Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The Winston-Salem Journal, started by Charles Landon Knight, began publishing in the afternoons on April 3, 1897. The area's other newspaper, the Twin City Sentinel , also was an afternoon paper. Knight moved out of the area and the Journal had several owners before publisher D.A. Fawcett made it a morning paper starting January 2, 1902.
The Twin-City Sentinel was the name of the afternoon newspaper published in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. The Sentinel ' s masthead was dropped in 1985 when operations were absorbed into its sister paper, the morning Winston-Salem Journal. Twin City derived from the fact that Winston and Salem began as separate cities.
The first such newspaper in North Carolina was the Journal of Freedom of Raleigh, which published its first issue on September 30, 1865. [1] The African American press in North Carolina has historically been centered on a few large cities such as Raleigh, Durham, and Greensboro.
News Argus, The Winston-Salem Forsyth 1962 Winston-Salem State University [60] Niner Times, The Charlotte Mecklenburg 1946 University of North Carolina at Charlotte [FB 3] Old Gold & Black: Winston-Salem: Forsyth: 1916 Weekly (Thurs.) Wake Forest University [61] Pen, The Raleigh Wake St. Augustine's University [62] Pendulum, The Elon: Alamance ...
Times News (Harry J. Wible, pub.; 1961−1988) – Mt. Pulaski [68] ... Illinois Newspaper Project; Newspapers of the Chicago metropolitan area; Comprehensive.
Illinois' first African American newspaper was the Cairo Weekly Gazette, established in 1862. [1] The first in Chicago was The Chicago Conservator , established in 1878. An estimated 190 Black newspapers had been founded in Illinois by 1975, [ 2 ] and more have continued to be established in the decades since.
Winston-Salem, NC Raleigh, NC Charlotte, NC: Circulation: 17,683 Research Triangle 17,663 Piedmont ... is a Spanish-language newspaper circulated in North Carolina ...
In 2005, Hollinger merged the 80-year-old Lerner Newspapers chain into Pioneer Press, Pioneer's first real inroads into the city of Chicago. Despite announcements by Publisher Larry Green that Pioneer intended to "grow" the Lerner Papers, over the course of the next six months, Pioneer dumped the venerable Lerner name, shut down most of its editions and laid off most of its employees.