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Gonzales Inquirer: Gonzales: Fenice Community Media Group 1853 Thursday 1,758 ... Seguin Gazette: Seguin: Southern Newspapers: 1888 Sunday / Wednesday 2,791
The Gazette-Bulletin changed its name to the Seguin Gazette in 1952. [3] In 1979, publisher John C. Taylor of the Gazette and Enterprise publisher Otha L. Grisham agreed to a merger, but in effect, Taylor and the Gazette soon took over the operations and Grisham retired. The new combined daily newspaper was called Seguin Gazette-Enterprise.
Leesville is an unincorporated city in the Gonzales-Guadalupe County area in Texas, United States. [15] The community had a population of 384 residents as of 2018. [citation needed]
1838 Gonzales men found the town of Walnut Springs (later Seguin) in the northwest section of the county. 1840 Gonzales men join the Battle of Plum Creek against Buffalo Hump and his Comanches. 1850 Gonzales College is founded by slave-owning planters, and is the first institution in Texas to confer A.B. degrees on women.
Gonzales is a city in the U.S. state of Texas, with a population of 7,165 at the 2020 census. [6] It is the county seat of Gonzales County. [7] The "Come and Take It" incident, the ride of the Immortal 32 into the Alamo, and the Runaway Scrape after the fall of the Alamo, all integral events in the War for Texas Independence from Mexico, originated in Gonzales.
Seguin Gazette (1888) , Seguin, Texas; Walton Tribune, Monroe, Georgia; Defunct publications. Angleton Times (1893–2004) - absorbed by the Brazosport Facts [3]
Seguin is one of the very few cities in the country with competing daily papers. The Gazette, a broadsheet, has been publishing for more than 125 years, since 1888. It is now part of the Southern Newspapers chain. The Daily News is part of the news operation of the locally owned and independently programmed radio station KWED. Seguin Gazette
James Milford Day was born May 11, 1815, in Anderson County, South Carolina. He was the son of Johnson Day and Sarah Hembree. Day accompanied his parents and siblings to Texas in 1835 and became part of the Runaway Scrape, that preceded Sam Houston's march to the battle of San Jacinto in 1836.