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Jewish Rhode Island, published monthly and owned by the Jewish Alliance of Greater Rhode Island. Based in Providence, but covering the entire state. Mercury, published monthly and owned by Gatehouse Media. An alternative weekly-style paper covering Rhode Island arts, entertainment and food in Newport and Middletown.
Edward A. Sherman Publishing Company, the family-owned publisher of the Daily News, also prints three free weekly newspapers in southern Rhode Island: Mercury, a Wednesday alternative weekly covering Bristol, Newport and Washington counties; the Friday Newport Navlog, the U.S. Navy's oldest base newspaper (founded 1901), covering Naval Station Newport; and Ocean State Independent, mailed to ...
Public Radio News/Talk: Rhode Island Public Radio: 102.9: W275DA: Providence (rebroadcasts WPVD) Public Radio News/Talk: Rhode Island Public Radio: 103.1: W276DF: Westerly (rebroadcasts WBLQ) Full service: Diponti Communications: 103.7-FM 103.7-HD1: WVEI-FM: Westerly: Sports (Simulcast of WEEI-FM Boston) Audacy: 104.3: W282CB: Hope Valley ...
Johnston Memorial Park, Johnston, Rhode Island 41°47′48″N 71°25′33″W / 41.79679°N 71.42577°W / 41.79679; -71.42577 ( Removed from Providence in June 2020 [ 7 ] and relocated to Johnston Memorial Park in October 2023.
William Cole Cozzens – Mayor of Newport and Governor of Rhode Island, 1863; Henry Y. Cranston – United States Representative from Rhode Island and commander of the Artillery Company of Newport; Robert B. Cranston – United States Representative from Rhode Island; George T. Downing (1819–1903) – abolitionist, entrepreneur, restaurateur [6]
The paper's last Massachusetts edition was published on March 10, 2006. On Oct. 10, 2008, the paper stopped publishing all of its zoned editions in Rhode Island and laid off 33 news staffers, including three managers. Even during the Great Depression, the Journal had not terminated news staff to cut costs.
This list of cemeteries in Rhode Island includes currently operating, historical (closed for new interments), and defunct (graves abandoned or removed) cemeteries, columbaria, and mausolea which are historical and/or notable.
The neo-Gothic building was constructed in 1844. The building is the oldest Catholic church still in use in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Providence. [2] [3] The church building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1978.