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The Tennessean is a daily newspaper in Nashville, Tennessee, owned by Gannett. It covers 39 counties in Middle Tennessee and eight counties in southern Kentucky, and has a history of Pulitzer Prize-winning journalism.
Nashville has made one appearance in the International League playoffs but has not won its championship. [37] The Sounds are the oldest active professional sports franchise in Nashville, [38] predating the Nashville Predators (1998), Tennessee Titans (1999), and Nashville SC (2018). [39]
Nashville Banner: Nashville 1876 [3] 1998 [26] The Nashville City Paper: Nashville 2000 2013 [27] Nashville Globe: Nashville 1906 1960 [16] Nashville Union and American: Nashville 1853 1875 Also published as the Daily Union and American and Nashville Union and Dispatch [28] The Perry Countian: Linden 1924s [20] 1978 Merged with the Buffalo ...
The Commodores practiced in secret for ten days in preparation. Vanderbilt faced Nashville on Thanksgiving Day and won 10–0 in front of 4 to 5,000 spectators, using "Harvard tactics." After thirty minutes of gameplay, John Edgerton scored a touchdown taking the wind out of the sails of Nashville rooters. A riot broke out downtown the next day.
David Climer (1953 – January 19, 2020) was a sports reporter and columnist for over four decades at The Tennessean, from 1974 to 2015.. Climer was raised in Lebanon, Tennessee, where he wrote for the school newspapers at Lebanon Junior High and Lebanon High School (where he was also a pitcher on the baseball team) before joining the Lebanon Democrat as a sportswriter.
Nashville Business in Review (1995–1997); later published as In Review (1997–1999) — alternative weekly (later biweekly) tabloid; Nashville Globe and Independent — African-American weekly (ceased publication in July 1960) Nashville Times (weekly November 11, 1937–May 26, 1938, then daily; ceased publication July 28, 1940) [1]
Milton B. Ochs, managing editor of the Chattanooga Times and Thomas R. Preston, a banker, bought the Nashville American around February 1909. Control of the paper transferred to Ochs on March 10, 1909. [6] Around June 1910, the paper published a 180-page special edition of the newspaper to celebrate the Nashville American's 98th year ...
In June 2007, it was estimated that The City Paper reached an average of more than 250,000 unique readers each week, according to a media audit reported in the Nashville Scene. By comparison, the same article reported the A-section of The Tennessean had at that time reached 365,700 readers weekly.