<P> When it ceased printing on May 16, 2009, the daily circulation was approximately 17,000, down from a high of 60,000 in the 1960s . The Citizen published as Tucson's afternoon paper, six days per week (except Sunday, when only the Arizona Daily Star (Tucson's morning paper during the week) was published as part of the two papers' joint operating agreement). </P> <P> The Tucson Citizen was the oldest continuously published newspaper in Arizona at the time it ceased publication . </P> <P> Founder Richard C. McCormick had originally been the owner of the Arizonan . However, when the editor of the Arizonan refused to support McCormick's re-election as congressional delegate for the territory of Arizona, McCormick took the press and started the Arizona Citizen with Wasson . During the mid-1880s, the newspaper was known as the Tucson Weekly Citizen . Allan Brown Jaynes was owner, manager and editor of the Tucson Citizen between 1901 and 1920 . He was very involved in the statehood of Arizona and is in the Arizona Newspaper Hall of Fame . William A. Small, his wife, and William H. Johnson invested in the newspaper in the late 1930s . Johnson sold his share to Small in 1964, and Small turned control over to his son, William A. Small Jr. in 1966 when he retired . </P> <P> In 1976, the Citizen was sold to Gannett Company, Inc...</P>

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