Like many newspapers, the
Union Leader has a complex history involving mergers and buyouts. The weekly Union became the
Manchester Daily Union on March 31, 1863. The afternoon
Union became a morning
Daily Union (dropping the "Manchester"). Although the
Union began as a Democratic paper, by the early 1910s it had been purchased by
Londonderry politician Rosecrans Pillsbury, a Republican. In October 1912, the competing
Manchester Leader was founded by
Frank Knox, later
Secretary of the Navy during
World War II, and financed by then-Governor
Robert P. Bass, a member of the
Progressive (or
Bull Moose) Party who was attempting to promote the Progressive cause in New Hampshire. The newspaper was so successful that Knox bought out the
Union, and the two newspapers merged under the banner of the Union-Leader Corporation July 1913. Owing to Pillsbury's role in the company, both papers espoused a moderate Republican, pro-business stance. Following Knox's death in 1944, William Loeb purchased the company, merging the
Union and
Leader into a single morning paper, the
Manchester Union-Leader, in 1948. Under Loeb's watch, the
Union-Leader moved sharply to the right. He often placed editorials on the front page and supported highly conservative candidates for public office. He dropped Manchester from the paper's masthead in the mid-1970s to emphasize the fact that it is the only statewide
newspaper in New Hampshire. In 2000, after Nackey Loeb's death on January 8, Joseph McQuaid, the son and nephew of the founders of the
New Hampshire Sunday News, Bernard J. and Elias McQuaid, took over as publisher. He was succeeded by his son, Brendan, in 2020. On April 4, 2005, it changed its name to the
New Hampshire Union Leader to reflect its statewide reach. However, it is still called the
Manchester Union Leader by some residents due to its historical legacy. The
New Hampshire Sunday News was created in 1948 and later, after Loeb's attempts to start a Sunday edition of the
Union-Leader failed, was purchased by the Union-Leader Corporation. The
Union Leader published the
Sunday News as its Sunday edition for decades but converted it to Saturday publication as of February 10, 2024. In January 2025, majority ownership of the paper moved from the Nackey S. Loeb School of Communications, a nonprofit organization, to two private investors. File:Manchester Union Democrat office 1877.svg|Office of the
Manchester Daily Union and its publisher Campbell & Hanscom in 1877 File:Manchester Courthouse, New Hampshire.jpg|The downtown
Union Leader building on Amherst Street was converted to Manchester District Court File:Manchester Union Leader building IMG_2758.JPG|
New Hampshire Union Leader building at 100 William Loeb Drive in
Manchester, New Hampshire ==Contributors==