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Kentucky Post: Northern Kentucky: 2007 ceased operation 31 December 2007 [101] Louisville Anzeiger: Louisville 1849 [19] 1938 German-language Louisville Herald: Louisville 1869 [19] Merged with Louisville Post in 1925 to form Herald-Post: Louisville Herald-Post: Louisville 1925 1936 Louisville Times: Louisville 1884 [102] 1987 [103] The ...
Robert Francis Stephens Jr. was born August 26, 1928, in Covington, Kentucky, to Robert Francis and his first wife, Helen Macke. [1] He was the only child of this marriage, which ended in divorce, but his father would marry twice more, and each marriage brought Stephens a step-sibling. [1]
The Herald-Post was created in 1925 from the merging of the old Louisville Herald and Louisville Post newspapers. Louisville financier James Buckner Brown (1872–1940) [1] sought to operate the paper as a counter to the positions of the Bingham newspapers the Louisville Times and the Courier-Journal.
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 ...
The Post was known throughout its history for investigative journalism and focus on local coverage, [5] [6] characteristics common to Scripps papers. As one of the first successful penny presses outside the East Coast, [7] the Post was written primarily for blue collar laborers who had no time to read a newspaper in the morning.
On September 8, 2006, the Kentucky Governor's Office of Local Development announced a grant of $23,863.00, to be combined with $44,000.00 from the City of Covington, $22,000.00 from the Kenton County Fiscal Court and $5,500.00 from the Cemetery. These monies will be used for new fencing on West 13th Street and Linden Avenue.
The first known African American newspapers to serve Kentucky were the Colored Citizen, which was briefly published in Louisville in 1866, and the Colored Kentuckian, launched in 1867. [ 2 ] African American newspapers serving Kentucky today include the Louisville Defender , the Key Newsjournal of Lexington, and the Northern Kentucky Herald ...
Foys came to the Diocese of Covington in the midst of a class action lawsuit concerning the sexual abuse of minors by over 80 diocesan employees, including priests. [3] The lawsuit was filed one day before Foys was appointed bishop. The claim was originally for $50 million, [4] but grew during the years of litigation. Foys vowed to meet with ...