Freedom Communications

Freedom Communications, Inc. was an American media conglomerate that operated newspapers, magazines, television stations and websites across the United States. Raymond C. Hoiles organized the company in 1950 and headquartered it in Santa Ana, California, but later relocated to Irvine. Its flagship title was the Orange County Register. Under Hoiles and his two sons, the company embraced a Libritarian philosophy in its editorial content. Hoiles died in 1970 and the company was then managed by his heirs. The Hoiles family lost control of Freedom Communications after it declared bankruptcy in 2009. Investment firms then sold off most assets, with the name and seven titles purchased by private equity firm 2100 Trust, established by investor Aaron Kushner. The company went bankrupt a second time in late 2015 and its two remaining newspapers were sold at auction in 2016 to Digital First Media.
History
Origins and growth
In 1919, Ohio newsmen Raymond C. Hoiles and his brother Frank A. Hoiles, who owned The Alliance Review, purchased the Lorain Times-Herald. In 1922, R.C. Hoiles and F.A. Hoiles purchased the Mansfield News. In 1927, R.C. Hoiles acquired the Bucyrus Telegraph-Forum and at some point he sold his stake in the Review back to his elder brother. He also sold the Mansfield News and Lorain Times-Herald in 1930 to Brush-Moore Newspapers.
In March 1935, R.C. Hoiles bought The Orange County Register and moved his base of operations to Santa Ana, California. He then acquired the Clovis News-Journal in November 1935. His brother F.A. Hoiles died in a car crash in December 1936. R.C. Hoiles bought The Gazette-Telegraph in January 1946, and Marysville Appeal Democrat in March 1946.
In April 1950, R.C. Hoiles merged his three publishing companies together to form Freedom Newspapers, Inc. The newly formed company published daily newspapers in California, Colorado and Ohio. In October 1951, Freedom acquired three Texas newspapers: The Brownsville Herald, McAllen Valley Evening Monitor, and Harlingen Morning Star. With the sale, the company owned 10 daily newspapers with a total circulation of 135,000. In 1965, Freedom acquired the Turlock Journal.
In 1969, Freedom acquired four Florida papers: Panama City News-Herald, Fort Pierce News-Tribune, Fort Walton Beach Playground Daily News, and the Marianna Floridan. In 1970, Hoiles died at age 90. The Freedom Newspaper chain was then one of the largest in the nation, with a total circulation over 500,000. The company acquired the Porterville Recorder in April 1974, New Bern Sun Journal in May 1974, Victorville Daily Press in January 1978, and Burlington Times-News in July 1978.
Legal battle for company
Following the death of Hoiles, the company was owned by his three children, Clarence H. Hoiles, Harry H. Hoiles and Mary Jane Hoiles Hardie. A bitter feud ensued over the fate of the company, with H.H. Hoiles against his two siblings. Harry Hoiles was named company president following his father's death. He was rebuked in his attempt at becoming Chief executive officer and later claimed his siblings froze him out of company management and stopped him from selling his shares to a third-party. The eldest of the three, Clarence Hoiles, who was instrumental and establishing the company and worked with his father in upper management and eventually became board chairman, died in 1982.
As Freedom Newspapers softened its stance on Libertarianism, Harry Hoiles became disenchanted and attempted to breakup the company. At that time, Freedom was the country's 15th largest chain. It was worth $640 million and owned 31 newspapers with a combined circulation of 800,000. The goal was to form his own company. After the breakup failed, Harry Hoiles attempted to buy the Freedom. One offer was $700 million. Clarence Hoiles's three daughters sued their uncle for mismanaging the trust of their deceased brother. The courts ruled against H.H. Hoiles in 1987 and he eventually resigned from the board of directors. Mary J. Hardie, who served on the company board for many years, died in 1996. Her brother Harry Hoiles died in 1998.
Expansion into TV
Freedom Newspapers expanded into television in 1981 when it purchased KTVL-TV from Sierra Cascade Communication. It then purchased WLNE-TV in 1982 from Pulitzer Broadcasting for $15.5 million, followed by KFDM-TV and WTVC-TV in 1983 from A.H. Belo Corp.for $49 million, and WRGB-TV in 1985 from Universal Communications Corporation. In Augst 1992, Freedom acquired the Fullerton News Tribune. In 1993, the company was renamed to Freedom Communications. In September 1995, Freedom agreed to purchase WPEC-TV from Photo Electronics Corp. The deal was completed about six months later. In March 1993, Freedom acquired the San Clemente Sun-Post, owned by a subsidiary of Howard Publications. It was then merged into the San Clemente News.
In February 1995, Freedom acquired The Tustin News. In June 1995, Freedom traded the Bucyrus Telegraph-Forum in Ohio and Dothan Progress in Alabama to Thomson Newspapers for the Desert Dispatch and Jacksonville Journal-Courier. In May 1996, Freedom sold the Turlock Journal to Central Valley Publishing, a subsidiary of USMedia Group, Inc. In January 1998, the company acquired WWMT-TV and WLAJ-TV from Granit Broadcasting Co. for $170 million. In 2000, Freedom purchased all the newspapers in Arizona owned by Thomson Newspapers. The sale included the Ahwatukee Foothills News, East Valley Tribune and Yuma Sun.
Sale to private equity
In March 2003, a majority of the Hoiles family voted to sell the company, which at that time included 25 newspapers and eight television stations. Freedom Communications was valued at $2 billion. That October, a majority interest in Freedom Communications was sold to a group of investors led by the Blackstone Group and Providence Equity Partners. Through a stock arrangement, the Hoiles family descendants retained control of the board. The private equity firms received a management fee from the company's gross revenue. The family sold a 40% stake for $470 million, which allowed some members to cash out. As part of this transaction, Freedom had acquired substantial debt.
In 2006, Freedom purchased WCWN from The Tribune Company for $17 million. In spring of 2009, amid the Great Recession, Freedom Communications instituted furloughs for all employees nationwide, followed by a permanent 5% pay cut starting in July 2009. On September 1, 2009, Freedom Communications went into a Chapter 11 bankruptcy reorganization. The company left bankruptcy on April 30, 2010, under the ownership of investment firms Alden Global Capital, Angelo, Gordon & Co. and Luxor Capital Group. Lenders to the company also retained a stake in Freedom. Thus, the Hoiles family lost control of the business after sixty years of ownership.
On November 2, 2011, Freedom sold its entire television division to Sinclair Broadcast Group for $385 million in a move to eliminate the company's debt. The sale was completed on April 2, 2012. Freedom began selling the majority of its newspaper portfolio in 2012. Four papers in the Midwest were sold to Ohio Community Media, an affiliate of the private equity firm Versa Capital Management, in May. The Clovis News Journal and other newspapers in New Mexico were sold to Stevenson Newspapers. Freedom papers in Texas were sold to AIM Media Texas. Its Florida and North Carolina papers were sold to Halifax Media Group.
2100 Trust
On July 25, 2012, The Orange County Register and six other papers were purchased by 2100 Trust LLC. The papers continued to operate under the Freedom Communications name. The principal company owner was Aaron Kushner, a former greeting-card executive with no prior media experience. Kushner paid $50 million for the assets and agreed to assume the pension liabilities. He soon increased staff, added new sections at the Orange County Register and began a new daily, the Long Beach Register.
In November 2012, Freedom sold the Colorado Springs Gazette to Clarity Media, a subsidiary of The Anschutz Corporation. In April 2013, Freedom sold the Yuma Sun and the Porterville Recorder to Rhode Island Suburban Newspapers. In June 2013, Freedom sold the Appeal-Democrat to the Vista, California subsidiary of Horizon Publications.
In October 2013, the former owners of Freedom Communications filed a lawsuit against Aaron Kushner demanding his company pay more than $17 million remaining on the sale. Kushner claimed that the prior owners had given him an inaccurate valuation of the assets and he faced $62.3 million in unexpected financial liabilities as a result.
In November 2013, Freedom purchased the Riverside Press-Enterprise from A.H. Belo Corporation for $27 million. In January 2014, the company laid off 71 workers in Riverside and Santa Ana. In March 2014, Freedom sold the Daily Press and the Desert Dispatch to New Media Investment Group. In December 2014, the Long Beach Register closed.
On November 1, 2015, Freedom Communications filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. In January 2016, Freedom closed several of its weekly papers in Orange County. On March 21, 2016, a bankruptcy judge approved the sale of Freedom Communications and its two major newspapers, the Orange County Register and the Riverside Press-Enterprise, to Digital First Media, the parent of the Los Angeles News Group, which operated eleven daily newspapers in Southern California. After the sale, the subsidiary was renamed to Southern California News Group.
