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The paper's website, insidenova.com, was acquired by another media group, Northern Virginia Media Services, publisher of Prince William Today, one of two weekly papers (the Prince William Times is the other) that launched in January 2013 following the closure of the News & Messenger.
The team sought a better ballpark for at least twenty years. When Prince William County officials rejected a 1998 proposal for a $150 million sports and entertainment complex on the Cherry Hill Peninsula by the Potomac River, team owner Art Silber changed the team name from Prince William Cannons to Potomac Cannons and announced an effort to move to Fairfax County. [3]
Hopewell Herald–Prince George Post: Hopewell: 2018 Twice weekly GateHouse Media: Independent-Messenger [8] Emporia 1893 Weekly Womack Publishing Co. Inc. [2] El Imparcial: Manassas: Weekly Spanish language newspaper Inside Business [5] Norfolk: Weekly Paxton Media Group: Business newspaper InsideNoVa/Prince William: Prince William County Weekly
Culpeper Times is a newspaper in Culpeper, Virginia, covering local news, sports, business and community.It was founded in 1889. The newspaper is a weekly, with a circulation of 5,000 copies It is owned by Rappahannock Media LLC, which purchased it in July 2014 from Virginia Media Group. [1]
The stadium was originally known as Davis Ford Park before being renamed Prince William County Stadium in 1986 and then G. Richard Pfitzner Stadium in 1996. [ 9 ] [ 10 ] On May 3, 2018, the Potomac Nationals announced that as part of a sponsorship deal with Northwest Federal Credit Union , the stadium would be renamed Northwest Federal Field at ...
Prince William Forest Park was established as Chopawamsic Recreational Demonstration Area in 1936 and is located in eastern Prince William County. This is the largest protected natural area in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan region at over 15,000 acres (6,070 ha).
Prince William County Public Schools (PWCS) is a school division in Virginia with its headquarters in the Kelly Leadership Center located in the unincorporated community of Independent Hill in Prince William County, Virginia. [1] As of the 2020 census, the population of the county was 486,943. [7]
Osbourn Park serves the mid-part of the county. Osbourn Park has also been designated as Prince William County's The Center for Biotechnology and Engineering and houses two other unique programs: Allied Health and NJROTC. It has at various times had a student population ranging from 1900 to 3200, but it is currently around 2500 grades 9-12.