in 1919. The Journal'
s circulation of 116,807 ranked 5th among daily papers, substantially behind the Chicago Tribune (424,026), Chicago Daily News (386,498), Chicago American (330,216), and Chicago Herald-Examiner (289,094). In April 1844, a group of men bought the two-year-old Chicago Express
. A few days later, publishing out of the former office of the Express
, the Journal
was first published, three years prior to the start of the Chicago Tribune''.
Richard L. Wilson acquired the paper from its founding group after the
1844 election. He served as editor, with a break when
President Taylor appointed him
postmaster of Chicago in 1849. When Wilson died in 1856, his brother Charles L. Wilson became sole owner. and
Andrew Shuman (
Lieutenant Governor of Illinois from 1877-1881) then became editor in chief. The newspaper advocated for higher tariffs.
James E. Scripps and his son-in-law
George Gough Booth acquired the paper in 1895. George's brother Ralph also later acquired an interest, and became editor and publisher in 1900. John C. Eastman, who had run
Hearst's Chicago operations, bought the paper from the Booths in 1904. From 1904-06, the paper claimed it increased its daily circulation from 34,800 to 85,000. He left the paper to five of his employees upon his death in 1925, when it had a claimed circulation of about 125,000. Samuel Emory Thomason, a prior general manager of the
Tribune, along with
John Stewart Bryan of
The Richmond News Leader, bought the paper in 1928 for $2,000,000.
Richard J. Finnegan became managing editor of the paper in 1916. ==Demise and legacy==