Sam Jackson (publisher)
Charles Samuel Jackson (September 15, 1860 – December 27, 1924) was a prominent newspaper publisher in the U.S. state of Oregon. Jackson owned the East Oregonian from 1882 to 1913, developing it into a successful regional paper.[1] He also founded and published Oregon Journal, which over 22 years he turned it into a "strong voice of the Oregon Country" and a rival of state's newspaper, The Oregonian.[2] Author George Stanley Turnbull described Jackson as "a character which has been one of the most influential in the history of Oregon journalism."[3] Early lifeCharles Samuel Jackson was born on Sept. 15, 1860, on his father's plantation in Deltaville, Virginia.[3] Jackson was interested in printing from an early age. At 16, his father gave him $20 to help finance a trip to the Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia. Instead, Jackson used the money to buy a small hand printing-press and made money from printing jobs done for friends and neighbors. At 19, Jackson's father gave him $250 to traverse the American frontier to Portland, Oregon. He then arrived in Pendleton in April 1880. His first job in town was at a stage line agency.[3] East OregonianAfter moving to Pendleton, Jackson got a second job at the East Oregonian, a Democratic weekly newspaper owned by Lewis Berkeley Cox. Jackson wrote local news stories and some semi-editorial articles, signed "Sandy Bottom." On Jan. 13, 1882, Jackson purchased the paper.[3] At the time Jackson had only $5 to his name, so he persuaded lawyer J. A. Guyer to buy in as co-owner and loan Jackson the $1,750 needed for his half.[4] Guyer was a silent partner while Jackson managed all aspects of the business. At the same time Jackson kept working his stage job until railroad reached Pendleton in 1884 and the line was discontinued. [3] Jackson increased print days from once to twice a week starting Feb. 3, 1882, and then expanded from semi-weekly to daily, except Sunday, on March 1, 1888.[3] Jackson was an aggressive journalist. He once said "Print the truth. Fight for the right. People like a fighting newspaper." He was a fighting editor in the literal sense. Jackson got into fist fights in the streets to defend his opinions. One time Jackson was accosted by a man over one of his editorials. Jackson had accused the man of opposing a school tax levy because he made money from brothels and preferred to keep young girls uneducated. The man hit Jackson with a cane while he fought back with his fists. The day after the brawl, Jackson wrote: "A man who is afraid of bodily injury or personal attacks is not a newspaperman or capable of becoming one."[4] Another time Jackson fought former EO editor J. H. Turner, turned around and then fought the man's nephew.[4] During the Pendleton years, Jackson was involved in various insurance, real estate and loan operations.[2] As publisher, Jackson wrote in support of a single-tax system exposed by Henry George in his book Progress and Poverty. He also advocated for a Secret ballot.[4] Jackson developed Eastern Oregonian into a "a powerful voice in the region."[1] By 1913, he still owned a third of the Eastern Oregonian, which at that time at he sold (aside from two shares he kept for sentimental reasons) to the paper's editor Edwin B. Aldrich.[4] The Oregon JournalIn 1902, a group of influential Portlanders persuaded Jackson to sell the East Oregonian and move to Portland to revive the failing Portland Evening Journal. Under his direction, the latter was renamed first the Oregon Daily Journal and then simply The Oregon Journal. The Journal became successful as the main (Democratic-leaning) competitor to Portland's (Republican-leaning) daily paper, The Oregonian.[1] In his first editorial at the helm of the paper, on July 23, 1902, Jackson declared that:
Jackson led the Journal for 22 years as owner, publisher and editor, until his death in 1924. His son, Philip succeeded him, serving as publisher for 29 years, until his death at the age of 59, in 1953.[1] Maria Jackson remained involved in the business until her death in 1956, at the age of 93.[5] FamilyIn 1886, Sam Jackson and the former Maria Clopton, also originally from Virginia, were married, in Pendleton.[5] They had two sons, Francis C. and Philip L. Jackson, both born in Pendleton.[5] Honors and legacyC.S. "Sam" Jackson was inducted into the Oregon Newspaper Hall of Fame in 1979.[2] In 1917, Jackson donated 88 acres (356,000 m²) on Marquam Hill in Portland to the University of Oregon Medical School; the site, then known as Sam Jackson Park, is now the campus of the Oregon Health & Science University.[1] The street serving it continues to be named SW Sam Jackson Park Road. Jackson Tower, former home of The Oregon Journal in downtown Portland, is named for him.[1] In October 1960, four years after Maria Jackson's death, based on provisions in her will, The Jackson Foundation was established.[5] According to the foundation's website, "The Foundation continues today as a permanent fund governed by the following language in her will:
"Alder Lea", a log house built for Sam Jackson in 1912–15 on a 40-acre (16 ha) tract on the Clackamas River, for use as a summer retreat, was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1981, as the C. S. "Sam" Jackson Log House.[6] Footnotes
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