User:Indyguy/sandbox
Timeline of the Lutheran Church–Missouri Synod
- Add non-US/Canadian colleges and seminaries
- Add pre-1872 members stats
- Start date for Lutheran Church in Southern Africa mission work
t. Paul's College (Missouri) / User:Indyguy/sandbox/St. Paul Lutheran High School (Missouri)
User:Indyguy/sandbox/Our Savior Lutheran Church (Indianapolis)
User:Indyguy/sandbox/Citizens Energy Group
Possible redirects:
- Indianapolis Gas Light & Coke Company
- Citizens Gas Light & Coke Company
- Electric Lighting, Gas Heating and Illuminating Company
- Indianapolis Natural Gas Company
- Consumers Gas Trust
- Broad Ripple Natural Gas
- Indianapolis Gas Company
- Citizens Gas Company
- Citizens Gas & Coke Utility
- Citizens Gas and Coke Utility
- Indianapolis Water Company
- Water Works Company of Indianapolis
- DigIndy
- Marion County Sheriff's Office
Possible redirects for AES Indiana:
- Indianapolis Brush Electric Light and Power Company
- Jenney Electric Company
- Marmon–Perry Electric Company
- IIndianapolis Light and Power Company
- Marion County Hot Water Heating Company
- Indianapolis Light and Heat Company
- Merchants Heat and Light Company
- Home Heating and Light Company
- Peoples Light and Heat Company
- Merchants Public Utility Company
- Indianapolis Power & Light
- Indianapolis Power and Light Company
- IPL Power
LCMS Secondary/Post-secondary Education
[edit]The founders of the LCMS had a high regard for education. The Saxon emigrants to Missouri brought with them a large number of theological books so that they would be able to train pastors and teachers. What eventually became Concordia Seminary was founded in Perry County in 1839, less than a year after they had landed. Concordia Theological Seminary was founded in Fort Wayne, Indiana, in 1846 with the support of Wilhelm Loehe in Germany. Control of both seminaries were transferred to the LCMS within a few years of the synod's founding in1847.
The original constitution of the synod required all member congregations to operate an elementary school for their children, although that provision was subsequently removed.
As the synod grew, six-year gymnasiums (equivalent to high school and junior college) for boys and young men in pre-seminary training were established in various cities, often by districts or local groups of congregations that later gave them to the synod itself: Fort Wayne, Indiana (18xx), Milwaukee, Wisconsin (18xx), Oakland, California (19xx), Portland, Oregon (18xx), Bronxville, New York (18xx), St. Paul, Minnesota (18xx), and Concordia, Missouri (18xx). Similar schools for training parochial school teachers were also established: Addison, Illinois (18xx, later relocated to River Forest, Illinois) and Seward, Nebraska (18xx).
The LCMS acquired two colleges when the English Synod merged into it in 1911: Concordia in Conover, North Carolina (founded 18xx); and St. John's in Winfield, Kansas (founded 18xx). St. John's differed from the others in that it was not specifically for training pastors and teachers.
The synod also supplied financial support and most of the faculty of the schools operated by the Synodical Conference for Black people in New Orleans (18xx), Selma Alabama (19xx), and Greensboro, North Carolina (18xx).
By the 1950s, the LCMS had adopted the American model of higher education, with high schools and colleges being separate institutions. As a result, the first four years of the synod's schools had been either spun off as independent high schools operated by the local Lutheran congregations or had been closed. the fifth and sixth years became junior colleges and were soon expanded into four-year institutions. Colleges established thereafter followed the American model: Ann Arbor, Michigan (1964) and Irvine, California (1976).
The laity in the synod wanted to be able to send their children to Lutheran colleges even if they were not going into church work. There had also been a small percentage of students enrolled in the synod's colleges who wanted just a liberal arts education. In 19xx, a group of Lutheran laymen acquired Valparaiso University in Valparaiso, Indiana, and, while it was independent of the LCMS, enrolled many students from LCMS families. The demand for this type of education led to the synodical colleges adding majors in secular subjects, and eventually to becoming universities. However, the decline in the college-age population in general and among Lutherans in particular caused the closure of several schools since 1980.
