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Iowa City Press-Citizen – Iowa City; Keokuk Daily Gate City – Keokuk; Le Mars Daily Sentinel – Le Mars; Marshalltown Times Republican – Marshalltown; The Messenger – Fort Dodge; Southeast Iowa Union – Mount Pleasant (was formerly the Fairfield Daily Ledger, Mount Pleasant News and the Washington Evening Journal) Muscatine Journal ...
This is a list of defunct newspapers of the United States.Only notable names among the thousands of such newspapers are listed, primarily major metropolitan dailies which published for ten years or more.
David Wood spent his youth working as a paper boy, marveling at Iowa City's beauty. Last week, he returned for a glimpse into the past. He delivered the local paper at 6.
The Daily Iowan – the student newspaper of the University of Iowa – has purchased two local weekly newspapers, the Mount Vernon Lisbon Sun and the Solon Economist. 2 small Iowa towns faced ...
He was in the newspaper business with The Minot Daily News in Minot, ND and The Argus Leader in Sioux Falls, SD before venturing into newspaper ownership. In 1969, Miller purchased the Cherokee Daily Times, in Cherokee, Iowa. He retired in 1984. From 1985 to 1995, Miller served in the Iowa House of Representatives as a Republican. He died in ...
Lee returned to Iowa to buy his first newspaper in the early 1890s, when he took charge of the Ottumwa Courier. In about 1899, he acquired a controlling interest in the Davenport Times . Lee and his associates purchased the Muscatine Journal in 1903, when John Mahin had reached the age of 70 years and was ready for retirement.
The Iowa Bystander / Iowa State Bystander / Bystander: 1894 [17] 2015: Weekly [17] By far Iowa's longest-lasting African American newspaper, spanning over a century. Founded by "ten prominent black men who had migrated to Iowa during the 1870s." [18] Some issues available online; Des Moines: Inner City Challenger / Challenger: 1981 [13] 1984 ...
The first issue of The Waterloo-Cedar Falls Courier was published on November 22, 1859, by WH Hartman and George Ingersoll. [2] The Courier changed to a daily newspaper in 1890, publishing in the afternoon every day except Saturday.