Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Burlington Union: Burlington: Middlesex: ... (Dynamic collection of online news sources about Massachusetts, circa 2008-present) ... (Survey of local news existence ...
The Daily Times Chronicle is a family-owned five-day (Monday through Friday) daily newspaper published in Woburn, Massachusetts, with separate daily editions and associated weekly newspapers covering several towns along Massachusetts Route 128 in eastern Middlesex County. The newspaper was formerly known as the Woburn Daily Times and Reading ...
The original motto of the Burlington Free Press was "Not the glory of Caesar, but the welfare of Rome". The Burlington Free Press became a daily newspaper on April 1, 1848, in response to the invention of the telegraph that brought more up-to-date news to the Burlington area. The first telegraph message was received in Burlington on February 2 ...
The Stoneham Independent's parent company, Woburn Daily Times Inc., also publishes a daily newspaper and two additional weekly newspapers in adjoining towns, and a weekly supplement, Middlesex East. Other Daily Times publications are: The Daily Times Chronicle, a daily serving Burlington, Reading, Wakefield, Winchester and Woburn, Massachusetts.
Newspapers in the West Unit include all four CNC dailies and a few Framingham-area weeklies published "as editions of The MetroWest Daily News." The non-Daily News West weeklies include titles in Boston's western suburbs -- MetroWest-- as well as several in Norfolk County, southwest and south of the city, and a few farther south in Bristol County.
The Burlington Fire Department has a force of 44 firefighters and 16 officers who are commanded by Chief Andrew Connerty. [33] Two engines, one tower, and one BLS and one ALS rescue/ambulance respond from two fire stations and average over 3,200 runs annually. Burlington also operates a hazardous materials/cascade unit and a brush unit.
The newspaper eventually grew to cover the towns of Acton, Boxborough, Maynard and Stow, just west of Concord, Massachusetts. Over time, The Beacon's publishers acquired other weeklies in neighboring towns, including titles as far east as Lexington and Burlington.
Originally a locally owned evening newspaper, the News was purchased by the Harte-Hanks newspaper chain as its first foray into Massachusetts journalism, in 1972. [2]By 1986, the paper sold 49,000 copies daily and 55,000 on Sunday, [3] and also published four Framingham-area weekly newspapers: the Town Crier papers in Sudbury, Wayland and Weston, and the Townsman in Wellesley.