School name | Location | Original name(s) | Start date | Founded by | Transferred to LCMS | Closed date | Level | Refs | Comments |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Concordia Seminary | St. Louis, Missouri | Concordia College | 1839 | C. F. W. Walther and three others | 1850 | N/A | Seminary | Founded in Perry County, Missouri; relocated to St. Louis in 1849 | |
Concordia Theological Seminary | Fort Wayne, Indiana | 1846 | Frederick C. D. Wyneken with support from Wilhelm Loehe | 1847 | N/A | Seminary | Relocated to St. Louis, Missouri, in 1861, to Springfield, Illinois in 1875, and back to Fort Wayne in 1976 | ||
Concordia Lutheran Theological Seminary | St. Catharines, Ontario | 1976 | LCMS | Seminary | Started as extension site for Concordia Theological Seminary; ownership transferred to the Lutheran Church–Canada in 1988 | ||||
Concordia Lutheran Seminary | Edmonton, Alberta | 1984 | LCMS | Seminary | Ownership transferred to the Lutheran Church–Canada in 1988 | ||||
Seminário Concórdia | Porto Alegre, Brazil | 1903 | LCMS | Seminary | [1] | Founded in Born Jesus, São Lourenço do Sul; moved to Porto Alegre in 1907; ownership transferred to the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Brazil in 1980 | |||
Seminario Concordia | José León Suárez, Buenos Aires, Argentina | 1942 | LCMS | Seminary | [2] | Founded in Barrio de Belgrano, Capital Federal; relocated to José León Suárez in 1948; ownership transferred to the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Argentina in 1986 | |||
Concordia University Chicago | River Forest, Illinois | Addison Teachers Seminary (1864–1913)
Concordia Teachers College (1913–1979) Concordia College (1979–1980) Concordia University River Forest (1980-2006) |
1864 | LCMS | N/A | N/A | Founded in Addison, Illinois; relocated to River Forest in 1913 | ||
Concordia University Wisconsin | Mequon, Wisconsin | Concordia College (1881–1989) | 1881 | Wisconsin, Illinois, and Minnesota districts of the LCMS | 1887 | N/A | Founded in Milwaukee, Wisconsin; relocated to Mequon in 1982 | ||
Concordia University Nebraska | Seward, Nebraska | Evangelical Lutheran Teachers' Seminary (1894–1924)
Concordia Teachers College (1924–1974) Concordia College (1974–1998) |
1894 | LCMS | N/A | N/A | |||
Concordia University, St. Paul | St. Paul, Minnesota | Concordia High School (1893–1921)
Concordia College (1921–1971) |
1893 | LCMS | N/A | N/A | [3] | High school separated from the college in 1968 | |
Concordia University Texas | Austin, Texas | Lutheran Concordia College of Texas (1926–1965)
Concordia Lutheran College (1965–1995) Concordia University at Austin (1995–2007) |
1926 | LCMS | N/A | N/A | Opened as a high school for boys; high school program discontinued in 1969 | ||
Concordia University Irvine | Irvine, California | Christ College Irvine (1976–1993) | 1976 | LCMS | N/A | N/A | |||
Concordia University (Oregon) | Portland, Oregon | Concordia Academy (1905–c. 1950)
Concordia College (c. 1950–1995) |
1905 | LCMS | N/A | 2020 | Originally a high school; junior college added by 1950; high school split off in 1977 | ||
Concordia College | Bronxville, New York | Concordia Progymnasium (1881– | 1881 | LCMS | N/A | 2021 | |||
California Concordia College | Oakland, California | 1906 | California and Nevada District of the LCMS | 1921 | 1973 | Junior college added in 1918 | |||
