is listed on the
National Register of Historic Places. On Aug. 18, 1866, the first edition of
The Weekly Courier was published in
Havilah, California. George A. Tiffany was the printer and business manager. C.W. Bush was the editor.
The Sacramento Bee described the Democratic newspaper as a "thoroughly fogy, fossil, and pre-rebelite." At the time Havilah was a small mining town and recently made the county seat. The
Courier was
Kern County's first newspaper. A year later A.D. Jones succeeded Bush as editor, and at some point the paper's name was changed to the
Havilah Courier. also known as the Bakersfield
Courier.
After recovering from a severe illness that overtook the town, Jones left the Courier
to operate the San Juan Echo''. In 1876, the
Kern County Courier merged with the
Southern Californian to form the
Courier California. Julius Chester was the editor and proprietor. In 1879, via a court order, the sheriff transferred ownership to A.C. Maude, who renamed it to the
Kern County Californian. Maude was raised in
England and fought in the
Union army during the
American Civil War. He participated in
Sherman's March to the Sea. Its name was changed to
The Daily Californian in 1891 after it expanded from weekly to daily publication. In 1893, George F. Weeks succeeded John Isaacs as the paper's manager. In 1897, Alfred Harrell, the Kern County superintendent of schools, purchased the newspaper from Weeks. Harrell gave
The Bakersfield Californian its present name in 1907. In 1926, he moved the newspaper to 1707 Eye Street in downtown Bakersfield. His widow Virginia M. Harrell then served as president of the Bakersfield California Corporation until she died in 1954. At that time their daughter, Bernice Harrell Chipman, assumed the position of president. She died in 1967. Berenice Fritts Koerber, granddaughter of Alfred Harrell, then became company president. Two years later Alfred Harrell was indicated by the California Press Association into the California Newspaper Hall of Fame. In 1983, the
Bakersfield Californian Building on Eye Street was placed on the
National Register of Historic Places. In 1984, the paper completed construction of a $21 million publishing facility. The Harrell-Fritts Publishing Center was located at a business center near Meadows Field. Koerber died in 1988. At that time the paper had a daily circulation of 81,000. In December 2014, Virginia "Ginny" Cowenhoven, daughter of Virginia F. "Ginger" Moorhouse, was named associate publisher, the fifth generation of the Harrell-Fritts family to serve in a leadership position at the media company. On June 3, 2019, after 122 years of family ownership, the paper announced a deal with Canadian newspaper executive Steven Malkowitz to sell the paper to Sound News Media. The sale closed on July 1, whereupon printing operations in Bakersfield ceased and were moved to Antelope Valley, where Sound News Media owns the
Antelope Valley Press. The Harrell-Fritts family retained ownership of The Harrell-Fritts Printing Press Building located at 3700 Pegasus Drive and The Historic Californian building at 1707 Eye St. In March 2025, the paper relocated its office to the first floor of the Cal Twin Towers at 4900 California Avenue, Suite 100-A. ==Other publications==