Mankato billionaire Glen Taylor finalized his purchase of the Star Tribune Monday, marking a new era for Minnesota's largest news organization.
The media company will once again be owned outright by a Minnesotan, 16 years after the Cowles family sold it to one of the nation's largest newspaper chains.
The Star Tribune joins Taylor's vast holdings of more than 80 businesses worldwide, including the Minnesota Timberwolves, the WNBA's Minnesota Lynx, and dozens of companies in printing and other industries.
"The Star Tribune is not only a good business, it's an important institution for all Minnesotans," Taylor said. "Our state and the region benefit from the presence here of a strong journalistic enterprise."
Terms were not disclosed, but Taylor has put the price near $100 million. He will personally own 100 percent of the Star Tribune; it will not be under the Taylor Corp. umbrella.
Taylor, 73, has said he will not take a managing role, though he will appoint his daughter Jean Taylor to the board of directors. The company's current management, including Publisher Michael Klingensmith, will remain in place. Taylor plans to meet with employees on Tuesday.
"It is the company coming full circle back to the days of private Minnesota family ownership," Klingensmith said Monday.
The sale is a pivotal moment for the Star Tribune, which emerged from bankruptcy in 2009 with the challenge of reinventing itself for a digital news audience while also publishing a compelling print edition. Since then, the company has expanded its digital and print readership and stabilized its finances. The newspaper won two Pulitzer Prizes in 2013 and holds the seventh-largest Sunday circulation in the nation.