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The Greenville News started off as a four-page publication in 1874 by A.M. Speights. For a one-year subscription, the cost was eight dollars. After five different owners and many editors, the Peace family under the leadership of Bony Hampton Peace bought the paper in 1919 from Ellison Adger Smyth, around the same time that Greenville was becoming known as "The Textile Center of the South."
NewspaperCat: Catalog of Digital Historical Newspapers. Gainesville. "Kentucky". N-Net: the Newspaper Network on the World Wide Web. Archived from the original on February 15, 1997. "Kentucky Newspapers". AJR News Link. American Journalism Review. Archived from the original on March 2, 2000. "United States: Kentucky". NewsDirectory.com.
The family enterprise started with one newspaper, the Greenville Daily News, and by 1971, the company owned morning and afternoon newspapers in Asheville, N.C., and Montgomery, Ala. The family had ...
He purchased a used Hoe press, rented a building on West Washington Street, and, in spring 1874, began publishing the 4-page, 6-day-a-week “Greenville Daily News,” the forerunner to today's ...
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For 150 years, The Greenville News has reported stories of our community and the people who give life to the area. Here is an overview of 1874 to 1924. From the archives: What was Greenville like ...
WKYA (105.5 FM) is a radio station licensed to Greenville, Kentucky, United States. The station is currently owned by Radio Active Media, Inc. [ 2 ] and broadcasts an oldies format. The station's studio (shared with sister station WNES and its translator W284AO) and transmitter is located on Everly Brothers Boulevard ( U.S. Highway 62 ) near ...
They founded the paper in a part of their mothers' school house with equipment they bought from another paper they had worked for, The Greenville Express. It became known and published daily as The Reflector on Dec. 10, 1894. The Daily Reflector was purchased by Cox Newspapers in 1996.