Neimore, a staunch Republican founded the newspaper as
The Owl in 1879. Her husband, J.B. Bass, was editor until his death in 1934. and Charlotte Bass in Los Angeles, 1949 During the
Great Migration, the paper offered information on employment and housing opportunities as well as news stories geared towards the newly arrived migrant population. By 1925, the newspaper had a circulation of 60,000, the largest of any African-American newspaper in California. Its publishers and editors were active in
civil rights, beginning with campaigns for equitable hiring, patronage of black businesses, and an end to segregated facilities and housing. Bass retired in 1951 and sold the
California Eagle to
Loren Miller, the former city editor. Miller was a law graduate of
Washburn University in
Kansas. After he relocated to Los Angeles in 1930, he began writing for the
Eagle and eventually became city editor. In 1945, Miller represented
Hattie McDaniel and won her case against the "Sugar Hill" restrictive covenant case. He was appointed in 1963 as a judge of the Superior Court [i.e., the trial courts] for Los Angeles County by Governor
Edmund "Pat" Brown. In 1963, Miller sold the paper to fourteen local investors in order to accept his appointment as judge. The
California Eagle initially increased circulation from 3,000 to 21,000. But within six months the paper had to close; on January 7, 1964, the
California Eagle ceased publication after 85 years. ==Platform==