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Holmes County Advertiser of Holmes ... [97] of Camdenton, Missouri. Lake Area News Focus, weekly, of ... The Aurora Advertiser of Aurora, Missouri; Girard Press ...
Lewis Shaw Coleman and his wife Mary Kate Miller Coleman, children of two prominent Lawrence County families, built the Coleman House in 1914 on a corner lot overlooking Oak Park in Aurora. Established in 1870, Aurora saw sudden population growth due in large part to a mining boom in 1885 [3] which spiked the population over 3,400 by 1890 ...
Parkland News - Farmington; Pike County News - Bowling Green; Phelps County Focus-Rolla; Rich Hill Mining Review - Rich Hill; Riverfront Times - St. Louis; Sedalia Democrat - Sedalia; South County Times - Crestwood, Sunset Hills, Affton, Sappington Concord Village, and Fenton [3] Southeast Missourian - Cape Girardeau; Springfield News-Leader ...
The other Republican paper of primary importance was the Aurora General Advertiser, founded by Ben Franklin's grandson and heir, Benjamin Franklin Bache, on October 2, 1790. The Aurora , published from Franklin Court in Philadelphia, was the most strident newspaper of its time, attacking John Adams' anti-democratic policies on a daily basis.
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A 79-year-old Missouri man is accused of killing a woman in her suburban Chicago home — a crime that happened nearly six decades ago. James Barbier was arrested Monday at his St. Louis County ...
Aurora's population peaked at 10,000 circa 1900. The Frisco Railroad (now Burlington Northern-Santa Fe) and the Missouri Pacific (now Missouri and Northern Arkansas Railroad) previously had depots in Aurora. The train master for the Missouri Pacific Railroad's White River division was headquartered in Aurora until the mid-1950s.
The Menace was published in Aurora from 1911 to 1920. In December 1919, the publishing plant burned down, arson was suspected. Publishing was moved to Branson, Missouri, and the newspaper's name was changed to The New Menace. It was published there from 1920 to 1922. It then moved back to Aurora from 1922 to 1931.