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The Boston Globe (Rhode Island) of Boston, owned by Boston Globe Media Partners, via their Providence-based bureau, covering all of Rhode Island; The Brown Daily Herald of Providence, owned independently, covering Brown University; The Call of Woonsocket, owned by RISN Operations, covering northern Providence County
Legacy.com is a privately held company based in Chicago, Illinois, [1] with more than 1,500 newspaper affiliates in North America, Europe and Australia, [4] [8] [9] including The New York Times, The Boston Globe, Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, Los Angeles Times and Manchester Evening News. [10]
The Boston Globe, also known locally as the Globe, is an American daily newspaper founded and based in Boston, Massachusetts. The newspaper has won a total of 27 Pulitzer Prizes . [ 4 ] The Boston Globe is the oldest and largest daily newspaper in Boston and tenth-largest newspaper by print circulation in the nation as of 2023.
G. Ogden Nutting, whose 2006 investment in the Pittsburgh Pirates led to his son taking control 11 years later and who helped grow his family’s newspaper business to more than 50 daily ...
Boston Chronicle (1915–1966 newspaper) The Boston Courant; Boston Courier; Boston Daily Advertiser; Boston Evening Transcript; Boston Evening Traveller; Boston Gazette; The Boston Globe; Boston Herald; Boston Investigator; The Boston Journal; The Boston News-Letter; Boston Patriot (newspaper) Boston Post-Boy; The Boston Post; The Boston ...
In October 1984, two Ogden newspapers (The Intelligencer and The Evening Journal) dropped the Doonesbury comic strip because they objected to Doonesbury's coverage of Ronald Reagan. [5] On January 30, 2018, it emerged that the company was the apparent high bid to purchase the bankrupt Charleston Gazette-Mail. [6] It withdrew the bid on March 8 ...
Paul W. Conley in the Boston Globe, December 15, 1941 Paul W. Conley in 1942. Paul Winthrop Conley (November 18, 1917 – November 9, 1978) was an amateur boxing champion, a member of the "famed South Boston fighting family" [1] International Longshoremen’s Association District Council official and a beloved local figure in South Boston, Massachusetts.
In its heyday, from the late 1800s to the early 1940s, the area was home to many of Boston's newspapers. As Boston Globe historian Thomas F. Mulvoy Jr. explains, "In the pre-radio era, newspapers along the Row, which began at Milk Street and wound its way down to the Old State House about 200 yards away, spread the news not only in their broadsheet pages but also on blackboards and bulletin ...