Concordia College | Conover, North Carolina | Concordia High School (1878–1881) | 1878 | Members of the Evangelical Lutheran Tennessee Synod | 1911 | 1935 | Transferred to the English Synod in 1893, which merged into the LCMS in 1911; main building burned down in 1935 | ||
Concordia College Alabama | Selma, Alabama | Alabama Luther College (1922–1930s)
Alabama Lutheran Academy (1930s–19?? Alabama Lutheran Academy and College 19??–1981) |
1922 | Evangelical Lutheran Synodical Conference of North America | 1967 | 2018 | Synodical Conference was dissolved in 1967; Historically Black College | ||
Concordia University Ann Arbor | Ann Arbor, Michigan | Concordia Lutheran Junior College (1963–1976)
Concordia College (1976–2001) |
1963 | LCMS | N/A | N/A | Became a satellite campus of Concordia University Wisconsin in 2013 | ||
St. John's College | Winfield, Kansas | 1893 | John Peter Baden | 1911 | 1986 | English Synod merged into the LCMS in 1911 | |||
St. Paul's College | Concordia, Missouri | 1883 | Franz Julius Biltz, pastor of St. Paul's Lutheran Church in Concordia | 1896 | 1986 | St. Paul Lutheran High School continues to operate and is owned by the LCMS | |||
Concordia College | Fort Wayne, Indiana | 1839 | C. F. W. Walther and three others | 1859 | 1957 | Founded in Perry County, Missouri with Concordia Seminary; relocated to St. Louis in 1847; separated from the seminary and relocated to Fort Wayne in 1861; high school department discontinued in 1951 | |||
Concordia Senior College | Fort Wayne, Indiana | 1957 | LCMS | N/A | 1977 | Concordia Theological Seminary moved to the campus in 1976 | |||
Immanuel Lutheran College | Greensboro, North Carolina | 1903 | Evangelical Lutheran Synodical Conference of North America | N/A | 1961 | Founded in Concord, North Carolina to train Black pastors and teachers; relocated to Greensboro in 1905; closed before dissolution of Synodical Conference | |||
Luther College | New Orleans, Louisiana | 1903 | Evangelical Lutheran Synodical Conference of North America | N/A | 1925 | Founded to train Black pastors and teachers; seminary department closed in 1911; closed in 1925 before dissolution of Synodical Conference, with budgeted funds being used for Alabama Luther College |
Info to be added to E. W. Scripps Company
[edit]Year Month/ Day Event Link
1878 Nov 02 Edward Willis Scripps (EWS), 24, started Cleveland Penny Press, with $10,000 borrowed from family members. Cleveland Penny Press
1880 Jul 31 Branched out to St. Louis, starting The Chronicle, a disaster from the start. He let it become a chronic invalid and drain him until it was sold in 1908. St. Louis Chronicle
1881 November EWS, bothered by bronchial ailment, took sister Ellen and began year-and-a-half tour of Europe and Mediterranean.
1883 Jan 01 EWS acquired control of Cincinnati Penny Post from his brother James, who had purchased it in 1881. Cincinnati Penny Post
1883 June EWS returned to United States from Europe.
1890 Sep 02 Changed name of Penny Post to The Cincinnati Post. The Cincinnati Post
1890 Sep 15 Started The Kentucky Post, across Ohio River from Cincinnati. The Kentucky Post
1890 December EWS visited California, bought desert acreage near San Diego and began eight-year construction of Miramar ranch.
