Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
"Texas Newspapers by Ethnic, Religious Professional, or Political Orientation". Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, University of Texas at Austin. August 6, 2012. Penny Abernathy, "The Expanding News Desert: Texas", Usnewsdeserts.com, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. (Survey of local news existence and ownership in 21st century)
Split into The Straits Times (based in Singapore) and The New Straits Times (based in Kuala Lumpur) after Singapore's separation from Malaysia in 1965. 1850 [108] North China Herald (North China Daily News) English Shanghai: China A weekly newspaper at first, it began daily publication in 1864 under the new name North China Daily News. Ceased ...
It was expanded in 1836 and retitled History of Texas. [1] A later author in this period, John Crittenden Duval, was dubbed the "Father of Texas Literature" by J. Frank Dobie. Duval wrote Early Times in Texas (serial form, 1868–71; book, 1892) and Adventures of Big-Foot Wallace (1872). [1]
Telegraph and Texas Register (1835–1877) was the second permanent newspaper in Texas.Originally conceived as the Telegraph and Texas Planter, the newspaper was renamed shortly before it began publication, to reflect its new mission to be "a faithful register of passing events". [1]
The German settlement in Mexico goes back to the times they settled Texas when it was under Spanish rule, but the first permanent settlement of Germans was at Industry, in Austin County, established by Friedrich Ernst and Charles Fordtran in the early 1830s, then under Mexican rule. Ernst wrote a letter to a friend in his native Oldenburg ...
Texas History handbooks online. 1900 - 1980, Online Handbooks of Texas, Hunters Frontier Times. Cowboy, True West and Old West in Badera, Texas. 1953-1980, Frontier Times Museums, Badera. History handbooks of Texas online of Badera, Wisconsin. 1972 - 1979, editors, Joe Small and Pat Wagner; Official Website : The Frontier Times
George Dealey at West End Historic District. George Bannerman Dealey (September 18, 1859 – February 26, 1946) was a Dallas, Texas, businessman.Dealey was the long-time publisher of The Dallas Morning News and owner of the A. H. Belo Corporation.
The first local newspaper appeared in 1849, when James Wellington Latimer [1] (known as “Weck,” “Wake,” and “Mark”) established a weekly newspaper, the Dallas Herald. Latimer and William Wallace had purchased the Texas Times, published in Paris, Texas, and moved it to Dallas to become the Herald.