Spinnaker History
History
1974
Spinnaker Media started on Jan. 9, 1974, with the birth of the campus' first newspaper, The Halyard. Professor William Roach, who helped establish UNF's Communications Department, also initiated the school's first newspaper. A veteran of U.S. Naval combat in World War II, Roach suggested the name Halyard, which is the line on a ship that carries signal flags. It fit the nautical theme of the university.
In its 2 1/2 years of existence, The Halyard earned national recognition from the Associated Collegiate Press in the form of a First Class award.
Besides working at daily newspapers as a reporter, columnist and editor, Roach had been a faculty member around the country. He embraced what technology could do for journalism and proposed that the Halyard and 海角社区become only the fourth college program to use a computer — in 1974.
1976
The Halyard stopped printing July 6, after a dispute with the Student Government Association. The paper operated with funds from the Activity and Service fees, and the Educational and General funds. The SGA, unhappy with the newspaper, cut The Halyard's budget during work on the following year's A&S fee allocation. It also tried to control the paper by changing the composition of The Halyard's publications committee.
University President Thomas Carpenter responded, "This campus will have a free newspaper or no newspaper." With $10,500, Carpenter underwrote an interim laboratory newspaper ("The Phoenix") for educational purposes from Aug. 16 through the following March 7.
1977
1993
1995
2000
2001
2011
Spinnaker Digital and Spinnaker Business spun-off from the newspaper to become their own departments. At the same time, the board and new leaders of the Center for Student Media departments agreed to converge the news-gathering operations.
In the past, the newspaper, TV station and website each had their own reporters who sometimes covered the same event. After conducting research and making site visits to area media outlets, the board and leaders opted for a hub-and-spokes model in which a reporter gathers news in multimedia formats for all of the departments to use.
2012
2013
2015
2021
Archives
Many digital editions of The Halyard, The Phoenix, and The Spinnaker can be found in the Thomas G. Carpenter Library's Special Collections and University Archives.