Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Cambridge, MA: Harvard University. "Directory of New England Newspapers". New England Newspaper and Press Association. Archived from the original on 2012-07-19. "US Newspaper Directory: Massachusetts", Chronicling America, Washington DC: US Library of Congress
Newspaper Area County Frequency Ownership Notes Abington Mariner [1] Abington: Plymouth: Weekly: New Media Investment Group: The Advocate: Fairhaven: Bristol: Weekly: News Corporation: Also covers Acushnet Agawam Advertiser News [1] Agawam: Hampden: Weekly: Turley Publications: Allston/Brighton TAB [1] Boston: Suffolk: Weekly: New Media ...
The Historic Cambridge Newspaper Collection [1] is a freely available, keyword searchable archive of four Cambridge, Massachusetts newspapers. The collection includes editions that are in the public domain .
As the Greenfield area's only newspaper of record, The Recorder is the primary source of local news in Franklin County. [2] Originally published in 1792, the paper is one of the oldest daily newspapers in the United States, and the second oldest daily in Massachusetts after the Daily Hampshire Gazette. [3] [4]
Newspapers often publish obituaries as news articles. Although obituaries tend to focus on positive aspects of the subject's life, this is not always the case. [ 2 ] According to Nigel Farndale , the Obituaries Editor of The Times , obituaries ought to be "balanced accounts" written in a "deadpan" style, and should not read like a hagiography .
The Wanderer is a weekly newspaper that serves the "Tri-town area" of Marion, Massachusetts, Mattapoisett, Massachusetts, and Rochester, Massachusetts in southeastern Massachusetts. The Wanderer is published by Wanderer Com Inc., at 55 County Road in Mattapoisett.
Plugh's Newspaper Media LLC, later renamed Enterprise NewsMedia, bought the Prescott Publishing for an estimated US$60 to US$70 million. [ 12 ] Liberty Publishing purchased Enterprise NewsMedia in 2006 as part of a mammoth deal that also included Community Newspaper Company (CNC) – then owned by the Boston Herald – and a new name for the ...
At the time of the sale to Jackson, the three papers covered four towns—the Malden News published an edition in Everett, Massachusetts—with a reported combined circulation of 11,300. Jackson announced he would save money by combining the three papers into one edition. [3] This move created the Daily News-Mercury in 1990. [5]