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Voted #1 Weekly Newspaper in Alabama by the Alabama Press Association. [citation needed] Cherokee County Herald: Centre: Weekly Chilton County News: Clanton: Weekly The Citizen of East Alabama: Phenix City: 1957 Weekly R.M. Greene Largest weekly newspaper in Alabama Clanton Advertiser: Clanton: Daily Clark County Democrat: Grove Hill 1856 ...
Student newspapers published in Alabama (2 P) Pages in category "Newspapers published in Alabama" The following 47 pages are in this category, out of 47 total.
Melrose Shaw briefly became publisher after her husband's death, then retired from the newspaper business and sold the Herald to News Publishing Co. [7] David Crawford Jr., owner of the Cherokee County Post, bought the Herald from the News Publishing Company in 2017, restoring local ownership to the paper. [1]
A small-town Alabama mayor died apparently by suicide just days after a conservative news site published pictures of him allegedly wearing women's clothes and makeup, officials said Sunday.
Its most recent buyer, Lee Enterprises, purchased the newspaper in 2020. Starting June 20, 2023, the print edition of the newspaper will be reduced to three days a week: Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. Also, the newspaper will transition from being delivered by a traditional newspaper delivery carrier to mail delivery by the U.S. Postal Service ...
The Decatur Daily is a daily (five days a week) newspaper serving Decatur, Alabama and the Tennessee Valley in the North Alabama area of the United States.As of September 30, 2006, it had an average daily circulation of 20,824 and a Sunday circulation of 23,840.
The Selma Times-Journal is a five-day-a-week newspaper located in Selma, Alabama. It publishes every day of the week except Sunday and Monday. The Saturday paper is called the "Weekend Edition." It is owned by Tuscaloosa, Alabama-based Boone Newspapers Inc.
York is a city in Sumter County, Alabama, United States. Founded around 1838 after the merging of two communities, Old Anvil and New York Station, the latter a station on a stagecoach line. The rail came through in the 1850s and later, the "New" was dropped from York Station in 1861.