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Old Original Bookbinder's was a seafood restaurant at 125 Walnut Street in Philadelphia.It was known for its lobsters and its Bookbinder's soup.. The restaurant was decorated with bas-reliefs of U.S. Presidents on its stained-glass façade and the Gettysburg Address written in bronze near the front door.
Alexander's Express Messenger (Philadelphia) (1844–1846) [11] All-day City Item (Philadelphia) (1872–1875) [12] Alleghanian (Ebensburg) (1859–1865) [13] Allegheny Mountain Echo and Johnstown Commercial Advertiser and Intelligencer (Johnstown) (1853–1861) [14] Allentown Chronicle and News and Evening Item (1921–1923) [15]
In July 2012, after selling the Inquirer Building in 2011, the Daily News along with The Inquirer and Philly.com moved their offices to the 3rd floor of the old Strawbridge & Clothier department store on East Market Street. [9] In 2019, Philadelphia Media Network renamed Philly.com Inquirer.com and made the Daily News an edition of the Inquirer ...
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The Bulletin billed itself as "Philadelphia's Family Newspaper" and had a conservative editorial focus. The Bulletin circulated to approximately 10,000 households in Center City, Philadelphia, as well as upwards of 86,000 households in Bucks, Chester, eastern Montgomery, Delaware County, and the Main Line. In June 2009, the paper suspended ...
Philadelphia: Philadelphia New Observer / Philadelphia Observer: 1976 [24] current: Weekly [24] ISSN 0890-8435; LCCN sn8602567, sn94093032; OCLC 14552816, 33390581; Official site; Philadelphia: North Philly Free Press: 1982 [25] 1983 [25] Monthly [25] ISSN 2642-9888; LCCN 2013254349; OCLC 664611332; Philadelphia: Odd Fellows’ Journal: 1897 ...
Christopher James Perry Sr. (September 11, 1854 – May 15, 1921) [5] was an African American journalist and the founder of The Philadelphia Tribune (formerly The Tribune). Perry began writing for local Philadelphia newspapers such as the Sunday Mercury. [6] However, in 1884, the Sunday Mercury went bankrupt and Perry was without a job. [7]
Wearing blue hard hats, white hazmat suits and respirator masks, workers carted away bags of debris on a recent morning from a sprawling and now-defunct oil refinery once operated by Philadelphia ...