Somerset —
SOMERSET — A fourth generation newspaperman has been named publisher of the Commonwealth Journal.
Rob McCullough, 50, who started working in a newspaper mailroom when he was 15, officially assumes his duties today. He succeeds Jack McNeely who has accepted a position with the Daily Mountain Eagle in Jasper, Alabama.
McCullough is a native of eastern Kentucky and moves here from the publisher position at the Corbin Times-Tribune.
“It’s always exciting when you can promote people from within the organization,” said Eddie Blakeley, senior vice president and division manager for Community Newspaper Holdings Inc., the corporation that owns both the Commonwealth Journal and the Times-Tribune.
“Rob brings a great deal of experience to this role and I am confident he and the excellent staff we have in place will continue to do good things not only for the Commonwealth Journal, but for the communities it serves.”
McCullough will also serve as group publisher overseeing both of the Commonwealth Journal’s sister publications, the Wayne County Outlook and the McCreary County Record.
Blakeley announced McCullough’s appointment as the new publisher and introduced him to department heads in late January.
“I am confident the community will find Rob to be a strong advocate for the market and will continue to improve on our commitment to bring the best in local news and information content that affects the wants and needs of the communities we serve,” Blakeley said.
“Rob is very fortunate to be surrounded by a staff of professional, hardworking employees who have a passion and a commitment to the communities we serve.”
McCullough said he plans to relocate to Pulaski County in the next couple of weeks.
“I am looking forward to moving to Pulaski County and becoming active in the community,” Rob McCullough, an active Rotarian, said.
Prior to his promotion as publisher of the Times-Tribune. McCullough served as publisher of the Morehead News Group for about five years.
The Morehead News Group, also owned by Community Newspaper Holdings Inc., publishes the twice-weekly Morehead News as well as The Olive Hill Times and Grayson Journal Enquirer, both weeklies. And before joining the Morehead News Group, McCullough worked in management at the Daily Independent based in Ashland, Ky.
The Daily Independent is close to McCullough’s heart—it was founded by his great-grandfather in the late 1800s. The Daily Independent’s leadership was passed along to both McCullough’s grandfather and father. McCullough entered management at that newspaper after graduating from Transylvania University with a bachelor’s degree in business.
Although McCullough said he considered entering another field while a university student, he ultimately opted for the newspaper industry.
“It’s my family’s thing,” McCullough said.
The Daily Independent remained under family ownership until it was sold in 1979. Like all the newspapers where McCullough has worked, it is currently owned by Community Newspaper Holdings Inc.
McCullough is the farther of three children.
“Jack [McNeely] built a solid foundation and I am confident Rob will continue to build upon Jack’s success,” Blakeley said. “Part of building upon that success will be expanding how the Commonwealth Journal utilizes multimedia technology to help deliver news to readers.”
“Since 1895, the Commonwealth Journal and its predecessors, the Commonwealth and the Somerset Journal, have provided readers and advertisers with a product that meets their wants and needs. Under Rob’s leadership, we intend to continue and improve upon that tradition for many years to come.”
Homepage
Newspaper veteran name Publisher of Commonwealth Journal
Kentucky native Rob McCullough brings years of experience
- Local News
-
Emergency personnel work to free Treavor Denney, 19, of Somerset, from his Chevy S-10 after a two-vehicle crash last night on Ky. 914 at Slate Branch Road. Somerset Police said Denney’s truck was traveling east bound when a Chevy Silverado, operated by Jeremy Reynolds, 30, of Somerset, pulled into his path attempting to make a left-hand turn onto Slate Branch. Denney was airlifted to UK Medical Center with head injuries, according to Somerset Police.
- Local Sports
-
On hand for Somerset High School senior Trevor Herd’s signing to Union College were, front row from left, Courtney Herd-Shadoan, Hobert Herd, Trevor Herd, Faye Herd and Roxie Meece; back row from left, Steve Wallace, Brian Blankenship, Emory York, Stephanie Herd (holding Madelyn Herd) and Tyler Brock.
-
Trevor Herd signs with Union College
During his four years on the Somerset High School soccer team, Trevor Herd scored 50 goals and notched 13 assists. During his junior year, Herd scored 27 goals in 21 matches, which earned him Commonwealth Journal's All-County Player of the Year. Despite being riddled by injuries during his senior campaign, Herd still scored nine goals, had five assists, and was named to both All-District and All-Tournament Teams throughout his career.
