The Knickerbocker News of Albany, New York was a daily newspaper published from September 4, 1843, in the capital city of New York State until April 15, 1988, when it was merged into a co-owned publication. The founder was Hugh J. Hastings, a young immigrant from County Fermanagh, Ireland, who worked as a reporter for several local newspapers before striking out on his own as a publisher/editor in the newspaper-rich community. He gave his newspaper its name in recognition of the region's deep Dutch heritage. Over the years, Hastings and his successor owners purchased and absorbed numerous competitors, and for decades the publication had the highest daily circulation in New York's Capital Region. What came to be called The Knickerbocker News after it absorbed the competing Albany Evening News was sold to the Gannett Corp. in 1928. Then, in 1960, Gannett sold it to the Hearst Corporation, the same year in which Hearst sold one of its two Rochester, NY, newspapers to Gannett, in effect giving each communications giant a virtual monopoly in the two respective upstate cities. The evening newspaper's last editor was Harry M. Rosenfeld, who had been hired from the editorial staff of The Washington Post by the Hearst Corp. about a year earlier to be editor of that newspaper and its sister publication, the Albany Times Union. William M. Dowd, a veteran writer and editor who had been the associate managing editor of Hearst's Baltimore News American before moving to Albany in February 1977 to oversee The Knickerbocker News' daily operations and wrote an award-winning column that contributed to the publication winning more than 100 journalism awards in its final decade, was its last managing editor. When The Knickerbocker News staff and resources were folded into the Times Union, under corporate orders no layoffs were made, an unusual decision in an industry in which staffing reductions during mergers had become the norm to cut costs. According to The New York Times in 1988, in the paper's circulation "heyday in the 1930s and 1940s" it "was known for aggressive reporting, strong political coverage and a readable style." It continued to be known for those characteristics as shown by its annual harvest of journalism awards until its final days of publication. The Knickerbocker News' circulation peaked at about 71,000 in 1972-73, which made it the largest newspaper at that time in the Capital Region, but had fallen to about 28,000 by the late 1980s. That was a fate that overtook most afternoon newspapers in the United States as major changes in the manufacturing sector resulted in changes in readership cycles by people who had been mainstays of newspaper purchasing before they began working different shifts and sought morning publications.