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The Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, also known as "the Trib", is the second-largest daily newspaper serving the Greater Pittsburgh metropolitan area of Western Pennsylvania.It transitioned to an all-digital format on December 1, 2016, but remains the second-largest daily in Pennsylvania, with nearly one million unique page views monthly. [2]
In 1970, Scaife purchased a small market newspaper, then known as the Tribune-Review. The paper was based in Greensburg, the county seat and center of Westmoreland County, located about 30 miles southeast of Pittsburgh. For a number of years, the paper was published and distributed only in the Westmoreland area. [13]
Dec. 25—John Peck stood before a Westmoreland County jury in early December and for the next 40 minutes argued for a conviction. It marked the last time Peck would do so as the county's district ...
The Tribune-Democrat is a five-day morning daily newspaper published in Johnstown, Pennsylvania.It is owned by CNHI LLC. The newspaper's coverage area includes all or parts of Blair, Bedford, Cambria, Indiana, Somerset and Westmoreland counties in Pennsylvania.
Cordelia Scaife May (September 24, 1928 – January 26, 2005) was a Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-area political donor and philanthropist.An heiress to the Mellon-Scaife family fortune, she was one of the wealthiest women in the United States.
The newspaper started life in 1799 as The Farmer’s Register, founded by John M. Snowden with William McCorkle as editor.Snowden, a native of Philadelphia struggled with his business ventures and sold the paper to W. S. Graham in 1808 who renamed the paper to The Greensburg and Indiana Register and later The Westmoreland and Indiana Register and lastly to just The Register in 1812 to save ...
Frank Cowan (December 11, 1844 – February 12, 1905) was an American lawyer, medical doctor, writer, and secretary to U.S. President Andrew Johnson.. He was born in Greensburg, Pennsylvania to Lucetta Oliver and Edgar Cowan, a local lawyer.
Adolph W. Schmidt was born in 1904 and raised in McKeesport, Pennsylvania. [1] He was educated at Princeton University and Harvard Business School. [2] He met his future wife, Helen "Patsy" Mellon (great-granddaughter of Thomas Mellon, founder of the Mellon Bank), during a fox hunt at the Rolling Rock Club in the Ligonier Valley. [3]