And while Herd’s injuries were serious enough to end his future as a soccer player at the next level, the talented Somerset High School senior set his mind on continuing to play and recently signed to play at the next level for Union College. - Lady Warriors win 7th straight crown
-
Trevor Herd signs with Union College
- Features
-
Tailrace at Wolf Creek Dam is one of the most popular trout fishing spots in Kentucky. With the spring fishing season in full swing, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers warns that waters immediately downriver from a dam can be dangerous. Last summer, sudden opening of a sluice gate overturned a boat, and a man and woman had to be fished out of this pool below the dam. The waters are stocked with trout from the Wolf Creek National Fish Hatchery located just northwest of the dam.
-
Water Hazard
Money is in the federal budget for continued normal operation of the Wolf Creek National Fish Hatchery and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers has issued safety guidelines for hundreds of fishermen who enjoy trout fishing in the Cumberland River below Wolf Creek Dam.
James Gray, project leader for the hatchery, said there have been no recent accidents below the dam. However, last summer, sudden opening of a sluice gate overturned a boat and a man and woman had to be fished out of the water, he said.
Fishing from the bank and from boats is highly popular immediately below Wolf Creek Dam. The often turbulent waters are teeming with rainbow trout stocked from the nearby hatchery.
Continued operation of the nearby trout hatchery was in doubt last year because $6.3 million to operate the facility at Wolf Creek and eight other national fish hatcheries was left out of the FY12 budget. The money has since been restored, Gray noted.
The hatchery at Wolf Creek produces 1 million trout each year with an annual budget of $907,000. “We’re operating normally,” said Gray. -
Historic Masonic building gets well-deserved facelift
The large crane reaching to the top of the Masonic Building downtown is lifting workmen this week as they repoint bricks on the west side of one of the oldest structures in Somerset.
Bricks and mortar on the face of the Masonic Building reportedly are more than 120 years old. The building at 104 North Main Street just north of the courthouse was renovated or rebuilt about 1890 when it was purchased by Somerset Masonic Lodge No. 111.
There are conflicting memories whether an old hotel building, called the National Hotel, was torn down and the existing Masonic structure was built at the site, or whether the building, reportedly in bad state of repair, was renovated by the Masons. Herb Stone, a Somerset plumber who took care of the building for 40 years, said the original building definitely was renovated.
-
E'town execs offer hints to help resurrect Virginia Cinema
Like a slow-moving film plot, progress on the long-defunct Virginia Cinema seems to drag. Like the quest of any movie hero, the road to renovation is filled with obstacles and potential pitfalls.
But film-lovers know that the cavalry always rides in to save the day ... and local officials are hoping to find a little extra help from out of town as well.
The offices of the Downtown Somerset Development Corporation hosted a couple of special visitors on Wednesday: Emily West and Heath Seymour from Elizabethtown, Ky.
Apropos to their town’s on-screen heritage (given the 2005 movie “Elizabethtown,” based on the western Kentucky community), the two were on hand to help share their own experiences renovating a deserted movie theater and turning it into something citizens can be proud of — the same thing Gib Gosser, executive director of the Downtown Somerset Development Corporation (DSDC), hopes can be done with the Virginia Cinema on East Mt. Vernon Street.
“The Virginia Cinema project has really been floundering over the last six or seven years,” said Gosser. “We’ve been trying to get it off the ground and there’s not been much progress.”
Enter West and Seymour. West is the executive director of the State Theater in Elizabethtown — its version of the Virginia Cinema, a grand old movie house that had fallen into disrepair after it closed in the early 1980s — and Seymour is Elizabethtown’s counterpart to Gosser, as executive director at Elizabethtown Hardin County Heritage Council. -
Unearthing History
“It’s a little curious.”
Martin Shearer, executive director of the Somerset-Pulaski County Development Foundation, was talking about apparent tunnels and walkways beneath the ground where the former Ferguson Shops were located. The development foundation, current owner, is preparing the land for possible industrial sites on property vacated by Crane Company in 2006.
“To rehabilitate the area, we’ve got to find out what’s below,” said Shearer. Both he and Mark Bastin, assistant executive director, admit to be completedly confounded by the unexpected, man-made cavities beneath the surface. -
Oasis Cafe opens at Eagle Heights
Officials and well-wishers gathered Saturday morning to celebrate the grand opening of the Oasis Cafe with a ribbon cutting. The cafe, located on 115 Jordan’s Way off Ky. 914 and near Eagle Heights Church, is a full service restaurant with a lunch a dinner menu. Cafe will become the “Hope Kitchen” Monday through Saturday between 1 p.m. and 3 p.m. and will serve free meals to those in need. The Oasis Cafe is located at the same campus at the Oasis Care Center and Thrift Store.
-
Water Hazard