Leadership
Founder and chief executive officer R.C. Hoiles led Freedom until his death in 1970. He was succeeded as chief executive officer by his son, C.H. Hoiles, who served until 1981, and then by:
- D.R. Segal (1981–1992)
- James N. Rosse (1992–1999)
- Samuel C. Wolgemuth (1999–2002)
- Alan Bell (2002–2006)
- Scott N. Flanders (2006–2009)
- Burl Osborne (2009–2010)
- Mitchell Stern (2010–2012)
- Aaron Kushner (2012–2015)
- Rich Mirman (2015−2016)
Newspapers
Freedom's newspaper portfolio consists of:
Los Angeles County
- Weekly newspapers:
- Easy Reader of Hermosa Beach (managed by Freedom pursuant to long-term agreement); includes 3 Easy Reader magazines:
- Beach
- Peninsula People
- Drop Zone
Riverside County
- The Press-Enterprise of Riverside
- Weekly newspaper:
- Desert Enterprise of Palm Springs
Regional
- Unidos en el Sur de California (regional Spanish-language weekly)
Orange County
- The Orange County Register of Santa Ana
- Weekly newspapers:
- Anaheim Hills News of Anaheim Hills
- Anaheim Bulletin of Anaheim
- Capistrano Valley News of San Juan Capistrano
- The Current of Newport Beach
- Dana Point News of Dana Point
- Fountain Valley View of Fountain Valley
- Fullerton News Tribune of Fullerton
- Huntington Beach Wave of Huntington Beach
- Irvine World News of Irvine
- La Habra/Brea Star Progress of La Habra
- Ladera Post of Ladera Ranch
- Laguna News-Post of Laguna Beach
- Laguna Niguel/Aliso Viejo News of Laguna Niguel
- Laguna Woods Globe of Laguna Woods
- Orange City News of Orange
- Placentia News-Times of Placentia
- Rancho Canyon News of Rancho Santa Margarita
- Saddleback Valley News of Lake Forest
- Saddleback Valley News of Mission Viejo
- Sun Post News of San Clemente
- Tustin News of Tustin
- Yorba Linda Star of Yorba Linda
Former stations
- Stations are arranged in alphabetical order by state and city of license.
| West Palm Beach | Florida | WPEC | 1996 | 2012 |
| Kalamazoo–Grand Rapids | Michigan | WWMT | 1998 | 2012 |
| Lansing | WLAJ | 1998 | 2012 | |
| Albany–Schenectady | New York | WRGB | 1986 | 2012 |
| WCWN | 2006 | 2012 | ||
| Medford | Oregon | KTVL | 1981 | 2012 |
| Providence | Rhode Island | WLNE-TV | 1982 | 2007 |
| Chattanooga | Tennessee | WTVC | 1983 | 2012 |
| Beaumont | Texas | KFDM | 1984 | 2012 |
References
- August 15, 1982, Freedom Chain To Buy N.C. Television Station, The Herald-Sun, Durham, North Carolina, Associated Press
- Rieder, Rem, June 25, 2013, One newspaper cuts to survive; another invests to thrive, 2014-04-17, USA Today
- August 30, 1919, Ownership Of Ohio Newspapers Changed, Springfield News-Sun, Springfield, Ohio
- February 15, 1922, Publisher's Announcement, News Journal, Mansfield, Ohio
- July 1, 1927, Newspaper at Bucyrus Sold to Ohio Publishers, The Washington Herald, Washington, D.C.
