Newark Advocate 2020 PROUD Magazine
Jeff Gill
In 1820, James Monroe was President of the United States,  Ethan Allen Brown was governor of Ohio, and Newark was still six years away  from being incorporated as a town.
Native Americans of the Shawnee and Wyandot tribes still  lived in the northern and western parts of the state, often traveling through  Licking County, which was just twelve years old itself. Five years earlier in  1815, the original log courthouse was replaced by a modest two story structure,  but Courthouse Square around it was still marked by ponds and bogs, surrounded  by mostly log structures barely more ornate than pioneer cabins.
And it was in 1820 that "The Newark Advocate" was first  published, in a simple sturdy brick building on the square. This intrepid  business venture was the brainchild of Benjamin Briggs, a native of  Pennsylvania who arrived in Newark's earliest days to make his mark, find a  career, and start a newspaper: one that is today the county's oldest  continuously operated business.
Briggs owned and edited "The Advocate" for thirty-six years,  and as a sign of different times and journalistic expectations, he was elected  mayor of Newark twice, and was voted at different times to both the Ohio House  and Senate, as well as postmaster. His was a vigorous and partisan editorship,  advocating for development projects like the Ohio & Erie Canal or the  National Road through Licking County, or local efforts such as new church  buildings and improved streets downtown.
In the early 1800s down through the first part of the 1900s,  newspapers were almost without exception partisan, and "The Advocate" was a  Democratic Party paper. Through the decades, other party and constituency  publications flourished – at one point Newark had over twenty newspapers with  names like "The Rasp" or "The Constitutionalist" or "The Reveille and  Woolgrower"  – but after World War I the  rise of a more dispassionate journalistic ethic led to a bipartisan "Advocate"  overshadowing the other party-oriented papers, like the "Newark North American"  or "Newark Express."
"The Advocate" has outlived its competition in most cases by  outworking it: the paper was the first in the county to go from monthly to  weekly to daily, and has been a daily for a majority of its publication history.  An early adopter of electronic media tools, the news now arrives by email and  on browser windows as much as it does on doorsteps or in driveways. Social  media and online reading make the entire news environment a constant, never-ending  opportunity for readers to connect and advertisers to reach audiences.
Advertising along with subscriptions has been the heart of  the "Advocate" business model since Briggs' days as editor and owner. After  many decades of private ownership, the formation of the Advocate Printing  Company saw the business into the Twentieth Century, and "The Newark Advocate"  is now part of the USA Today Network. Whether in the print product or the  online version, newspaper ads are still a major part of each page, and looking  back through the two hundred years of history you learn almost as much from  those ads as you do the articles about who we are as a county.
The first hundred years you see many advertisements for  horses and carriages and the equipment and services that go with them; in the  second hundred years, cars and trucks are well represented in the ad sections,  while you have trouble finding a livery stable. Through the 1800s, clothiers  and haberdashers and milliners are common in the corners of each page promoting  their wares; today, banner ads online and sidebars are focused on very different  retail angles, from electronics to home delivered groceries.
But in the editorial content itself, you hear the spirit of  each era speaking both to their subscribers, and also as that "first rough  draft of history" credited to journalism. Sometimes that voice is cracked and  flawed – The Advocate sadly did not endorse Abraham Lincoln in either 1860 or  in 1864 – but you can also hear calls for justice in the 1960s through Op-Eds,  and editorial invitations to renewal and re-invigoration as Newark has  navigated the end of one industrial era and the beginnings of our information  age.
Benjamin Briggs, the first editor (and reporter, and  circulation manager, and advertising executive, and pressman), was said in  Hill's 1881 "History of Licking County" to have been "a clear, forcible writer,  much given to the use of strong Saxon words that vigorously expressed his  ideas, and he never wrote without having ideas to convey. . . When he chose to  be vituperative he generally succeeded." But he was also "identified with every  project that tended to the advancement and welfare of the place and its people,"  and left for Washington an honored representative of Licking County's  interests. Today's editor, Benjamin Lanka, wouldn't expect to run for political  office while still holding a position of journalistic trust, but he and his  staff still honor clear and concrete writing, condemnation when called for, and  praise whenever possible. With a volunteer community Editorial Board, "The  Newark Advocate" still has strong words and straightforward suggestions about  what can improve and enhance the everyday lives of people around today's  Courthouse Square.
From the Briggs era to the present day, you can't help but  notice how the interests of "The Advocate" have always "tended to the  advancement and welfare of the place and its people."
 
 


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