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New York Star (1800s newspaper) New York Star (1948–1949) The New York Sun; New York Sunday News; New York Weekly; New York Weekly Messenger; The New York Weekly Journal; New York World; New York World Journal Tribune; New York World-Telegram; New Yorker Volkszeitung; New-York Gazette; New-York Mirror; New-York Spectator; New-York Tribune ...
The New-York gazette, or, The Weekly post-boy. w., January 1, 1753–March 12, 1759. [2] The New-York gazette, or, The Weekly post-boy. w., May 6, 1762–October 9, 1766. [2] The New-York gazette, or, The Weekly post-boy. w., October 16, 1766–August or September 1773. [2] New-York Gazette, Revived in the Weekly Post-Boy, 1747
The Daily Gazette, from 1902 to 1989 Schenectady Gazette, is an independent, family-owned [2] daily newspaper published in Schenectady, New York. [3] The Daily Gazette also owns and operates The Amsterdam Recorder , The Gloversville Leader-Herald and Your Niskayuna .
Fultonhistory.com (also known as Old Fulton New York Postcards) is an archival historic newspaper website of over 1,000 New York newspapers, along with collections from other states and Canada. As of February 2018, the website had almost 50 million scanned newspaper pages.
Jul. 13—SCHENECTADY — The Daily Gazette announced Tuesday it will acquire The Leader-Herald newspaper of Gloversville. The move will bring a sixth publication into the family of newspapers ...
Its stated mission as embodied in its original constitution was “to promote and encourage original historical research; to disseminate a greater knowledge of the history of the State of New York and particularly of Schenectady County; to gather, preserve, display, and make available for study artifacts, books, manuscripts, papers, photographs and other records and materials relating to the ...
The New York City Municipal Archives preserves and makes available more than 10 million historical vital records (birth, marriage and death certificates) for all five boroughs (Manhattan, Brooklyn, the Bronx, Queens and Staten Island). Researchers have open access to the indexes, and both microfilmed and digital copies of vital records on-site ...
The media in New York's Capital District is part of the Albany-Schenectady-Troy media market, which is the 59th largest in the United States, [1] includes all of the 11 counties of the Capital District, along with Hamilton County, New York, as well as Berkshire County, Massachusetts, and Bennington County, Vermont.