The Waco Tribune-Herald has been a Cox newspaper for more than two decades and a presence in Central Texas since 1892. The Tribune-Herald's family tree includes five newspapers:
Waco Evening Telephone (founded 1892)
Waco Morning Times
Waco Herald
Waco Morning News
Waco Tribune
Through the years, ownership of the various newspapers changed hands
until 1927, when E.S. Fentress and Charles Marsh, owners of the Waco
News-Tribune, bought the Waco Times-Herald. Those two papers were the
beginning of the chain known as Newspapers Inc., a group that grew to
include 13 daily newspapers with Waco as the headquarters.
Harlon Fentress, son of E.S. Fentress, ran Newspapers Inc. until late
1975, when he decided to sell the chain to Cox Enterprises Inc. of
Atlanta, Ga. Cox bought Newspapers Inc. in January 1976.
The Tribune-Herald building was remodeled inside and out in the
mid-1980s. The owners made a commitment to stay at 900 Franklin, the
heart of downtown Waco. Since the early 1990s, the downtown has made a
comeback from an area of vacant, rundown shops to a treasure for
shoppers, diners, museum-goers and those seeking parks in which to
relax.
The newspaper has been cited for its dedication to quality and
journalistic excellence. One of its biggest contributions to literacy is
A Storybook Christmas. Despite the project's name, the Trib welcomes
donations of new books or funds with which to buy books from January
through December.
Since it began in 1991, Storybook Christmas has placed more than
125,000 new books in the hands of children ages 3 to 8 who did not have
books of their own before. Donations are tax-deductible and may be mailed to:
A Storybook Christmas
P.O. Box 6088
Waco, TX 76706-6088