Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The paper would remain connected with the Simmons family until 1995. In 1995, the Herald was bought from the Simmons family by the group owning the Jackson Star. The paper was folded into a holding company called Jackson Newspapers, but continued to publish as a separate entity. [9] In 2022, Gannett sold the newspaper to NCWV Media. [10]
Wayne County News: Wayne: Daily Weirton Daily Times: Weirton: Daily Ogden Newspapers Inc. [26] Welch News: Welch: Nondaily West Virginia Daily News: Lewisburg: Daily Weston Democrat: Weston: 1868 Weekly NCWV Media West Virginia Queer News: Parkersburg: Daily Wetzel Chronicle: New Martinsville: Nondaily Ogden Newspapers Inc. [26] Wheeling News ...
Jackson County sent several delegates to the Wheeling Convention, but Roane County sent none. Daniel E. Frost of Ravenswood, editor of the county's first newspaper [12] and who had represented both counties in the Virginia House of Delegates, became the delegate for both counties. Fellow delegates also elected him the Speaker of the Restored ...
Scott County Times [22] Simpson County News [23] Tate Record [24] The Carroll County Conservative [25] The Choctaw Plaindealer [26] The Columbian Progress [27] The Enterprise-Tocsin [28] The Kosciusko Star-Herald [29] The Northside Sun [30] The Pine Belt News [31] The Winona Times [25] The Winston County Journal [26] The Yazoo Herald [32 ...
The paper began as the Forest News, founded in 1875, published by the Jackson County Publishing Company. It was renamed to the Jackson Herald in 1886. [3] In 1891 The Jackson Herald was sold to J.J. Holder for $3000; the old ownership had been "somewhat unfriendly" to the Farmers' Alliance, the new ownership was expected to be friendly towards the Alliance.
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
In 2013, HD Media purchased The Herald-Dispatch from Champion Industries. [1] The Herald-Dispatch was founded in 1909 when two Huntington newspapers, the Herald and the Dispatch, merged.[3] In 1927, the newspaper became a part of the Huntington Publishing Company, operated by Joseph Harvey Long, the owner of the Huntington Advertiser.
Meanwhile, although Frost's Unionist friend Andrew Flesher restarted a newspaper in Ravenswood (and sold it after about a year), Jackson County's next multi-year newspaper would be the Jackson Democrat, beginning in Ripley in 1864 (the year President Lincoln received 670 votes in the county, compared to 190 for McClellan) and replaced by the ...