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Tullahoma News and Guardian: Tullahoma: Daily: Union City Daily Messenger: Union City: Daily: Vanderbilt Hustler, The: Nashville: 1888 [12] [13] [14] Weekly or bi-weekly Student-run at Vanderbilt University: Weakley County Press: Martin: Weekly or bi-weekly Williamson Herald: Franklin: Weekly Wilson Post: Lebanon: Weekly or bi-weekly Winchester ...
Tullahoma was founded in 1852 as a work camp along the new Nashville and Chattanooga Railroad.Its name is derived from the Choctaw language, and means "red rock".. An alternative explanation (see Sam Davis Elliott's Soldier of Tennessee and sources cited therein) of the name is that Peter Decherd, who donated the land for the railroad right-of-way (and was therefore given the right to name two ...
Monthly newspaper [70] OCLC 36168311; Published by Pearl Wade. [70] Murfreesboro: The Murfreesboro Union: 1920 [71] 1900s [71] [71] LCCN 2013254328, sn96091136; OCLC 36001549, 664611329; Attested through at least 1939. [71] Nashville: 780 Countdown: 1962 [72] 1964 [72] Nashville: The Block Bulletin: 1947 [74] or 1950 [69] 1950s [73] Monthly ...
The article had five groupings of people or places, and readers with a "definite similarity or something in common." Here are the five: Rye B. Page Jr., Ed L. Ward, Paul T. Marshburn, L.C. LeGwin ...
The late Sam D. Kennedy, publisher of The Daily Herald from 1965 to 1984 was inducted into the Tennessee Press Association Hall of Fame last week.
1950s Tennessee elections (5 C) S. 1950s in sports in Tennessee (10 C) This page was last edited on 17 July 2022, at 09:49 (UTC). Text is available under the ...
Mull branched into television in the 1950s. He hosted an hour-long Gospel music program, The Mull Singing Convention , on Knoxville television, first on WBIR-TV and later on WVLT-TV . Mull's Gospel music program was also broadcast in Chattanooga, Tennessee , originally on WRGP-TV when that station went on the air in 1956.
In the early 1950s, it accompanied 37 Sunday newspapers. [2] A decade later, at its peak in 1963, This Week was distributed with the Sunday editions of 42 newspapers for a total circulation of 14.6 million. It was the oldest syndicated newspaper supplement in the United States when it went out of business in 1969. [3]