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The Appleton Post-Crescent decided to purchase the Twin City News-Record, which had been formed when the Menasha Record and the Neenah News Times merged in 1949. The "Appleton" portion of the name was removed in 1964 to reflect that the newspaper reached farther than the city limits. [2]
The Post-Crescent recently spoke with Homan and developers about the nearly 180 housing units that will be added in Appleton in the coming months. Here's when those are likely to be completed.
Based on this combined data, The Post-Crescent identified roughly 85 short-term rentals in Appleton, 12 in Menasha, 10 in Grand Chute, five in the city of Neenah, three in Little Chute, two in Fox ...
Appleton's 2025 capital improvements program budgets $7.8 million for asphalt and concrete paving. The percentage of streets rating above minimum rideability stood at 95.5% in June, just shy of ...
Becky Jacobs, Appleton Post-Crescent. January 8, 2024 at 6:03 AM. APPLETON — In 2024, Fox Cities residents can expect to see a grocery store move into a former Shopko building, new flights take ...
Duke Behnke, Appleton Post-Crescent January 24, 2024 at 6:10 AM APPLETON — Voters in District 4 have three choices for their next representative on the Common Council .
MADISON — Appleton Post-Crescent reporters and photographers secured multiple awards Friday at the Wisconsin Newspaper Association's Better Newspapers Contest awards banquet in Madison.
Samuel Ryan Jr., (March 13, 1824 – March 26, 1907) was an Irish American newspaper publisher, Democratic politician, and Wisconsin pioneer. He was the founder of the Appleton Crescent (now The Post-Crescent), served eight years as county judge of Outagamie County, Wisconsin (1866–1874), and served one year in the Wisconsin State Assembly (1865).