The first edition was issued on Sunday, December 13, 1903, under the business managership of L.C. Strauss, who had managed the New York City office of the San Francisco Examiner, the first Hearst-owned newspaper. It was predicted to be Democratic in politics and to compete with the Republican-supporting Los Angeles Times, another morning newspaper. The Examiner published a preview edition on Friday, December 11, to announce its platform, but its first regular "mammoth Sunday issue" was dated December 13. "Fireworks, the booming of cannon and shouts of the populace greeted the appearance of the paper." The Weekly Journal-Miner of Prescott, Arizona, said of the Examiner:
The paper is a typical Hearst publication, a style of journalism which is original with Mr. Hearst and the only one of its kind in the United States and for that matter the world, except for the Phenix Enterprise, which affects the Hearst style.
The Journal-Miner predicted the Examiner would be a pro-labor newspaper as opposed to the rival open-shopLos Angeles Times.
Building
The five-story Los Angeles Examiner Building on South Broadway at 11th Street was designed in a mix of Mission Revival and Spanish Colonial Revival styles by architect Julia Morgan. The 7,800-square-foot building was the largest structure in the United States devoted solely to the publication of a newspaper. A train of nine freight cars arrived in Los Angeles on November 19, 1903, loaded with the machinery to print the paper. Five of the cars carried a mammoth Hoe printing press. In 1918, a set for the motion picture The Empty Cab was a replica of the editorial rooms of the Examiner. The Sunday Examiner building was displayed prominently in Laurel and Hardy's skyscraper, girder-walking sequence that was part of the silent Hal Roach comedy "Liberty".
Patriotism controversy
In common with the other Hearst newspapers, the Examiner was opposed to American involvement in World War One and in 1918 attracted opposition and boycotts. A "large number of editorials attacking the government's war policies," clipped from the Examiner, were seized in a raid by federal agents in a raid on a Santa Barbara school for boys called "Boyland." Five people were arrested and charged with espionage. An organization called the California Loyal League claimed that the Examiner was "disloyal and a dangerous influence in this city." It included both the French and the British consuls in Los Angeles. The University Club of Los Angeles and the Sierra Madre Club both banned the Examiner from its reading rooms. Examiner staffers were barred from taking photographs at a French national day celebration at the Shrine Auditorium. They were jeered on their way out of the building.
Staffers manhandled, kidnapped
Automobile race driverAl Reinke and driver Babe Stapp were indicted on charges of manhandling and then kidnapping reporter James Lee who went with photographer John Bennus to the funeral of Ernie Triplett, who had been killed in a racing accident in Imperial, California. Lee said five men threatened violence against the newspaper's workers if news photos were taken at the funerals of any race drivers. The newspaper had been campaigning against automobile-racing fatalities. Reinke was killed in a racing accident before he could be tried.
Merger
In 1962, the morning Examiner merged with the Los Angeles Herald-Express, an afternoon newspaper also owned by the Hearst organization. The Examiner published its last edition on Sunday, January 7. The succeeding newspaper was known as the Los Angeles Herald Examiner.
Notable people
Max F. Ihmsen, publisher, 1911-1921
Morris Lavine, reporter convicted of extortion in connection with newspaper articles he helped prepare