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The Sower family eventually sold the Rolla Daily News to American Publishing Company, and then the paper later became owned by GateHouse Media. [2] Gatehouse closed the St. James Leader-Journal in St. James in 2016 [5] and the Waynesvile Daily Guide in Waynesville in 2018. [6] Both were absorbed into the Rolla Daily News. [7]
The Daily Guide, commonly known as the Waynesville Daily Guide, but based in St. Robert and serving the entire county, closed in September 2018. It was owned by GateHouse Media and was the central printing plant for three other GateHouse newspapers in nearby counties, the daily Camden Lake Sun Leader and Rolla Daily News as well as the weekly ...
The cemetery is owned and operated by the Town of Waynesville. [2] Colonel James Robert Love, who donated the land and founded Waynesville and is a hero of the American Revolutionary War, is buried on the highest hill in the cemetery. [3] The white chief of the Cherokee people, William Holland Thomas, is buried there.
The Smith family continued the mortuary business in the 1940s and a family named Collins bought it in the 1980s and renamed it Smith Collins funeral home until 2015. The Holliday House was a ...
The Waynesville Courier began publishing on February 8, 1888. Jesse Daniel Boone sold the paper in 1902 to G.C. Briggs. Briggs turned it into a daily publication in 1906, but reverted in back to a weekly publication after two years. In 1912, Briggs sold the paper to R.B. Wilson and Harry Hall.
In 1891 he was admitted to the bar and commenced practice in Waynesville. He was elected as a Democrat to the Fifty-second congress and Fifty-third Congress (March 4, 1891 – March 3, 1895), Fifty-sixth Congress (March 4, 1899 – May 10, 1900) and Sixtieth Congress (March 4, 1907 – March 3, 1909). After being an unsuccessful candidate for ...
The Journal is a newspaper published in Seneca, South Carolina, five days a week, Tuesday through Saturday, the paper delivered Saturday being labeled as a weekend edition. It serves the western portion of upstate South Carolina, primarily Oconee County and western Pickens County, including Clemson University and the city of Clemson. Its ...
Soon after dr. Way built a medical office and by 1899 had completed one of the areas most distinguished homes. The home is a large 3 + 1 ⁄ 2-story brick dwelling retaining a lot of the woodwork, large carved fireplaces, and grand staircase with Queen Anne and Colonial Revival style design elements. It also features a full attic and widow's ...