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The Andalusia Star-News was formed in 1948 out of the merger of the Andalusia Star and the Covington News, both of Andalusia, Alabama. [1] It has a circulation of 3,372 and is owned by Boone Newspapers, Inc. [2] In 1972, it was sold to Tuscaloosa Newspapers by Ed Dannelly and Byron Vickery, who had operated it since 1948. [3]
Andalusia is located slightly northwest of the center of Covington County at (31.309, -86.479 According to the U.S. Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 19.8 square miles (51.3 km 2), of which 19.7 square miles (50.9 km 2) is land and 0.15 square miles (0.4 km 2), or 0.79%, is water.
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Marion: UDC Monument at Marion Courthouse Square to Nicola Marschall, designer of the original Confederate flag and Confederate uniform. [27] In Marion there is also a pre-Civil War monument to the faithful slave. [28] Moulton: Confederate Monument, Lawrence County Courthouse (2006) by SCV, Lt. J. K. McBride Camp No. 241 and the Alabama ...
Gumm met his wife Ethel Marion Milne in the vaudeville industry where she was an actress, singer, and pianist. [4] He married Milne on January 11, 1914, in Michigan. [6] The couple had three children: Mary Jane Gumm (born 1915), Dorothy Virginia Gumm (born 1917), and Frances Ethel Gumm (born 1922). The latter is better known as Judy Garland.
Last week, Ethel Kennedy, the lauded activist and widow of the late Robert F. Kennedy, passed away following a stroke at the age of 96. Her family gathered in Cape Cod earlier this week for a ...
The fourth courthouse was built of brick in 1896 in the center of Courthouse Square (which sits in front of the current courthouse). When the Central of Georgia Railway reached Andalusia in 1899, followed shortly by the Alabama and Florida Railroad, the town saw massive growth; population rose from 270 at the 1890 census to 2,480 by 1910. [2]
The Daily Home is a daily newspaper serving the Talladega County and St. Clair County, Alabama areas. Originally begun as a weekly in 1867 it was called Our Mountain Home until daily production began in 1909 at which point the name was changed to The Talladega Daily Home.