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Oregon Sentinel: Jacksonville: 1855 1888 Originally named the Table Rock Sentinel until 1858 [29] Oregon Spectator: Oregon City: 1846 1855 Oregon State Journal: Eugene: March 1864 [6] Oregon Unionist: Salem: 1866 [6] Oregon Weekly Times: Portland: May 1851 1864 suppressed [6] Oregon Weekly Union: Corvallis: 1863 Orenco Herald: Orenco: 1914 ...
Oregon City News-- wiki (pages do not yet exist),mondo, loc,books,nwsprs,narchive, edpub Draft:Oregon City News After 20 years, Angela Fox retires as editor on November 30, 2021 with Aaron Breniman taking her place Robert Pamplin Jr. bought Oregon City News and the Clackamas Review papers in 2000 from Columbia River Newspaper located in ...
Southwestern Oregon Publishing Company purchased the Bandon Western World in 2003 [5] and the Reedsport Umpqua Post in 2004. [6] In January 2015, The World launched a new weekly newspaper, the Coquille Valley Courant, which serves the Coquille Valley area, including Coquille, Myrtle Point, Powers and surrounding towns. [7]
Coquille / k oʊ ˈ k iː l / is a city in, and the county seat of, Coos County, Oregon, United States. The population was 4,015 at the 2020 census. The primary economic base is the timber industry. The city derives its name from the Coquille Native American tribe.
The Lincoln County Leader is a weekly newspaper based in Newport, Oregon, United States. It was formed in January 2024 by the merger of the Newport News-Times and Lincoln City News Guard, both published by Country Media, Inc. The newspaper takes the name of an earlier publication that existed from 1893 to 1987. [1]
C. J. Howard established the Western Oregon in 1905. He sold it to D. W. and I. S. Bath in 1908. [2] Lew A. Cates became the new proprietor and changed its name to the Cottage Grove Sentinel on Oct. 2, 1909. [4] Elbert Bede purchased The Sentinel on Sept. 11, 1911. [2] He and W. H. Tyrrell, owner of The Leader, merged their two papers together ...
The Statesman Journal is the major daily newspaper published in Salem, Oregon, United States. Founded in 1851 as the Oregon Statesman, it later merged with the Capital Journal to form the current newspaper, the second-oldest in Oregon. The Statesman Journal is distributed in Salem, Keizer, and portions of the mid-Willamette Valley.
The Lake Oswego Review is an American newspaper published in Lake Oswego, Oregon, within the Portland metropolitan area.The paper began as the Western Clackamas Review, was later known as the Oswego Review from 1929 through 1961, [2] and then adopted its present name when the city of Oswego annexed Lake Grove and the lake. [3]