1890 Fall Created Scripps-McRae League to run his newspapers.
1892 Jun 03 EWS acquired his first paper on Pacific Coast, The San Diego Sun. The San Diego Sun
1895 March Started the Los Angeles Record Los Angeles Record
1896 Dec 23 Acquired the Kansas City World. Kansas City World
1899 Feb 25 Started Seattle Star. Seattle Star
1899 Sep 21 Started the Akron Press. Akron Press
1900 Apr 11 Started the Chicago Press. Chicago Press
1902 Jun 02 Started Newspaper Enterprise Association feature service.
1902 Jun 07 Acquired the Des Moines News. Des Moines News
1902 Nov 07 Started the Spokane Press. Spokane Press
1903 Mar 21 Started the San Francisco News. San Francisco News
1903 Jun 08 Acquired Toledo News-Bee. Toledo News-Bee
1903 Dec 21 Started Tacoma Times. Tacoma Times
1904 Jul 02 Acquired Columbus Citizen. Columbus Citizen
1904 Nov 21 Started Sacramento Star. Sacramento Star
1905 Aug 31 Started Fresno Tribune. Fresno Tribune
1906 Apr 26 Started Denver Express. Denver Express
1906 Jul 02 Started Evansville Press. Evansville Press
1906 Jul 21 EWS purchased Publisher's Press; merged with Scripps- McRae Press Association and Scripps News Associations into United Press, though this did not become effective until June 21, 1907.
1906 Sep 01 Started Pueblo Sun. Pueblo Sun
1906 Sep 10 Started Terre Haute Post. Terre Haute Post
1906 Sep 18 Started Dallas Dispatch. Dallas Dispatch
1906 Sep 29 Started Portland News. Portland News
1906 Oct 01 Started Oklahoma News. Oklahoma News
1906 Nov 01 Started Memphis Press. Memphis Press
1906 Dec 01 Started Nashville Times. Nashville Times
1907 Aug 01 Acquired Berkeley Independent. Berkeley Independent
1908 Feb EWS "retired" turning over business management to son Jim, 22, but keeping hand in with his editors.
1909 May 03 Started Oakland Mail. Oakland Mail
1911 Sep 25 Started Houston Press. Houston Press
1911 Sep 28 Started Chicago Daybook. Chicago Daybook
1911 Started United Press (later known as United Press International, or UPI).
1912 May 11 Started Philadelphia News-Post. Philadelphia News-Post
1917 November EWS suffered stroke and went to Florida to recuperate and learned the pleasure of living on a yacht, which he did most of the rest of his life.
1917 EWS went to Washington to supervise coverage and editorial treatment of World War I. Jim became angry over EWS's insistence that Robert P. Scripps become editor-in-chief (and because of other business differences broke away from his father and used his and his associates' stock positions to break off five West Coast papers and the Dallas Dispatch).
1920 EWS withdrew from management of his many enterprises, and made Robert P. Scripps and Roy W. Howard responsible for editorial and business direction, respectively.
1921 Jan 21 Started Birmingham Post which later merged with the Herald to become the Birmingham Post-Herald. The paper ceased publication on Sept 23, 2005 when the economics of publishing the newspaper were no longer favorable. Birmingham Post Birmingham Herald Birmingham Post-Herald
1921 Jun 13 Started Norfolk Post. Norfolk Post
1921 Oct 03 Started Fort Worth Press. Fort Worth Press
1921 Nov 08 Started The Washington Daily News. Washington Daily News
1921 Nov 21 Started The Knoxville News. Knoxville News
1922 Feb 01 Acquired Youngstown Telegram. Youngstown Telegram
1922 May 27 Acquired Indianapolis Times. Indianapolis Times
1922 Jun 22 Scripps motto "Give light and the people will find their own way" first used. (Lighthouse emblem added in May 1927.)
1922 Aug 21 Started El Paso Post. El Paso Post
1922 Nov 03 Change of name from Scripps-McRae to Scripps Howard announced. Roy Wilson Howard (RWH) assumed joint editorial direction of papers with Robert P. Scripps.
1922 Nov 22 Started Baltimore Post. Baltimore Post
1922 Nov 23 The E.W. Scripps Trust was created.
1922 United Feature Service was organized (and a year later United Newspictures, forerunner of Acme Newspictures, was started).
