Newspapers in Jacksonville date to the mid-1830s. In 1864,
an olive grower named J.K. Stickney teamed with W.C. Morrill
to start the Florida Union. The two parted in April
1865. Stickney kept the paper and established physician Holmes
Steele as editor.
Steele smashed other Jacksonville papers - the Herald,
the Mercury, the Times - in the year following the
war.
In 1867, Stickney sold the paper to Edward M. Cheney, a Boston
lawyer and Union army captain. Cheney tried unsuccessfully
to turn the Union from a three-times-a-week paper to a daily,
but it didn't work out. He sold the Union in 1873
to Walton, Fowle & Co., headed by Canadian newpaperman,
Charles H. Walton. The paper nose-dived. It abandoned daily
publication. It appeared doomed. Soon it was sold to Baptist
preacher H.B. McCallum and a partner.
Charles H. Jones, who had run away from home at 14 to be
a Confederate drummer boy, tried to buy the Union.
When that failed, he recruited an old friend from Chicago
and started a rival paper. The Florida Daily Times
began in November 1881.
By 1883, the professionally produced Times had eclipsed
the preacher-edited Union. McCallum, ridden by illness,
sold to the interlopers. The first edition of The Florida
Times-Union came out on Sunday, Feb. 4, 1883.
The newspaper, along with the afternoon Jacksonville
Journal, the St. Augustine Record and the weekly
Courier Journal in Crescent City, were purchased
by Morris Communications Jan. 1, 1983, from Seaboard Coast
Line Railroad.