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George Barry Bingham Sr. was born on February 10, 1906, in Louisville, Kentucky. [1] Bingham's family owned a cluster of influential media properties – The Courier-Journal and The Louisville Times newspapers, plus WHAS Radio and WHAS Television.
George Barry Bingham Jr. (September 23, 1933 – April 3, 2006 in Louisville, Kentucky) was an American newspaper publisher and television and radio executive. He was the third and last generation of the Bingham family that controlled Louisville's daily newspapers, a television station, and two radio stations for much of the 20th century.
Her son Barry later said he could remember Eleanor pushing him out of her lap and jumping from the car. [10] She was survived by three children: Robert Norwood Bingham (his middle name was later changed to Worth, making him Robert Worth Bingham Jr), George Barry Bingham (better known as Barry Bingham Sr.), and Henrietta Worth Bingham. [11]
Then-publisher Barry Bingham Jr. described the incident as "almost a textbook clash between the First Amendment right of a newspaper to collect news and an individual's or organization's Fourth ...
Keith Runyon, who was on the editorial board of The Courier Journal and The Louisville Times, told me Publisher Barry Bingham Jr. was preparing to endorse Atkins until his father, company Chairman ...
Barry Bingham Sr. (1906–1988), American media executive Barry Bingham Jr. (1933–2006), American media executive, son of the above Edward Bingham (1881–1939), Royal Navy admiral and Victoria Cross recipient
Both newspapers were later owned and operated by the Bingham family, headed for much of the 20th century by patriarch Barry Bingham, Sr. The Times, which operated in the shadows of "The C-J" during most of its existence, nevertheless was a testing ground for many new ideas, usually involving design and typography.
Bosworth M. "Bos" Todd Jr., an investment adviser, founded Wellspring as a transitional home for young people with schizophrenia, like his son