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From 2002 to 2008, The Sun was a printed daily newspaper distributed in New York City. [3] [4] It debuted on April 16, 2002, claiming descent from, and adopting the name, motto, and nameplate of, the earlier New York paper The Sun (1833–1950). [5] It became the first general-interest broadsheet newspaper to be started in New York City in ...
The Sun was a New York newspaper published from 1833 until 1950. It was considered a serious paper, [2] like the city's two more successful broadsheets, The New York Times and the New York Herald Tribune. The Sun was the first successful penny daily newspaper in the United States, and was for a time, the most successful newspaper in America. [3 ...
Offices of the New York Sun, 1893, on Nassau Street, Manhattan. Moses was born in Wallingford, Connecticut, to Moses Sperry Beach and Lucretia Yale, and was a cousin of Canadian fur trader James Murray Yale and Gov. Elihu Yale of Yale University, members of the Yale family.
From The New Yorker: [6] The American newspaper business as we know it was born on September 3, 1833, when a twenty-three-year-old publisher named Benjamin Day put out the first edition of the New York Sun. Whereas other papers sold for five or six cents, the Sun cost just a penny.
Beach was born on October 5, 1822, in Springfield, Massachusetts.He was the son of Moses Yale Beach, proprietor of The Sun, and Nancy Day.His brother was Alfred Ely Beach, the first subway-constructor in New York, and proprietor of Scientific American, while his uncle was Benjamin Day, founder of the New York Sun. [4] [5] Another brother was banker William Yale Beach.
In 1897, an editorial writer from the New York Sun answered a letter from a little girl wondering about Santa Claus. 'Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus': Read the essay from 1897 that made us ...
Cover of New York World-Telegram and The Sun on April 18, 1955 announcing the death of Albert Einstein. The New York World-Telegram, later known as the New York World-Telegram and The Sun, was a New York City newspaper from 1931 to 1966.
Seth Lipsky (born 1946) is the founder and editor of the New York Sun, an independent conservative daily in New York City that ceased its print edition on September 30, 2008. Lipsky counts Ronald Reagan , Margaret Thatcher , Winston Churchill , Ariel Sharon , and Milton Friedman among his intellectual and ideological heroes. [ 1 ]