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The Union and Advertiser, also known as the Daily Union and Advertiser was a newspaper in Rochester, New York. [1] It was published by Curtis, Butts & Co. [2] from 1856 until at least 1886. For at least part of its history it was a daily. Several volumes are part of the Library of Congress' collection. It was succeeded in 1918 by the Rochester ...
Newspapers published in Albany, New York: ... The New-York daily advertiser. d., March 1–September 19, 1785. ... A Graphic Summary of the Growth of Newspapers in ...
New York: New York Amsterdam News / Amsterdam News: 1909 [147] 1941 [147] Weekly [147] ISSN 0028-7121; LCCN sn86058065, sn7805580; OCLC 13404942, 1586884; Published by Powell-Savory Corp. [147] New York: New York Amsterdam News: 1943 [148] current: Weekly [148] LCCN sn83030330, sn85042678; OCLC 9480575, 12774267; Official site; New York: New ...
The Rochester Patriot published 23 times a year from around 1972 until 1982. The Jewish Ledger – weekly newspaper serving the Rochester area's Jewish community since 1924. Stopped publication in December 2020 due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Monroe County Post – had different publications serving different parts of the Rochester area ...
Pages in category "Newspapers published in Rochester, New York" The following 10 pages are in this category, out of 10 total. ... The Union and Advertiser
The Knickerbocker News' circulation peaked at about 71,000 in 1972-73, which made it the largest newspaper at that time in New York's Capital Region, but had fallen to about 28,000 by the late 1980s. That precipitous decline was a fate that overtook most afternoon newspapers in the United States during the same period as major changes in the ...
Rochester Police Chief David Smith said that City of Rochester Water Bureau employees found the body of man in the water around 8 a.m. Tuesday, as they completed their daily morning check of the ...
The Knickerbocker Press was circulated in the morning while the Albany Evening News was circulated in the evening and was a direct competitor of Albany Times Union, Hearst's newspaper. By 1937, Gannett monopolized not only the Rochester newspaper business but the Albany one as well. It was at this time that Hearst and Gannett struck a deal.