsior.

Monthly magazines include Coast, OC Family and Southland Golf. Its market-leading digital offerings include OCRegister.com, OCVarsity.com and many others. Orange County Register also offers a full spectrum of digital advertising, custom content, printing, and advertising insert services that help Orange County’s 80,000 small businesses effectively reach Orange County.

The Orange County Register is part of Southern California News Group, which operates 11 daily newspapers and associated websites in Southern California, including the Los Angeles Daily News, Daily Breeze in Torrance, Long Beach Press-Telegram, Pasadena Star-News, The (Riverside) Press-Enterprise, San Gabriel Valley Tribune, Whittier Daily News, Inland Valley Daily Bulletin, The Sun in San Bernardino and Redlands Facts. When combined with its multiple weekly newspapers, Spanish-language products and social channels, SCNG products reach an audience of more than 8.1 million readers each week, with in-depth reporting on exclusive content focusing on local news, politics, sports and entertainment relevant to the communities it serves.

HISTORY:

The evolution of the Orange County Register began on Nov. 25, 1905, when a group of businessmen launched the Santa Ana Register to serve Orange County’s 20,000 residents. There have been several major developments, both in the county and within the Register, since that date.

As preferences in how to receive information and connect with our neighbors in Orange County continue to evolve, the Orange County Register is evolving right along with those preferences.

Here are some noteworthy milestones at the Register:

1935 Raymond Cyrus “R.C.” Hoiles buys the paper after negotiating for nine months with owners Loyal King and J. Frank Burke. The 32-page evening paper cost readers 3 cents a copy.

1937 Hoiles begins writing a bylined column, which becomes a six-day-a-week mainstay of the paper, eventually under the label “Common Ground.” It is his forum to take a stand for limited government, free markets, property rights and individual liberty – and against public schools, collective bargaining, social-welfare laws and taxes.

1938 Purchases and absorbs Santa Ana competitor the Journal, from John P. Scripps.

1939 Moves from Third and Sycamore to Sycamore and Sixth, in downtown Santa Ana.

1939 Changes name to Santa Ana Register, dropping “Daily” from the flag.

1940s With World War II, world and national news dominated the front page; local news moves to a second section.

1942 Hoiles opines against the internment of 110,000 Japanese-Americans, one of the few in the country to speak out against the forcible relocations.

1949 Launches Sunday edition again. With a cost to readers of 10 cents a day, the paper has a circulation of about 15,000.

1950 Hoiles’ newspaper holdings are incorporated as Freedom Newspapers Inc.

1955 Changes name to The Register.

1957 Moves out of downtown Santa Ana to a 6.4-acre orchard at 625 N. Grand Ave.

1959 Starts a morning edition.

1965 Circulation tops 100,000. Buys community dailies and weeklies in Orange, Brea, Anaheim, La Habra.

1970 R.C. Hoiles dies. R.C.’s oldest son, Clarence, serves as CEO until his own death in 1981.

1979 R. David Threshie becomes publisher. New offset presses installed.

1980 N. Christian Anderson III named editor. He later becomes publisher, after Threshie retires.

1985 Wins first Pulitzer Prize, for photography of the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics.

1985 Changes name to The Orange County Register.

1986 Moves into 5-story addition at Grand Avenue site. Circulation tops 300,000.

1989 Wins Pulitzer Prize for military affairs coverage.

1996 Wins Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting on fertility fraud at UC Irvine.

2005 The Register celebrates its 100-year anniversary.

2007 Terry Horne named president and publisher.

2008 Expands availability of its news content through Amazon Kindle handheld device.

2008 Begins delivering news updates to mobile phones through m.ocregister.com.

2009 Introduces revamped OCRegister.com with personalization capabilities and hyper-local content.

2010 The Orange County Register introduces mobile news app on iPhone, Android, Blackberry smartphones in April. OCVarsity app is launched in September.

2011 Sunday circulation for the Register grows by 7 percent, to 283,997.

2012 2100 Trust completes its acquisition of Freedom Communications on July 25. The investor group is led by Aaron Kushner, who becomes Freedom’s CEO and Register publisher.

2012 Freedom Communications acquires Churm Media, which includes a portfolio of magazines, Ripe Orange marketing agency, and a custom content unit, in December.

2013 Register expands depth and quality of its daily and community newspapers. Updates include new sections in the daily, and a full redesign of its community newspapers from tabloid-size to a larger broadsheet-size matching the daily paper.

2014 Rich Mirman named publisher in October.

2016 The Register and The Press-Enterprise (owned by Freedom Communications) are purchased by Digital First Media in March; Southern California News Group (SCNG) is formed. Ron Hasse is named publisher of the newspapers, and president of SCNG.