Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Spirit of Jefferson and Farmer's Advocate: Charles Town: 1844 Nondaily St. Marys Oracle: St. Marys: Nondaily State Journal: Charleston: 1984 Nondaily NCWV Media Sunday News-Register: Wheeling: Daily Times West Virginian: Fairmont: Daily CNHI [4] Major newspaper Tyler Star News: Sistersville: Nondaily Ogden Newspapers Inc. [26] Wayne County News ...
WJYP (1300 AM) is a sports-formatted broadcast radio station licensed to St. Albans, West Virginia, United States, serving Western Kanawha County, West Virginia and Central Putnam County, West Virginia. WJYP is owned and operated by L.M. Communications, Inc.
Legacy.com is a United States–based website founded in 1998, [2] the world's largest commercial provider of online memorials. [3] The Web site hosts obituaries and memorials for more than 70 percent of all U.S. deaths. [4] Legacy.com hosts obituaries for more than three-quarters of the 100 largest newspapers in the U.S., by circulation. [5]
It took its name after the 1928 merger of the Mineral Daily News and the Keyser Tribune. [4] The Daily News was founded in Keyser in 1912; [1] the other paper had begun as the West Virginia Tribune, published in New Creek, West Virginia, in 1870. [5] Gannett sold the newspaper in 2022 to NCWV Media. [6]
Company insiders had raised concerns about the chemical’s effect on the family’s cows as early as 1991. Still, DuPont let ever-greater quantities of C8 spill into Dry Run. In 1993, after state regulators began asking about the sediment building up on the landfill’s collection ponds, DuPont opened the pond drains, allowing C8-laden sludge ...
Byrd sold the paper in 1912 to associate Max von Schlegell, who sold it to H.C. Ogden in 1923. [ 3 ] The newspaper changed its name in 1913 to The Martinsburg West Va. Evening Journal ; in 1920, to The Martinsburg Journal ; back to The Evening Journal in 1978; to The Morning Journal in 1990; and to its current name in 1993.
St. Albans is a city in western Kanawha County, West Virginia, United States, at the confluence of the Kanawha and Coal rivers. The population was 10,861 at the 2020 census . [ 3 ] It is part of the Charleston metropolitan area .
In the 1960s, the paper (and one of its reporters) were known for the Grafton Monster sighting. [10] In 1975 the Sentinel ceased its daily publication schedule, changed its name to the Mountain Statesman, and moved to the three times a week schedule it uses today. [11] The newspaper was bought by News Media Corporation in the early 1970s. [12]