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In 1975, Gila Printing, owned by Louis F. Long, sold the Graham County Guardian to Robert G. Gentry, who had published the Eastern Arizona Courier of Safford since 1967. [9] Gentry merged the two papers together to form the Eastern Arizona Courier and Graham County Guardian and then sold them in 1983 [10] to Wick Communications. [11]
Arizona Copper Camp – Ray in the 1910s and 1920s [19] Arizona Daily Citizen – Tucson 1880s – 1900s [20] See also: Arizona Citizen, Tucson Citizen, Arizona Weekly Citizen. The Arizona Daily Orb – Bisbee 1890s – 1900s [21] The Arizona Gleam – Phoenix in the 1920s and 1930s [22] The Arizona Journal; The Arizona Kicker – Tombstone [23]
Greenwood Memory Lawn Mortuary & Cemetery is the official name given to a cemetery located at 2300 West Van Buren Street in Phoenix, Arizona owned by Dignity Memorial.The cemetery, which resulted as a merger of two historical cemeteries, Greenwood Memorial Park and Memory Lawn Memorial Park, is the final resting place of various notable former residents of Arizona.
Graham County is a county in the southeastern part of the U.S. state of Arizona. As of the 2020 census, the population was 38,533, [1] making it the third-least populous county in Arizona. The county seat is Safford. [2] Graham County composes the Safford, Arizona Micropolitan Statistical Area.
Front page of a 1918 issue of the Phoenix Tribune, filled with news of World War I. This is a list of African American newspapers that have been published in the state of Arizona. It includes both current and historical newspapers. The first African American newspaper in Arizona was the Phoenix Tribune, which was published from 1918 to the ...
Cruz, an editor at the Republic since 2018, has led coverage of breaking news and crime, handling dozens of high-impact breaking news events. Cruz previously worked for 13 years as an editor and ...
Darrow J. "Duke" Tully (February 27, 1932 – June 20, 2010) was a former publisher of the Arizona Republic and the Phoenix Gazette newspapers, published in Phoenix.Both were owned by Central Newspapers, Inc., headquartered in Indianapolis, Indiana, at the time.
KATO was built and signed on by veteran eastern Arizona radio station owner Willard Shoecraft. When it came on air on May 5, 1961, it restored radio service to Safford, which had been lost on October 29, 1960, when the Safford-based Gila Broadcasting chain—and its local station KGLU—shuttered operations in the face of a pending FCC license revocation hearing. [3]