- October 28, 1984, Hoiles left mark on paper, The Lima News, Lima, Ohio
- December 10, 1930, Two Papers Sold To Brush-Moore , , R.C. Hoiles Sells Mansfield News, Loran Times-Herald, The Independent, Associated Press
- March 1, 1935, Ohio Newspaperman Acquires Substantial Interest In Santa Ana Daily Register, The Register, Santa Ana, California
- November 21, 1935, Santa Ana Register Sold By J.F. Burke, Ventura County Star, Ventura, California, United Press
- November 20, 1935, Hoiles Purchase New Mexico Paper, The Register, Santa Ana, California
- December 30, 1936, Alliance Review Publisher Killed , , Frank Hoiles, Auto-Crash Victim, Once Figured in Sensational Kidnapping., The Plain Dealer, Cleveland, Ohio
- January 11, 1946, Hoile's Buy Colo. Springs Newspaper, Telegraph-Forum, Bucyrus, Ohio
- March 15, 1946, Appeal-Democrat Sold For Price Above $300,000, Colusa Sun-Herald, 1, United Press
- April 19, 1950, Register, Three Other Papers, Merged as 'Freedom Newspapers', The Register, Santa Ana, California
- October 2, 1951, Freedom Newspapers Inc. Buys Three Texas Papers, The Register, Santa Ana, California
- November 3, 1965, Turlock Journal Is Sold, The San Francisco Examiner
- Apr 25, 1969, 4 Florida Newspapers Joining Freedom Group, The Lima News, Lima, Ohio
- October 31, 1970, Santa Ana Publisher R.C. Hoiles, National News Chain Head, Dies, The Los Angeles Times
- April 2, 1974, Newspaper sale revealed, Tulare Advance-Register
- May 15, 1974, Freedom buys Sun-Journal, The Greensboro Record, Associated Press
- January 30, 1978, Victorville Press sold, Ventura County Star, 10, United Press International
- July 20, 1978, Freedom Expands, Valley Morning Star, Harlingen, Texas, Associated Press
- Vartabedian, Ralph, April 16, 1982, Freedom Newspaper Suit Seen as Outgrowth of Philosophical Dispute, The Los Angeles Times
- Granelli, James S., April 5, 1987, Keeping Harry Hoiles at Bay , , Freedom Newspapers Families Frank in Discussing Rift, The Los Angeles Times
- April 14, 1998, Former Freedom Communications head, Harry Hoiles, dies, The Odessa American, Odessa, Texas, Associated Press
- January 3, 1982, Clarence H. Hoiles, 76; newspaper group head, The Daily Register, Red Bank, New Jersey, Associated Press
- Granelli, James S., October 2, 1985, Harry Hoiles Sweetens His Offer to $700 Million , , Freedom Newspapers Ante Raised, The Los Angeles Times
- October 1, 1985, Battle Renewed Over Freedom Newspapers , , Suit Claims Mishandling of Trust by Harry Hoiles, The Los Angeles Times
- January 9, 1996, Hardie helped to define newspaper dynasty goals, Turlock Journal
- January 20, 1981, Sister station of KTVZ sold to paper chain, The Bulletin, United Press International
- October 7, 1983, Freedom buys 2 TV stations, The Monitor, McAllen, Texas
- November 6, 1985, WRGB-TV station sold for second time in two years, Rapid City Journal, Rapid City, South Dakota, Associated Press
- August 8, 1992, In Brief , , Freedom Newspapers Inc. acquires Fullerton paper, Daily Press, Victorville, California
- November 18, 1993, New name reflects Freedom's strategy to grow. diversity, Daily Press, Victorville, California
- September 28, 1995, Freedom to buy TV station, The Lima News, Lima, Ohio
- Minch, Jack, February 7, 1996, Freedom completes deal for Channel 12 , , WPEC-TV to continue airing CBS programming, Fort Pierce Tribune
- San Clemente newspaper purchased, March 6, 1993, 6, The Star-Tribune, Duarte, California
- Shoppers, Weekly Papers Battle for Ad Dollars, Weber, Jonathan, November 3, 1989, 114, The Los Angeles Times
- Register, San Clemente paper link up, June 13, 1993, 10, Daily Press, Associated Press, Victorville, California
- February 23, 1995, New Regime Takes Over Today , , Tustin News Sold to Freedom Newspapers, The Tustin News
- Kerber, Ross, June 20, 1995, Freedom Communications, Thomson Swap Newspapers, The Los Angeles Times
- Moran, Tim, May 23, 1996, Turlock newspaper is sold , , Journal goes to USMedia, after 31 years with Freedom group, The Modesto Bee, 21
- Banas, Teri, January 16, 1998, Granite to sell WLAJ-TV , , Ownership change will be local ABC affiliate's second in last two years, Lansing State Journal
- June 27, 2000, Freedom Buys Thomson's Newspapers In State, June 14, 2018, Kingman Daily Miner, Google News Archive, Associated Press
- Mirhadi, David, March 11, 2003, Marysville Appeal-Democrat part of Freedom's sale, The Union, Grass Valley, California
- Gentile, Gary, October 15, 2003, Freedom agrees to partnership keeping company in family hands, The Desert Sun, Palm Springs, California, Associated Press
