Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
New Orleans Republican: New Orleans: 1867 1878 North Ouachita Weekly: Sterlington: 2019 [23] Courrier de la Louisiane: 1807 1860 [22] The Louisianan: 1870 1871 New Iberia Enterprise: 1885 1902 [24] New Orleans Item-Tribune: New Orleans: 1924 1958 Began as Daily City Item in 1877 [4] L'Abeille (The New Orleans Bee) New Orleans: 1827 1923 New ...
The Plain Truth Of New Orleans: 1969 [75] 1970 [75] Bimonthly newspaper [75] LCCN sn89059088; OCLC 7366271; New Orleans: The Republican Courier: 1899 [76] 1900 [76] Weekly [76] LCCN sn83016564; OCLC 2806334, 9908251; New Orleans: The Louisiana Republican: 1881 [77] 1882 [77] Weekly [77] LCCN sn89059142; OCLC 19537223; In English and French. [77 ...
Later in 2013 the New Orleans edition became The New Orleans Advocate. In 2019, the papers merged to form The Times-Picayune | The New Orleans Advocate. The New Orleans Tribune and The Louisiana Weekly serve the city with an African American focus. The Clarion Herald is the official newspaper of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New Orleans.
Louisiana State Newspapers, Inc. is a privately held chain of 23 local newspapers in the U.S. state of Louisiana, mostly in the Acadiana region. It is based in Lafayette [ 1 ] and is the largest newspaper chain by number of publications in the state.
They were third in local market share behind two supermarket chains based outside of the Greater New Orleans Metropolitan area. [3] [15] [16] [17] In 1995, Schwegmann Brothers Giant Supermarkets acquired the 28 grocery stores in the New Orleans Metropolitan Area of the National Canal Villere Chain, then owned by the National Tea Company. The ...
The New Orleans Item, March 7, 1916 The New Orleans Item newsroom at work, circa 1900. The New Orleans Item-Tribune, sometimes rendered in press accounts as the New Orleans Item and Tribune, was an American newspaper published in New Orleans, Louisiana, in various forms from 1871 to 1958.
The New Orleans Item newsroom, circa 1900. Established as The Picayune in 1837 by Francis Lumsden and George Wilkins Kendall, the paper's initial price was one picayune, a Spanish coin equivalent to 6¼¢ (half a bit, or one-sixteenth of a dollar). [6]
The New Orleans Bee [1] (French: L’Abeille de la Nouvelle-Orléans [2]) was an American broadsheet newspaper in New Orleans, Louisiana, founded on September 1, 1827, by François Delaup and originally located at 94 St. Peter Street, between Royal and Bourbon. [3] The newspaper ceased publication on December 27, 1923.