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Osage County is served by a weekly newspaper, The Osage County Herald-Chronicle. The newspaper has a circulation of approximately 4,500, making it the 3rd largest paid weekly publication in the state of Kansas. The Herald-Chronicle was created by the merger of The Osage County Herald and The Osage County Chronicle in February 2007.
Maurice Mehl (1887–1966), paleontologist, was born in Burlingame, Kansas; Victor Murdock (1871–1945), U.S. Representative from Kansas, Progressive Party presidential nominee, 1916. Carla Provost (b. 1970), chief of the Border Patrol; Kenny Starr (b. 1952), Country and Western singer
Osage County: Formerly published by Louise Redcorn Bixby Bulletin: Bixby: 1905 2012 In 2012, the Bulletin was combined with the Jenks Journal and Glenpool Post to form the South County Leader. The South County Leader ceased publication in 2014. [13] Branding Iron: Atoka: 1884 1884 [14] The Broken Arrow Ledger: Broken Arrow: 1904: 2017 ...
Law enforcement officers in Kansas raided the home and office of a newspaper owner, prompting a sharp rebuke from a press freedom group and raising constitutional questions far beyond the small ...
The Emporia News; Enterprise–Chronicle – Burlingame – vol. 26 in 1921; The Girard Press – Girard; Herald of Freedom - Lawrence [2] [3] [4] Kansas Free State - Lawrence [5] [6] Kiowa County Signal – Greensburg; Labor Chieftain – Topeka (1885–1887) [7] Lawrence Republican – Lawrence – vol. 3 in 1859–60; St John News – St. John
GateHouse publishes 14 daily newspapers and seven weeklies in Kansas, and several shopper publications (not listed) in most of its newspaper markets: [5] Wichita area and central Kansas Butler County Times-Gazette [ 59 ] of El Dorado, Kansas , a merger of the former Augusta Gazette and El Dorado Times, published twice weekly.
Osage City was surveyed and platted in late 1869, after the route of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway had been fixed, but before it had been built to the city. Osage City was incorporated as a city in April 1872. [6] Like Osage County, the city was named for the Osage Nation. [7] Osage City was a very busy coal mining town in the 19th ...
On Mar. 10, 1910 it changed names to Alcona County Herald with Rola E. Prescott as publisher. “It is the only country weekly in the United States having its own cartoonist and giving its readers a live cartoon on county subjects in every issue.” [246] Lincoln Herald: The newspaper began publishing on January 1, 1908, under the name Lincoln ...