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As the Greenfield area's only newspaper of record, The Recorder is the primary source of local news in Franklin County. [2] Originally published in 1792, the paper is one of the oldest daily newspapers in the United States, and the second oldest daily in Massachusetts after the Daily Hampshire Gazette. [3] [4]
Kehler was born on July 16, 1944, in Bronxville, New York, the second of four children, and was raised in Scarsdale. [2] His father, a lifelong Republican, was an executive with the Arnold Baking Company, and his mother was a homemaker.
The Recorder: Greenfield: Franklin: Daily: 11,253: Newspapers of New England Inc. ... (Dynamic collection of online news sources about Massachusetts, circa 2008-present)
Under the leadership of publisher Minnie Dwight and her son, William, the T-T in 1955 bought The Recorder-Gazette of Greenfield, Massachusetts. Minnie died two years later, and William bought the Monitor in 1961. [1] In 1960, the T-T bought the Edwardsville Intelligencer in Illinois; the paper was sold in 1964. [2]
First published September 6, 1786—with a news item about Shays' Rebellion—the Gazette is one of oldest newspapers in the country, [5] and had been owned by the DeRose family since 1929 before being sold for an undisclosed amount of money in 2005. The paper was sold to Newspapers of New England, said then-publisher and co-owner Peter L ...
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In 1955 he bought and became co-publisher of the Greenfield Recorder-Gazette. His later purchases of the Concord Monitor and Valley News in New Hampshire would lead to the establishment of Newspapers of New England, the company that eventually decided to close the T-T. [10]
Jillette was born in Greenfield, Massachusetts. His mother, Valda Rudolph Jillette (née Parks; 1909–2000), [2] was a secretary, and his father, Samuel Herbert Jillette (1912–1999), [2] worked at Greenfield's Franklin County Jail. [3] [4] [5] Jillette became an atheist in his early teens after reading the Bible.