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A marker in London, close to where The Daily Courant was first published. The Daily Courant, initially published on [O.S. 11 March] 1702, was the first British daily newspaper. It was produced by Elizabeth Mallet at her premises next to the King's Arms tavern at Fleet Bridge in London. [1] The newspaper consisted of a single page, with ...
Within ten years Mallet was again in charge of the family business, publishing serial news publications such as The New State of Europe (launched 20 September 1701) and sensational tracts. [3] Front page of The Daily Courant. Mallet launched the Daily Courant on 11 March 1702. It was a single newssheet carrying digests of foreign papers.
The newspaper was founded in 1893 as the Virginia Enterprise and switched names to Mesabi Daily News in 1945. The very first editor of the paper was named R. McGarry, who was succeeded by D. A. Cuppernoll in 1895. [3] In 2014, Adams Publishing group acquired 34 papers, including the Daily News, from American Consolidated Media. [4]
A weekly newspaper at first, it began daily publication in 1864 under the new name North China Daily News. Ceased publication in 1951. 1853 [109] Chinese serial: Chinese Victoria City: Hong Kong First Chinese-language newspaper in the crown colony. Ceased publication in 1856. 1853 Soerabaijasch Handelsblad: Dutch Soerabaja: Dutch East Indies
The New England Courant, the 7 August 1721 front page. It was James Franklin (1697–1735), Benjamin Franklin's older brother, who first made a news sheet something more than a garbled mass of stale items, "taken from the Gazette and other Public Prints of London" some six months late.
In the 16th and 17th century, there appeared numerous printed news sheets summarizing accounts of battles, treaties, the king, epidemics, and special events. In 1605, Johann Carolus published the first regular newspaper in Straßburg, comprising brief news bulletins. The world's first daily newspaper appeared in 1650 in Leipzig.
• Reporter Sarah Greenhalgh was found dead in her Virginia home in 2012 • Police named a suspect - the "bat-sh-- crazy boy" she wrote about in a Facebook post hours before her brutal murder ...
Bibliography of American Newspapers cataloged and inventoried by the Virginia Newspaper Project (Database searchable by locale) "Virginia Newspapers". Historical U.S. Newspapers Online. Library Guides. Ohio: Bowling Green State University. Newspapers that are freely available on the Internet "News: Newspapers: Regional: United States: Virginia ...