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It was then titled The Shrewsbury Chronicle, or Wood's British Commercial Pamphlet [6] and eight pages long. [5] Following Wood's death in 1801, his widow Mary (nee Horlick) carried on the paper until her own death in 1808, making her "one of the earliest, if not the earliest, of women newspaper proprietors". [7] [8]
Shrewsbury Chronicle: Shrewsbury: Worcester: Weekly: New Media Investment Group: The Shoestring Western Massachusetts Hampshire Daily The Somerville Times: Somerville Middlesex Weekly Prospect Hill Publishing Corp. The Somerville/Medford News Weekly Somerville, Medford Middlesex Weekly South Boston Online: Boston: Suffolk: Weekly: South Boston Inc.
SHREWSBURY — On Feb. 22, 1974, Eileen Ferro was brutally stabbed to death in her Ladyslipper Drive home. ... Ferro was one of about a half dozen women stabbed to death in Central Massachusetts ...
Shrewsbury (/ˈʃruzberi/ SHROOZ-bury) is a town in Worcester County, Massachusetts, United States. The population was 38,325 according to the 2020 United States Census, in nearly 15,000 households. [1] Incorporated in 1727, Shrewsbury prospered in the 19th century due to its proximity to Worcester, and from visitors to Lake Quinsigamond.
This is a list of at least 351 people executed in Massachusetts, United States. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Capital punishment in Massachusetts was ruled unconstitutional and effectively abolished in 1984. [ 3 ]
On February 4, 2021, 23-year-old American woman Sandra Birchmore (May 13, 1997 [citation needed] – February 1, 2021) was found dead in her Canton, Massachusetts apartment. . Her death was initially ruled as a suicide by asphyxia; however, federal authorities later determined that her death was a homicide, with a local police officer alleged to have killed h
Robert Cadman or Robert Kidman [1] (1711–2 February 1739) was an 18th-century steeplejack and ropeslider [1] [2] who between 1732 and 1739 performed feats of daring, ultimately by sliding or flying down a rope from St Mary's Church, Shrewsbury to the Gay Meadow across the River Severn.
In Shrewsbury public life he was a member of the Shrewsbury Schools Board from 1898, [2] and later Vice-Chairman of the Shrewsbury Education Committee which superseded the board in 1902. He was until his death member of the Shrewsbury Free Library Committee and the council of the Shropshire Archaeological Society. [3]