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Bettye Lee Mastin in her 1795 Lexington home in January 2001, shortly after she retired after more than 50 years as the Herald-Leader’s home writer. Patrick Mitchell, 66
The Herald-Leader was created by a 1983 merger of the Lexington Herald and the Lexington Leader. The story of the Herald begins in 1870 with a paper known as the Lexington Daily Press. In 1895, a descendant of that paper was first published as the Morning Herald, later to be renamed the Lexington Herald in 1905.
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That’s why I’m excited to share big news about a new daily digital product that gets rolled out to Herald-Leader and kentucky.com subscribers today. It’s a new, improved electronic edition ...
Lexington Herald-Leader: Lexington: 1870 Sun–Fri [57] McClatchy Company [58] Originally Lexington Daily Press: Louisville Defender: Louisville: 1933 Weekly Albin H. Bowman Publishing [59] Louisville Eccentric Observer: Louisville: 1990 weekly Aaron Yarmuth Free tabloid paper The Manchester Enterprise: Manchester: 1890 [60] Weekly Nolan Media ...
Much like the rest of Lexington and across Kentucky, the Herald-Leader has been no stranger to change in recent years. We’ve seen the arrival of a new editor, new staff members and even new ...
A vote of 130 sports media members across the state determined the winner of the 43rd annual honor.
Jeffrey A. Marx is an American journalist. In the early 1980s, as a correspondent for the Lexington Herald-Leader, he co-authored a series of exposes on improper cash payoffs to University of Kentucky basketball players which won him and the co-author, Michael M. York, the 1986 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting.