

The company that owns and operates the newspaper, Bangor Publishing Co., expanded through acquisitions of Bangor Metro magazine (2014), Madawaska's St. Warren became publisher of the newspaper. In 2008, the paper's editorial page director, Todd Benoit, was appointed BDN 's director of new media he later became BDN 's president and chief operating officer. īDN adopted an aggressive "digital-first" publishing strategy, and became the most-read online news source in the state in 2011, the Portland Press Herald outsold BDN in print copies by a few thousand papers on an average weekday, but BDN 's website had more than 100,000 unique visitors than the Press Herald 's website. From 1997 to 2001, BDN acted as an Internet service provider in addition to a newspaper, working with two local, small telecommunications companies to provide dial-up Internet access to a few thousand people in Maine. The newspaper launched its Web presence in 1997 at, later moving to in the 2000s. As of 1993, the Bangor Daily News was one of fewer than twenty American newspapers that declined to accept ads for tobacco products. The newspaper was an early adopter of a policy against running tobacco advertising. Warren succeeded his father as editor in 1984 five years later, the newspaper moved its printing plant from Bangor to a new printing plant in Hampden (which was closed in 2013 and sold in 2015). The ruling appears in a textbook on Canadian media law. Banville and the newspaper considered the Canadian court's ruling to be a prior restraint on freedom of the press, but decided not to further appeal considering the cost. After publishing an account of the restricted proceeding in BDN, Banville was convicted in a Canadian court for violating a publication ban, and was fined $160 in 1983, the Court of Appeal of New Brunswick upheld the conviction, but gave Banville an absolute discharge, meaning that he does not have any Canadian criminal record. In 1982, a reporter for the Bangor Daily News, Beurmond Banville, who ran a one-person news bureau for the paper in Madawaska, Maine, on the U.S.-Canada border, wrote about a pretrial hearing in a murder case in New Brunswick, Canada. At the time, published seven regional editions of the newspaper throughout Maine, and in addition to its main office on Main Street in Bangor had news bureaus at Madawaska, Presque Isle, Houlton, Pittsfield, Calais, Machias, Rockland, Augusta and Ellsworth. The newspaper's peak came in the mid-1980s, when Bangor Daily News had 150 reporters and editors and 150 other employees. On New Year's Eve 1962, a massive blizzard dumped over three feet of snow on Bangor, with 20-foot snowdrifts that made it impossible for the delivery trucks to move. It has only missed one day of delivery in its entire history. Warren became publisher in 1955 and remained in that role until 1984, a time when the newspaper's circulation dramatically increased. After Fred Jordan's death in 1947, his widow Lillis Towle Jordan became publisher. O’Connell was sent to Europe as a war correspondent. forces during World War II, and the paper's managing editor John M. Forty-six BDN staff members served in the U.S. Towle's son-in-law Fred Jordan took control of the paper in 1929. The Bangor Daily News merged with the Bangor Whig & Courier in 1900, leaving two newspapers in the city: BDN and the Bangor Daily Commercial (which ceased publication in 1949). Ownership of the paper remained in the family, and Towle's great-grandson Richard J. Upon Stewart's death in 1890, his sons took control of the paper, which was originally a tabloid with "some news, but also plenty of gossip, lurid stories and scandals." In 1895, J. The Bangor Daily News 's first issue was Jthe main stockholder in the publishing company was Bangor shipping and logging businessman Thomas J. The car is on display at the Cole Land Transportation Museum in Bangor. As part of its community relations, the Bangor Daily News in 1950 sponsored a soap box derby car, which bore the newspaper's logo.
