Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Newspapers.com, owned by genealogy company Ancestry.com, has long kept digitized copies of many Fall River papers, starting with the city’s first, the Fall River Monitor, in 1826. Newspapers.com ...
The smaller of the two main newspapers in Massachusetts' South Coast, The Herald News is a daily newspaper based in Fall River, Massachusetts. Its coverage area includes Fall River and the nearby towns of Dighton, Freetown, Somerset, Swansea and Westport, Massachusetts; as well as Little Compton and Tiverton, Rhode Island. [2]
The weekly eventually was sold to Journal Register Company, then the owner of The Herald News of Fall River. The use of the titles "Mr.," "Mrs.," "Ms." and "Miss" before the last names of people cited in the newspaper, still in use in sections other than sports at the start of 2007, is the legacy of longtime Standard-Times editor James M ...
North Cass Herald - Belton; Parkland News - Farmington; Pike County News - Bowling Green; Phelps County Focus-Rolla; Rich Hill Mining Review - Rich Hill; Riverfront Times - St. Louis; Sedalia Democrat - Sedalia; South County Times - Crestwood, Sunset Hills, Affton, Sappington Concord Village, and Fenton [3] Southeast Missourian - Cape Girardeau ...
Fall River interim Police Chief Kelly Furtado holds a bouquet of flowers as she is surrounded by family and friends at her swearing-in ceremony at Government Center on Tuesday, Oct. 15, 2024.
The last of Fall River's Jewish temples. Records show at one time Fall River hosted seven or possibly as many as 12 synagogues. Temple Beth El reached its peak of activity in the 1950s, with 600 ...
Fall River: 17: Border City Mill No. 2: Border City Mill No. 2: June 28, 1990 : One Weaver St. Fall River: Converted into apartments 18: Brayton Methodist Episcopal Church: Brayton Methodist Episcopal Church: February 16, 1983
Alcona County Herald: On March 10, 1910, the newspaper changed its name to the Alcona County Herald, with Rola E. Prescott as the publisher. Interestingly, it was the only country weekly in the United States to have its own cartoonist, providing readers with lively cartoons on county subjects in every issue.