Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Patriot Ledger moved from its longtime editorial and business office location in downtown Quincy to the Crown Colony Office Park in South Quincy in 1988, then moved to 2 Adams Place on the Quincy-Braintree line. The newspaper was sold in 1997 to Newspaper Media LLC, which also owned The Enterprise in Brockton. It was bought by GateHouse ...
South Boston Online: Boston: Suffolk: Weekly: South Boston Inc. Covers South Boston and Seaport District South End News: Boston: Suffolk: Weekly: South End News Inc. Covers South End and Boston Southbridge News: Southbridge: Worcester: Daily: Stonebridge Press Southwick-Suffield News: Southwick: Hampden: Non-daily: Also covers Suffield ...
Lend a Hand is The Patriot Ledger's annual holiday charitable program and has raised more than $3.3 million for South Shore people in need. Susan, a disabled Quincy resident, needs to move but ...
The Bertrand and the Fraser families, of West Quincy, have held on to their homes in Quincy and Duxbury for up to 74 years. Now one is selling. How 2 South Shore families, including one with 13 ...
The Patriot Ledger March 15, 2024 at 5:34 AM QUINCY − North Quincy High School sophomore Anna Li won the grand prize at the Region V Science and Engineering Fair at Bridgewater State University.
Quincy is the location of the corporate headquarters of several firms, including Boston Financial Data Services, [64] the Stop & Shop supermarket chain, [65] Arbella Insurance Group [66] and The Patriot Ledger, the publisher of the South Shore's largest regional newspaper.
What the state allocated to South Shore school districts in fiscal 2023 South Shore school districts received $527,142 in fiscal 2023, with Kingston receiving $218,400; Plymouth, $217,360; and ...
The Massachusetts Office of Coastal Zone Management limits its definition of the South Shore to the municipalities between Boston Harbor and Cape Cod, which includes Atlantic coastal and coastal watershed areas "from the three-mile (5 km) limit of the state territorial sea to 100 feet (30 m) beyond the first major land transportation route encountered (a road, highway, rail line, etc.)". [4]