When print journalism arrived in the Pacific Northwest with the first
European settlers, it quickly became a potent force. From the early
efforts by entrepreneurial pioneer businessmen to use newspapers as
promotional tools to the more balanced reporting of the mid-twentieth
century, journalism in the Pacific Northwest has described the citizenry
and helped shape its opinions. In this invaluable reference work, Floyd
McKay embraces the many facets of journalism history in Oregon and
Washington by considering both mainstream media and specialized
publications, such as those devoted to Native American, ethnic, and
immigrant communities and the feminist and suffrage press. Organized
both chronologically and regionally, Reporting the Pacific Northwest
provides the first comprehensive annotated bibliography of this subject
for general reference use and for the study of journalism history.