1923 Jul 27 Acquired Pittsburgh Press. Pittsburgh Press
1923 Sep 24 Acquired New Mexico State Tribune. New Mexico State Tribune
1926 Mar 12 EWS died on his yacht Ohio in Monrovia Bay, Liberia, Africa and was buried at sea.
1926 Knoxville Sentinel purchased and merged into Knoxville News-Sentinel. Denver News and Times purchased and consolidated with Express into Rocky Mountain News. Memphis News-Scimitar purchased and merged with Press into Memphis Press-Scimitar. Knoxville Sentinel Denver News and Times Denver Express Rocky Mountain News Memphis News-Scimitar Memphis Press Memphis Press-Scimitar
1927 Feb 10 Acquired The New York Telegram. New York Telegram
1931 Feb 27 Acquired The World and merged with The New York Telegram into New York World Telegram. The World New York Telegram New York World Telegram
1933 Feb 18 Tribune and Journal combined business operations to form Albuquerque Publishing Company. Albuquergue Tribune Albuquerque Journal
1935 Aug 24 Scripps established Continental Radio. (Name was changed May 17, 1937 to Scripps Radio, Inc. and December 31, 1961 to Scripps Broadcasting Company.)
1935 Aug 31 Acquired radio station WFBE in Cincinnati and changed call letters to WCPO.
1935 Oct 11 Purchased radio station WNOK, Knoxville.
1938 Mar 02 Robert P. Scripps died aboard his yacht off Baja, Calif.
1938 Dec 31 Evansville Press combined business operations with Evansville Courier. Evansville Press Evansville Courier
1939 Dec 30 Press-Scimitar and Commercial Appeal merged into Memphis Publishing Company. Memphis Press-Scimitar Memphis Commercial Appear
1940 Scripps acquires the National Spelling Bee from the Louisville Courier-Journal, which began the event in 1925.
1947 Dec 17 WEWS-TV started in Cleveland.
1948 Dec 11 WMC-TV went on the air in Memphis.
1949 Jul 26 WCPO-TV went on the air in Cincinnati.
1953 Jan 01 Charles E. Scripps became chairman of the board of The E. W. Scripps Company.
1957 Oct 01 Knoxville News-Sentinel and Journal joint operation agreement became effective. Knoxville News-Sentinel Knoxville Journal
1958 May 24 International News Service and picture service facilities joined with United Press to form United Press International.
1960 Jan 23 Cleveland News purchased and merged with Cleveland Press. Cleveland News
1961 Dec 27 WPTV, West Palm Beach, Fla., acquired.
1962 Aug 15 Scripps Howard Foundation incorporated.
1964 Nov 20 Roy W. Howard died.
1965 Apr 12 Acquired Stuart (Fla.) News. Stuart News
1965 Jun 04 Acquired Hollywood (Fla.) Sun-Tattler. Hollywood Sun-Tattler
1966 Apr 24 New York World Telegram and Sun merged with Journal-American and Herald Tribune to become World Journal Tribune. After many difficulties the new paper was suspended May 5, 1967. New York World Telegram and Sun New York Journal-American New York Herald Tribune New York World Journal Tribune
1966 Dec 21 Started Tacoma Times. Tacoma Times
1970 Aug 12 Acquired San Juan Star. San Juan Star
1970 Dec 31 Purchased KTEW television in Tulsa, and changed name to KJRH on July 14, 1980.
1972 Jul 12 Washington Daily News sold to The Washington Star. Washington Daily News
1973 Dec 28 Purchased Fullerton Publishing Company (Daily News Tribune.) Daily News Tribune
1976 Jun 30 UPI broadcast advisory board formed.
1977 Jan 01 New York executive offices moved to Cincinnati.
1977 May 10 Acquired Grant County News and The Leader of Boone County, both newspapers in Kentucky Grant County News The Leader of Boone County
1977 Sep 23 Cincinnati Post and Enquirer agreed on joint operating agreement (effective Dec 6, 1979).
1977 Oct 28 Scripps Broadcasting purchased KMBA, Kansas City.
1978 Jun 14 United Media Enterprises, consolidation of Newspaper Enterprise Association (NEA) and United Feature Syndicate (UFS), became effective.
