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The Gazette published weekly community newspapers serving Montgomery, Prince George's, Frederick, and Carroll counties in Maryland, including a subscription-based weekend edition covering business and politics throughout the state. The group of papers consistently won awards from the Suburban Newspapers of America, and regional awards.
Maryland Gazette, and Frederick Weekly Advertiser: Frederick: 1790 [33] Became Political Intelligencer, or, Republican Gazette in 1824 [33] Maryland Hawk: Temple Hills: 1984 [59] African American newspaper. Maryland Herald, and Eastern Shore Intelligencer: Easton: 1790 [33] 1799 Maryland Journal: Baltimore: 1773 [33] 1797
In 1916, through a business deal, The News acquired The Frederick Post, publishing The News in the evenings and The Frederick Post in the morning. In 2002, the two papers were merged to create a single morning edition known as The Frederick News-Post. The Sunday edition created in October of that year created a true daily paper published 365 ...
In October 1984, two Ogden newspapers (The Intelligencer and The Evening Journal) dropped the Doonesbury comic strip because they objected to Doonesbury's coverage of Ronald Reagan. [5] On January 30, 2018, it emerged that the company was the apparent high bid to purchase the bankrupt Charleston Gazette-Mail. [6] It withdrew the bid on March 8 ...
Hagerstown, Maryland 21741: Circulation: 17,000 daily and Sunday 19,000: Website: ... Since 2011 It has been printed by The Frederick News-Post in Frederick, MD. [3]
The Maryland Gazette was founded in Annapolis, Maryland in 1727 and published through 1734 [4] by William Parks. [5] [6] Parks moved to Virginia in 1736. [7] The newspaper was both Maryland and the South's first publication, as well as the sixth in the colonies. Publication became irregular after 1730, before being discontinued in 1734. [8]
The Prince George's Enquirer and Southern Maryland Advertiser was a weekly newspaper published from 1882 to January 30, 1925, in Upper Marlboro, Maryland. [1] It replaced a paper that had been established during the American Civil War by Michael J. Slayman, The Prince Georgian and Southern Maryland Advertiser . [ 2 ]
In 1738, Anne and Jonas moved to Annapolis where they later revived the dormant Maryland Gazette in 1745. The Maryland Gazette was one of the first newspapers published in America and was the main source for news for Maryland colonists. In Annapolis, the Greens rented a small two-story house with a kitchen and two bedrooms, located at 124 ...