- Heisel, William, Powers, Ashley, Reyes, David, August 23, 2007, Register is losing architect of its rise , , N. Christian Anderson's job at the paper's parent firm is squeezed out., The Los Angeles Times
- June 20, 2006, Tribune Selling WCWN-TV in Albany For $17 Million, The Morning Call, Allentwon, Pennsylvania
- Kouwe, Zachery, August 31, 2009, Owner of , Orange County Register, May File for Bankruptcy, subscription, live, February 17, 2022, May 25, 2010, The New York Times
- Peter Lattman, Russell Adams, August 31, 2009, Paper Owner Freedom Plans to File For Chapter 11, Wall Street Journal
- de la Merced, Michael, 2009-09-01, Freedom Communications Files for Bankruptcy, 2009-09-02, The New York Times
- Bunis, Dena, March 10, 2010, Freedom set to emerge from bankruptcy, The Brownsville Herald
- May 2, 2010, Family no longer owners of Freedom , , Company emerges from bankruptcy, The Brownsville Herald
- Milbourn, Mary Ann, O.C. Register owner sells TV stations, November 2, 2011, Orange County Register, November 2, 2011
- Milbourn, Mary Ann, May 17, 2012, Freedom Communications sells 4 Midwest papers, live, March 23, 2022, November 6, 2025, Orange County Register
- January 31, 2012, Freedom Communications Announces Sale Of Clovis, NM, News Journal to Clovis Media Inc., dead, 2012-05-10, 2012-06-04, Freedom Communications
- May 18, 2012, AIM Media Texas, LLC acquires Texas newspapers, dead, 2012-05-23, 2012-06-04, Odessa American
- June 1, 2012, Freedom announces sale of Florida, N.C. properties to Halifax Media Group, dead, 2012-06-04, 2012-06-04, The Star, Port St. Joe, Florida
- Milbourn, Mary Ann, July 25, 2012, Freedom Communications closes sale of the Register, 2012-08-29, April 1, 2013, Orange County Register (archive)
- Bensinger, Ken, November 1, 2013, Former O.C. Register owners sue buyer over withheld payment, live, December 11, 2022, April 22, 2023, Los Angeles Times
- Bensinger, Ken, January 17, 2014, Dozens laid off at Freedom papers, November 6, 2025, Los Angeles Times
- Avery, Greg, November 30, 2012, Anschutz buys Colorado Springs Gazette, November 30, 2012, Denver Business Journal
- April 30, 2013, Yuma Sun Under New Ownership, dead, June 30, 2013, June 14, 2018, Yuma Sun
- May 2, 2013, In Brief , , Porterville Recorder sold to private owner, The Fresno Bee, B7
- 2013-06-03, Appeal-Democrat, Tri-County papers have new owners, 2024-09-23, Appeal-Democrat, en
- June 1, 2013, Sales of four north-valley newspapers announced, dead, October 4, 2014, Chicoer.com
- Bensinger, Ken, November 22, 2013, Sale of Riverside newspaper closes, The Los Angeles Times
- Bensinger, Ken, 2013-11-21, Sale of Riverside Press-Enterprise to Aaron Kushner closes, finally, 2025-10-08, Los Angeles Times, en-US
- Bensinger, Ken, January 17, 2014, Dozens laid off at Freedom papers , , Loss of 71 workers in Riverside and Santa Ana is sharp reversal of recent expansion., The Los Angeles Times
- Milbourn, Mary Ann, March 3, 2014, Register owner sells Victorville, Barstow newspapers, Orange County Register
- Pfeifer, Stuart, Khouri, Andrew, December 28, 2014, Long Beach Register stops publishing, 2014-12-30, Los Angeles Times
- Chapter 11 Petition, PacerMonitor, 2 November 2015
- OC Register To Cut a Bunch of Community Weeklies, Among Other Belt-Tightening Moves, OC Weekly, 2018-05-30, 2016-01-08
- OC Register parent to expand into Palm Springs (updated), Southern California Public, Radio, February 12, 2014, Southern California Public Radio
- Archives, Los Angeles Times
- OC Register Ramps Up Newport Beach, Costa Mesa Coverage, 2014-01-01, 2014-01-02, live
- DiMartino, Mediha, Sources Say Freedom to Furlough Staff, Trim Long Beach to Weekly Schedule, Orange County Business Journal, 2014-06-15, 2014-05-30
- Irvine World News officially becomes daily newspaper, July 22, 2013
- La Habra, Brea Papers Purchased, 2017-07-06, 2016-04-22, , live
External links
Category:Defunct mass media companies of the United States
Category:Defunct newspaper companies of the United States
Category:Defunct broadcasting companies of the United States
Category:Defunct companies based in Greater Los Angeles
Category:Digital First Media
Category:Sinclair Broadcast Group
Category:Companies based in Santa Ana, California
Category:Publishing companies established in 1950
Category:Mass media companies disestablished in 2016
Category:1950 establishments in California
Category:2016 disestablishments in California
Category:Companies that filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2009
Category:Companies that filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2015