1978 Jul 01 Started Campbell County (Ky.) News. Campbell County News
1978 Oct 01 Purchased weeklies of Southern California Publishing Company, Pico Press, Inc., and San Gabriel Valley Publications. Southern California Publishing Company Pico Press, Inc. San Gabriel Valley Publications
1978 Nov 01 Purchased web press establishment in Louisville.
1979 Mar 01 Purchased principal weeklies in Louisville, Jeffersonian, The Voice, and Reporter. In March 1980 acquired Southwest Advertiser and changed name to Southwest News.
1979 Sep 16 $10 million UPI Technical Systems Center opened in Dallas.
1979 Nov 01 Purchased Kentucky Standard. Kentucky Standard
1980 Feb 01 Acquired Cordovan Corporation, publishers of books, magazines and business newspapers.
1980 Oct 31 The Cleveland Press, 102 years after founding and a decade of serious financial straits, sold to a Cleveland industrialist.
1981 Apr 28 Scripps's first experiment with electronic distribution took place in Evansville, when news briefs from The Press could be seen in 30,000 homes via cable television.
1981 Sep 09 Scripps Cable Service buys cable systems serving 12,500 subscribers in Lake County, Fla.
1981 April Scripps purchases two Portland, Ore., radio stations, KUPL-AM/FM
1982 United Media reorganzied; "Garfield" copyrights and syndication rights sold to cartoon's creator, Jim Davis, for $32 million.
1982 Streamlined corporate structure by acquiring the remaining 14 percent of Scripps Broadcasting, which had been a publicly traded subsidiary.
1982 HGTV goes on the air.
1982 Cinetel acquired.
1982 February Purchased Jupiter (Fla.) Courier-Journal, which publishes three times weekly and has paid circulation of 6,000 Jupiter Courier-Journal
1982 October The Bremerton Sun adds a Sunday edition
1984 Jan 01 Cordovan Business Journals changes name to Scripps Howard Business Journals; there are 12 journals in the group.
1984 Jan 06 Scripps purchases weekly newspapers in Kentucky - The Pioneer News, circulation 6,000; The Mt. Washington Star, circulation 2,000. The Pioneer News The Mt. Washington Star
1984 Mar 01 The Stuart News becomes a morning publication and adds a Sunday edition.
1984 May 22 Ground is broken for E. W. Scripps Hall at Ohio University.
1985 Nov 01 Company acquires Kartes Video, nation's leading video cassette distribution company.
1985 Dec 31 Columbus Citizen-Journal closed. Columbus Citizen-Journal
1985 April Company introduces redesigned lighthouse logo and new identity program.
1985 July Lawrence A. Leser elected president and chief executive officer, succeeding Edward W. Estlow.
1985 March KNXV-TV in Phoenix acquired.
1985 September Scripps Broadcasting celebrates 50th anniversary with New York City extravaganza.
1986 April Intentions to merge John P. Scripps Newspaper Group into Scripps announced.
1986 December Scripps Business Journals merge with American City Business Journals; Scripps receives $24 million in stock transaction.
1986 December Medart to purchase Berkley Small.
1986 January Scripps sells Ann Arbor Cablevision.
1986 March WXYZ-TV in Detroit and WFTS-TV in Tampa join Scripps Howard Broadcasting.
1986 March Scripps and Tele-Communications Inc. reach agreement whereby TCI has 50 percent of its partnership redeemed.
1986 May McCaw Cellular Communications sold.
1986 October Naples Daily News becomes company's 21st daily newspaper. Naples Daily News
1986 September Scripps Broadcasting sells interests in Cablevision Systems Corp.
1986 September Evansville Press sold; Evansville Courier purchased. Evansville Press Evansville Courier
1986 September Rocky Mountain News Business Journal sold. Rocky Mountain News Business Journal
1987 Scripps sells Canton (Ohio) Free Press; Landmark Community Newspapers and Southern California Publishing Company; also interest in Connecticut cable system; SCW and Youngstown unit of Consumer Communications Services . Canton Free Press Landmark Community Newspapers Southern California Publishing Company
1988 Jun 28 The E. W. Scripps Company makes its initial stock offering .
1989 Fall The E. W. Scripps Company purchases stock in John P. Scripps Newspaper Group for $39.6 million from estate of John P. Scripps.
