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The Kennebec Journal (KJ) is a six-day morning daily newspaper published in Augusta, Maine. It covers Augusta and the surrounding capital area, as well as southern Kennebec County . In August 2023, the newspaper was acquired by the Maine Trust for Local News, [ 2 ] a non-profit newspaper group that also publishes the state's largest newspaper ...
Midcoast Villager – formed by the merger of the Courier Gazette, Camden Herald, Free Press, Republican-Journal, and villagesoup.com. Mount Desert Islander – Bar Harbor, published once a week on Thursdays; The Northern Forecaster – published weekly alongside The Portland Forecaster, The Mid-Coast Forecaster and The Southern Forecaster
^ "3000 Immigrants Due at Portland for November Quota," The Daily Kennebec Journal, October 30, 1923 ^ "25 Years Ago Today," Portland Press Herald, November 5, 1948 ^ "Immigration Head Loud in Praise of Pier at Portland," The Daily Kennebec Journal, November 28, 1923 ^ ibid, The Daily Kennebec Journal, November 28, 1923
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The Mining Journal (1841) The Plain Dealer (1842) Boston Herald (1846) The Chicago Tribune (1847) The Daily Standard (Celina, Ohio, 1848) Taunton Daily Gazette (1848) [8] The Santa Fe New Mexican (1849, the oldest continuously published newspaper in the Southwestern and Western United States) Deseret News (1850) [9] Placerville Mountain ...
While still in his mid-teens he began work as a printer for the Gardiner, Maine Home Journal. At the age of 17 he became state editor of The Daily Kennebec Journal of Augusta, Maine . His career took him briefly to Chicago , Los Angeles and then in 1888 to Seattle, where he arrived November 6, 1888 and promptly became a printer at the Seattle ...
The replacement of the copper was completed October 1, with some minor work lasting until November. Legislative leaders placed a time capsule in the dome, containing a book of Maine laws, a legislative handbook, the September 30 issue of the Kennebec Journal, some of the old copper, and personal items from the legislators. [7]
At the time of his death, Seattle magazine The Town Crier wrote that "he was an editor whose personality pervaded the medium which he controlled." [9]After his death in Seattle, the newspaper stayed in the family: Alden J. Blethen (1896–1915); Clarance Brettun Blethen (1915–1941); William Kingsley Blethen (1949–1967); John Alden "Jack" Blethen (1967–1982); [10] Frank A. Blethen (1945 ...