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Front page of the Arkansas Freeman from 1869. This is a list of African American newspapers that have been published in Arkansas . The first such newspaper in Arkansas was the Arkansas Freeman of Little Rock, which began publishing in 1869.
The Arkansas Freeman was the first African American newspaper in Arkansas. It was founded in 1869 and went defunct in 1870. It was founded in 1869 and went defunct in 1870. The paper was opposed to the Radical Republican rule of Arkansas, and opposed the reality that black Arkansans mostly supported them.
The Daily News: Mountain Home 1994 1999 Succeeded the North Arkansas View [54] The Daily Siftings Herald: Arkadelphia: 2018 [39] The Elector: DeWitt 1866 1866 [33] The Epworth News: Wynne 1896 c. 1896 [31] The Harrison Daily Eclipse: Harrison: 1901 1901 [41] The Gillett Reporter: Gillett: 1914 [35] 1926 The Grand Prairie News: Stuttgart 1916 ...
The Log Cabin Democrat is a daily newspaper in Conway, Arkansas, United States, serving Conway and Faulkner County and some surrounding areas. It was founded in July 1879 as The Log Cabin. Its publisher is David Meadows, who also serves as the publisher of The Courier in Russellville. [1]
The major daily newspaper published in Little Rock is the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, which is circulated statewide and publishes standalone print and digital editions focusing on the Arkansas River Valley and Ozark regions from a satellite facility based in Lowell.
His father moved the family to Oberlin, Ohio, when Arkansas outlawed free people of color (Arkansas's Free Negro Expulsion Act of 1859). The father freed his family. [1] He was included in a photo montage of African American state legislators serving in Arkansas in 1891 published in The Freeman newspaper in Indianapolis. [3] He was a Democrat. [4]
Hussman was born in Texarkana, Arkansas, but moved in 1949 to Camden, Arkansas, with his parents, Walter E. Hussman Sr. (1906–1988) and the former Betty Palmer (1911–1990), and two older sisters. Hussman Sr. published The Camden News , which he had purchased from his father-in-law, Clyde E. Palmer (1876–1957).