1989 March Hollywood (Fla.) Sun-Tattler sold Hollywood Sun-Tattler
1990 Mar 07 Class A Common Stock now traded on the New York Stock Exchange under symbol "SSP."
1990 Apr 02 Lawsuit against the company by Gillett Broadcasting settled; provides for company to purchase WMAR-TV in Baltimore for $125 million .
1990 Jun 08 Steps taken to dissolve joint operating agreement with Persis Corporation, publisher of The Knoxville Journal, effective Dec
1990 Dec 31 Persis closes Knoxville Journal in exchange for $40 million in lieu of distributions it would have received from company had joint operations continued through 2005.
1992 June Pittsburgh Press sold; The Monterey County (Calif.) Herald acquired Pittsburgh Press Monterey County Herald
1992 March Company announces plans to sell radio stations.
1993 Apr 24 Tulare (Ca.) Advance-Register sold to Gannett Corp. Tulare Advance-Register
1993 Created Home & Garden Television (HGTV), a 24-hour cable network.
1993 San Juan Star sold to Santa Rita Acquisitions Inc. (Gerry Anglo) San Juan Star
1995 February Watsonville (Calif.) Register-Pajaronian newspaper sold to New Media Corp. Watsonville Register-Pajaronian
1996 Jun 01 William R. Burleigh becomes president and chief executive officer; Lawrence A. Leser continues as chairman of the board.
1996 Vero Beach Press Journal acquired. Vero Beach Press Journal
1996 Company merges Scripps Howard Cable into Comcast Corporation through transaction that delivered $1.59 billion in value, tax-free, directly to Scripps Howard shareholders.
1996 New Media unit established in Cincinnati.
1996 December Decision made to expand Category Television franchise: Home & Garden Television announces plans for related businesses, including radio and business-to-business networks.
1996 June Scripps Ventures launched within United Media
1997 Controlling interest of Food Network acquired from A.H. Belo.
1997 August Boulder Daily Camera acquired in swap for Monterey County Herald and San Luis Obispo Telegram-Tribune. Boulder Daily Camera Monterey County Herald San Luis Obispo Telegram-Tribune
1997 December Los Angeles-based Scripps Howard Productions unit sold; nonfiction unit in Knoxville, Cinetel Productions, to be expanded and renamed Scripps Productions.
1997 October Corpus Christi Caller-Times, San Angelo Standard Times, Wichita Falls Times Record News, Abilene Reporter-News and the Plano Star Courier, all in Texas, and the Anderson Independent-Mail in South Carolina, acquired from Harte-Hanks Commmunications.
1998 DIY--Do It Yourself network debuts on air on the digital tier.
1998 February Scripps, Texas newspaper groups create online classified alliance.
1998 January Scripps joins consortium to acquire AdOne, an Internet classified network.
1998 May President & CEO William R. Burleigh named chairman of the board as Lawrence A. Leser retired.
1998 September Second venture fund, Scripps Ventures II, formed.
2000 Kenneth W. Lowe named president, chief operating officer and a director of the company.
2000 Four Scripps Web sites join Knightridder.com's Real Cities network.
2000 April The Ft. Pierce (Fla.) Tribune, acquired in swap for The Destin (Fla.) Log. Ft. Pierce Tribune The Destin Log
2000 January Scripps Networks restructured leadership and formed New Ventures group.
2000 June Plans for fourth cable network, Fine Living, announced.
2000 March Acquisition of independent KMCI, Lawrence, Kan., completed.
2000 May Scripps and Media NewsGroup, on behalf of the Denver Rocky Mountain News and The Denver Post, submit a Joint Operating Agreement application to the Attorney General to form the Denver Newspaper Agency.
