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The Arkansas Gazette was established seventeen years before Arkansas became a state. When the capital was moved to Little Rock in 1821, publisher William E. Woodruff also relocated the Arkansas Gazette. The newspaper was the first to report Arkansas' statehood in 1836. [1] Arkansas Gazette building. Over the decades the paper was bought and ...
Arkansas Forum: Siloam Springs 1921 c. 1921 [8] Arkansas Gazette: Arkansas Post, Little Rock 1819 [9] 1991 [10] Arkansas Herald: Siloam Springs 1882 1889 [11] Arkansas Intelligencer: Van Buren 1842 1845 [12] Arkansas Journal: Helena 1843 1845 [13] Arkansas Ladies Journal: Little Rock 1884 1886 founded by Mary W. Loughborough [14] Arkansas Post ...
The history of the Arkansas Democrat-Gazette goes back to the earliest days of territorial Arkansas. William E. Woodruff arrived at the territorial capital at Arkansas Post in late 1819 on a dugout canoe with a second-hand wooden press. He cranked out the first edition of the Arkansas Gazette on November 20, 1819, 17 years before Arkansas ...
Edmund Hogan appointed as Brigadier General of the Arkansas Militia, by U.S. President Monroe. [9] Matthew Cunningham arrives in Little Rock. He is the first physician in the city. [verification needed] Little Rock becomes the capital of the Arkansas Territory formed in 1819; and seat of Pulaski County. [10] [8] Arkansas Gazette in publication.
Founded as the Arkansas Gazette by William E. Woodruff in November 1819, it was the first newspaper to begin publication in the then-Arkansas Territory and was originally published in the pre-statehood territorial capital of Arkansas Post, before relocating to Little Rock shortly after it became the capital city in 1821. The Gazette and the ...
The Gazette Building in downtown Little Rock, Arkansas was built in 1908. It was designed by architect George R. Mann, and built by Peter Hotze. [2] The building was listed on the U.S. National Register of Historic Places in 1976. [1] Originally and for many years, the building served as the headquarters of the Arkansas Gazette newspaper.
Hussman was born in Texarkana, Arkansas, but moved in 1949 to Camden, Arkansas, with his parents, Walter E. Hussman Sr. (1906–1988) and the former Betty Palmer (1911–1990), and two older sisters. Hussman Sr. published The Camden News , which he had purchased from his father-in-law, Clyde E. Palmer (1876–1957).