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That’s why I’m excited to share big news about a new daily digital product that gets rolled out to Herald-Leader and kentucky.com subscribers today. It’s a new, improved electronic edition ...
The Herald-Leader was created by a 1983 merger of the Lexington Herald and the Lexington Leader. The story of the Herald begins in 1870 with a paper known as the Lexington Daily Press. In 1895, a descendant of that paper was first published as the Morning Herald, later to be renamed the Lexington Herald in 1905.
Lewis County Herald: Vanceburg: 1924 [56] Weekly Dennis Brown Lexington Herald-Leader: Lexington: 1870 Sun–Fri [57] McClatchy Company [58] Originally Lexington Daily Press: Louisville Defender: Louisville: 1933 Weekly Albin H. Bowman Publishing [59] Louisville Eccentric Observer: Louisville: 1990 weekly Aaron Yarmuth Free tabloid paper The ...
Much like the rest of Lexington and across Kentucky, the Herald-Leader has been no stranger to change in recent years. We’ve seen the arrival of a new editor, new staff members and even new ...
One of the areas for researchers is the Central Library's Kentucky Room, which houses Kentucky census records and numerous other genealogy and local history resources. It also contains microfilm of the Lexington Herald-Leader, as well as its forerunners, the Lexington Herald and the Lexington Leader, along with other local newspapers.
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There is a gable in the parapet in the front center holds a decorative scroll displaying an "H" (for Herald). The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1982. [2] John L. Nunn purchased the Lexington Herald in the 1930s, [3] and the Lexington Herald Building is now more associated with Nunn than with the Herald. The ...