2000 November The Gleaner (Henderson, Ky.) acquired. Henderson Gleaner
2000 October Marco Island (Fla.) Eagle acquired. Marco Island Eagle
2000 September William R. Burleigh retires as CEO; continues as chairman of the board.
2000 September Kenneth W. Lowe named CEO of The E. W. Scripps Company.
2001 January Attorney General Janet Reno approved the joint operating agreement between Scripps and MediaNews Group in Denver.
2002 Mar 28 Company creates Media Procurement Services, Inc. a subsidiary company, to provide newsprint management and buying services for its own newspapers and other newspaper publishing customers.
2002 Sep 23 The Scripps Howard Foundation and Hampton University in Virginia, in partnership to increase workplace diversity in the nation’s media, open the Scripps Howard School of Journalism and Communications.
2002 Oct 14 After a successful video-on-demand trial in Cincinnati and Northern Kentucky, Scripps Networks and Time Warner Cable expand their video-on-demand agreement to offer Scripps Networks on-demand programming in more than 30 Time Warner Cable markets across the country.
2002 Oct 31 Company acquires controlling interest of the Shop at Home television retailing network
2002 March FINE LIVING launched.
2003 Oct 23 Kenneth W. Lowe, president and chief executive officer, celebrity chef Emeril Lagasse and pop culture icon, Snoopy of “Peanuts” fame, preside over the opening bell ceremony at the New York Stock Exchange in observation of the company’s 125th anniversary
2003 Dec 03 Company establishes the Scripps Academy for Hispanic Journalists, a training and education program designed to help early-career Hispanic journalists develop the skills they need to succeed in daily newspaper careers.
2004 Apr 01 Company’s Washington, D.C. bureau will be known as the Scripps Media Center to recognize its new role producing magazines, special sections and other innovative products in addition to reporting the news.
2004 Apr 14 Company acquires Summit America Television Inc., which includes Summit’s 30 percent minority interest in the Shop at Home television retailing network and Summit’s five Shop at Home-affiliated broadcast television stations.
2004 Nov 17 Company acquires the Great American Country (GAC) cable and satellite television network, a 24-hour country music video network distributed nationwide to about 34 million Nielsen rated households, from Jones Media Networks, Ltd.
2005 Jan 12 Scripps Networks, a pioneer in the delivery of shelter-related information, launches HGTVPro.com, the first video-rich, professional-grade information online network for the building industry.
2005 Jun 27 Company acquires Shopzilla, a leading online comparison shopping service and the online BizRate consumer feedback network.
2005 Sep 23 The Birmingham Post-Herald ceases publication due to unfavorable publishing economics. Birmingham Post-Herald
2005 Sep 30 Company acquires the Colorado Daily in Boulder Colorado Daily
2006 Jun 21 Jewelry Television buys the cable network assets of Shop At Home television.
2006 Sep 26 Scripps sells the five broadcast television stations affiliated with Shop At Home for $170 million.
2007 Dec 31 The Cincinnati Post and The Kentucky Post publish their final editions as the JOA with The Cincinnati Enquirer expires.
2008 Jul 01 The company’s national and global businesses are spun off in a tax-free transaction. For every share they own, Scripps shareholders receive one share of stock in the new company, Scripps Networks Interactive. The assets that remain with The E. W. Scripps Company include 10 television stations in nine markets, daily newspapers in 15 markets, and the licensing and syndication businesses of United Media.
2010 Apr 27 Announced the sale of United Media's licensing operations to Iconix Brand Group
- ^ "Seminário Concórdia | IELB". Evangelical Lutheran Church of Brazil (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2023-07-03.
- ^ "QuiÉnes Somos – Seminario Concordia". Seminario Concordia (in Spanish). Retrieved 2023-07-03.
- ^ "History of CSP". Concordia St. Paul. Retrieved 2023-06-27.