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The Clarion Ledger is an American daily newspaper in Jackson, Mississippi. It is the second-oldest company in the state of Mississippi , and is one of the few newspapers in the nation that continues to circulate statewide.
Canton News: Canton: Monthly Clay Mansell Clarion-Ledger: Jackson/statewide 1941 Daily Gannett Company: OCLC 8674244 [2] Clarksdale Press Register: Clarksdale: 1949 Daily Delta Press Pub. Co. OCLC 15003806: The Clinton Courier: Clinton: Bi-monthly Clay Mansell Columbian-Progress: Columbia: 1935 Bi-weekly Emmerich Newspapers, Inc. Columbus ...
In 2009, publication of the Hattiesburg American was moved to Gannett's Clarion-Ledger facility in Jackson, Mississippi. In 2010, Gannett announced its intention to sell the 38,000 square foot (3,500 square meter) building which housed the Hattiesburg American operations at 825 North Main Street, and an agreement was reached with a Hattiesburg ...
Michael Chavez, Mississippi Clarion-Ledger December 11, 2023 at 6:01 AM The Clarion-Ledger has released its annual Dandy Dozen, a collection of Mississippi's top high school boys basketball ...
Simeon Roe Adams (1813/1814 - April 3, 1860) was an American newspaper printer and politician. He served in the Mississippi State Senate from 1844 to 1848. He also owned the Eastern Clarion newspaper, a predecessor of The Clarion-Ledger , from 1839 to 1860.
WJTV signed-on January 20, 1953, as Mississippi's first television station, airing an analog signal on UHF channel 25. It was owned by the Hederman family, publishers of Jackson's morning and afternoon newspapers—The Clarion-Ledger and the Jackson Daily News, respectively—and was a primary CBS affiliate and secondary DuMont Television Network affiliate.
The newspaper was established in 1979 by Joe Dove, former business editor of The Clarion-Ledger. He led the newspaper until 1984 when he sold it to Richard Roper, head of Downhome Publications and publisher of Mississippi Magazine. [2] Two years later Roper sold the publication to Rosa Lee Harden Jones. [3]
Jerry W. Mitchell (born February 23, 1959) [1] is an American investigative reporter formerly with The Clarion-Ledger, a newspaper in Jackson, Mississippi.He convinced authorities to reopen many cold murder cases from the civil rights era, his investigations providing the basis for prosecutions, prompting one colleague to call him "the South's Simon Wiesenthal". [2]