When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Paperboy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paperboy

    Paperboy. A paperboy is someone – often an older child or adolescent – who distributes printed newspapers to homes or offices on a regular route, usually by bicycle or automobile. In Western nations during the heyday of print newspapers during the early 20th century, this was often a young person's first job, perhaps undertaken before or ...

  3. Newspaper hawker - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newspaper_hawker

    Newspaper hawker. A newspaper hawker, newsboy or newsie is a street vendor of newspapers without a fixed newsstand. Related jobs included paperboy, delivering newspapers to subscribers, and news butcher, selling papers on trains. Adults who sold newspapers from fixed newsstands were called newsdealers, and are not covered here.

  4. Newspaper Carrier Day - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Newspaper_Carrier_Day

    It "honors Barney Flaherty, the first newspaper carrier (or paperboy) hired in 1833, as well as all current newspaper carriers." It is celebrated on September 4, the anniversary of Flaherty's hiring by Benjamin Day , publisher of the New York Sun .

  5. History of American newspapers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_American_newspapers

    History of American newspapers. The history of American newspapers begins in the early 18th century with the publication of the first colonial newspapers. American newspapers began as modest affairs—a sideline for printers. They became a political force in the campaign for American independence. Following independence the first amendment to U ...

  6. History of newspaper publishing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_newspaper...

    History of newspaper publishing. The modern newspaper is a European invention. [1] The oldest direct handwritten news sheets circulated widely in Venice as early as 1566. These weekly news sheets were full of information on wars and politics in Italy and Europe. The first printed newspapers were published weekly in Germany from 1605.

  7. Benjamin Henry Day - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Henry_Day

    The American newspaper business as we know it was born on September 3, 1833, when a twenty-three-year-old publisher named Benjamin Day put out the first edition of the New York Sun. Whereas other papers sold for five or six cents, the Sun cost just a penny. For revenue, Day relied on advertising rather than on subscriptions. Above all, he ...

  8. Sholes and Glidden typewriter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sholes_and_Glidden_typewriter

    The Sholes and Glidden typewriter (also known as the Remington No. 1) was the first commercially successful typewriter. Principally designed by the American inventor Christopher Latham Sholes, it was developed with the assistance of fellow printer Samuel W. Soule and amateur mechanic Carlos S. Glidden. Work began in 1867, but Soule left the ...

  9. Benjamin Lundy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Lundy

    Benjamin Lundy (January 4, 1789 – August 22, 1839) was an American Quaker abolitionist from New Jersey of the United States who established several anti-slavery newspapers and traveled widely. He lectured and published seeking to limit slavery 's expansion and tried to find a place outside the United States to establish a colony in which ...