As late as 1993,
Nan Tucker McEvoy, granddaughter of
San Francisco Chronicle founder M. H. de Young and
chair of Chronicle Publishing Company's
board of directors, declined an offer of $800 million made by
Hearst Corporation for Chronicle Publishing. She told
Editor & Publisher that the sale of the
San Francisco Chronicle would take place "wiktionary:over my dead body|over [her] dead body", and was widely quoted. However, with the growing
consolidation of print and broadcast media in the 1990s, the other shareholding heirs of the de Young family decided to sell the assets of CPC in 1999 when the consolidation trend in the United States was at its peak. The movement to sell was partly facilitated by the action of a special stockholders' meeting in April 1995, in which Mrs. McEvoy was ousted from the Chronicle Publishing Company board and therefore from her position as chair. Although Mrs. McEvoy kept her 26.3% ownership share in the company's stock, which together with the 7% held by her son
Nion McEvoy gave them a formidable one-third shareholder voting bloc if they chose to vote together, she no longer exerted direct control over the management of
The Chronicle or its
editorial positions, and could not retain the clout she previously held in the disposition of Chronicle Publishing Company's assets, including
The Chronicle. Over the latter half of 1999 into 2000, the units of the company were sold separately to different entities: •
San Francisco Chronicle:
Hearst Corporation (longtime owners of
The Examiner, which was divested upon the purchase of the
Chronicle amid protests that San Francisco would be left with only one newspaper) •
Worcester Telegram & Gazette:
The New York Times Company (owners of the nearby
Boston Globe) •
The Pantagraph (Bloomington, Illinois):
Pulitzer, Inc. •
KRON-TV:
Young Broadcasting (which paid a record $820 million for the station, then disaffiliated it from NBC in the wake of a conflict with the network) • Partner network
BayTV went to Young with the sale and was folded in August 2001. •
WOWT and
KAKE:
LIN TV, which swapped the stations to
Benedek Broadcasting for cash and that company's
WWLP in
Springfield, Massachusetts) •
Chronicle Books: Purchased by
Nion McEvoy, Chronicle Books' editor-in-chief, son of Nan Tucker McEvoy and great-grandson of
San Francisco Chronicle founder M. H. de Young • MBI Publishing: Purchased by
New York City investment firm Flagship Partners, Inc. With the exception of the
Pantagraph and the book imprints, all of the former Chronicle Publishing assets have met some degree of criticism, misfortune, or both. Concerns about the
Telegram & Gazette being pared down into a "
Boston Globe#History|[Boston] Globe West" arose in Worcester while Hearst's purchase of the
Chronicle led to the
Examiner having to reinvent itself under its new local ownership as it struggled, and down the line was sold out to private equity publishers that reduced its operations considerably. The television properties became a strain on their new owners as the Chronicle–LIN–Benedek deal pushed Benedek Broadcasting into bankruptcy with most of the company (including the former Chronicle) stations being purchased in 2002 by
Gray Television. Young Broadcasting struggled in the years since purchasing KRON-TV, having sold four stations and pare down operations at KRON to keep afloat due to the heavy debt incurred by the massive purchase of the station. KRON itself also suffered due to the loss of its NBC affiliation to
KNTV, and became a lower-profile news-heavy station holding an affiliation with
MyNetworkTV, eventually consolidating their studios (though not ownership) within the building of their longtime rivals,
ABC-owned
KGO-TV. Young itself filed for bankruptcy in 2009, but emerged the next year; it sold itself to
Media General in 2013, uniting it with WWLP.
Nexstar Media Group purchased Media General in 2017, and KRON remains owned by that group. Twenty-four de Young family shareholders received at least $2 billion divided among them from the sales of the Chronicle Publishing assets. ==See also==