The
Charleston Courier was founded in 1803. The founder of the
Courier,
Aaron Smith Willington, came from
Massachusetts with newspaper experience. In the early 19th century, he was known to row out to meet ships from
London,
Liverpool,
Havre, and
New York City to get the news earlier than other Charleston papers. He also had a translator working for him, so he could copy items from the
Havana newspapers.
Rudolph Septimus Siegling also served as editor during the 1800s. The
Charleston Daily News, founded in 1865, merged with it to form the
News and Courier in 1873. The
Evening Post was founded in 1894, but quickly ran into financial trouble. In 1896, rice planter Arthur Manigault stepped in to rescue the paper. The paper and its successors have been in the hands of the Manigault family for four generations. In 1926, Manigault's son, Robert, bought
The News and Courier. During the
Civil Rights era, the
News and Courier was virulently
segregationist, to the extent that
Time described it as
the most segregationist newspaper in the South. Its editor, Thomas R. Waring Jr., was a staunch segregationist, as was staffer W. D. Workman Jr., who ran for public office in a campaign that united South Carolina's divided racial and economic conservatives.
Merger By 1991, it was apparent Charleston could no longer support two newspapers; the
News and Courier and
Evening Post had shared their editorial staff since the 1980s. They were merged into a single morning newspaper,
The Post and Courier. The paper acquired several sisters in the 1990s when its parent bought other newspapers and television stations. In 2008 and 2009, newspaper officials reacted to declines in revenue with cost-cutting efforts. In 2008, they offered a buyout to employees, a bid to streamline the company and reduce expenses. 64 full-time employees left, shrinking the workforce to 381 by the start of 2009. This was deemed insufficient, so on February 6, 2009, the company laid off 25 employees and on March 23, Evening Post Publishing Co., the parent company of the paper, announced a company-wide
furlough that would force all employees to take five days' unpaid leave in the second quarter of 2009. The newspaper said the move was necessary to reduce expenses "because of the continued weakness of the economy and the impact on advertising". In July 2021, the
Post and Courier began moving its offices to 148 Williman Street. In February 2025, the paper eliminated its Monday and Tuesday print days. ==Awards ==