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''The Daily Dispatch'' is an American, English language community-oriented daily newspaper based in
Henderson, North Carolina Henderson is a city and the county seat of Vance County, North Carolina, United States. The population was 15,060 at the 2020 census. History The city was named in honor of former North Carolina Supreme Court Chief Justice Leonard Henderson, w ...
, primarily covering the North Carolina counties of Vance, Granville, and
Warren A warren is a network of wild rodent or lagomorph, typically rabbit burrows. Domestic warrens are artificial, enclosed establishment of animal husbandry dedicated to the raising of rabbits for meat and fur. The term evolved from the medieval A ...
. It is published three times a week on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays except on certain national holidays.


History

President and Editor P.T. Way started the publication as a four-page, 16-column daily version of his semi-weekly ''Henderson Gold Leaf'' on that date when World War I brought the need for up-to-date news of events abroad. The newspaper took the name of the ''Henderson Daily Dispatch'' in 1915 when Henry A. Dennis joined the staff as the paper's news editor. The Gold Leaf reverted to a weekly edition that year and stopped publication following a fire in December 1946 at the newspaper office. * ''The Gold Leaf''. nline resource(Henderson, Vance County, N.C.) 1881-1911; OCLC: 894524007 * ''Henderson Daily Dispatch''. (Henderson, Vance County, N.C.) 1914-1995. OCLC: 24562449 * ''The Daily Dispatch''. (Henderson, Vance County, N.C.) 1995-current; OCLC: 37631964 The Dispatch bounced back from the fire and operated in a temporary headquarters until its office was rebuilt in 1947. Ten years later, the company moved to a new plant at 304 South Chestnut Street in Henderson. It printed its first edition on a new 32-page rotary press on Monday, Dec. 2, 1957. In May 1973, the company changed from the old "hot type" process of using molten lead to "cold type" printing, which relied on a typesetter. In October 1980, The Dispatch installed a front-end system that handled all copy electronically, making typewriters almost obsolete. That system was replaced by a more modern system, using a pagination process, in 1990. Dennis and his descendants managed the newspaper into the 1990s. Henry A. Dennis, M.L. Finch and S.A. Jones bought all of the company's stock upon Way's death in 1922. Dennis served as president and editor, while Finch served as business manager and secretary-treasurer until his death in 1973. Dennis died in 1979, leaving his family as sole stockholders and his son, William B. Dennis, as editor until his own retirement in March 1994. The newspaper was sold to Paducah Newspapers Inc. in February 1994, and Rick Bean began a 10-year tenure as the publisher of the newspaper. He took the newspaper from an afternoon daily being published on Monday through Saturday to a morning edition with delivery on Tuesday through Sunday. The newspaper also changed its name to The Daily Dispatch and later launched the newspaper's website, www.hendersondispatch.com. Bean is currently a group publisher for Paxton Media Group newspapers in North Carolina, Tennessee and Georgia, and the publisher of The Herald Sun in Durham, N.C., and the High Point Enterprise in High Point, N.C. James D. Edwards became publisher of The Dispatch when Bean moved to High Point in 2004. He previously served as managing editor in the 1980s. William B. Dennis's son, William A. Dennis, took over as editor following his father's retirement. Other editors have included James Dutra, Laverne Jefferies, Arthur Murray, Glenn Craven and Luke Horton. The newspaper's current editor, Alan Wooten, joined ''The Daily Dispatch'' staff in April 2012. Wooten became publisher/editor when Edwards left the newspaper in January 2014.


Awards

''The Daily Dispatch'' is a member of the North Carolina Newspaper Association. It was a back-to-back winner in 2006 and 2007 of the North Carolina Press Association's General Excellence Awards for newspapers with 15,000 subscribers and less.


See also

*
List of newspapers in North Carolina There have been newspapers in North Carolina since the ''North-Carolina Gazette'' began publication in the Province of North Carolina in 1751. As of January 2020, there were approximately 260 newspapers in publication in North Carolina. While pr ...


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Daily Dispatch, The Vance County, North Carolina Daily newspapers published in North Carolina 1914 establishments in North Carolina