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Iowa City Press-Citizen – Iowa City; Keokuk Daily Gate City – Keokuk; Le Mars Daily Sentinel – Le Mars; Marshalltown Times Republican – Marshalltown; The Messenger – Fort Dodge; Southeast Iowa Union – Mount Pleasant (was formerly the Fairfield Daily Ledger, Mount Pleasant News and the Washington Evening Journal) Muscatine Journal ...
Advantage Archives LLC is a digital archiving service based in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, United States. Established in 2018, [ 1 ] it digitizes microform , newspapers, books and documents. [ 2 ] The results are stored in a community history archive, which is freely accessible.
The Traer Clipper was founded in 1874 and the Traer Star was founded in 1878. The two papers merged in 1883 to form the Traer Star-Clipper. [1] In May 2024, Ogden Newspapers merged the paper with the Dysart Reporter, founded in 1878, to form the North Tama Telegraph.
Fifty years ago, five teenagers went to the woods on the Iowa-South Dakota border for a campfire. Only one of them survived the night. 50 years ago, 4 teens were murdered at Gitchie Manitou.
Gilbertville-area historical tornado activity is above Iowa state average. It is 206% greater than the overall U.S. average. On May 15, 1968, an F5 (max. wind speeds 261-318 mph) tornado 22.7 miles away from the Gilbertville city center killed 5 people and injured 156 people and caused between $5,000,000 and $50,000,000 in damages.
From 1986 through 2007, a weekly total market coverage newspaper called The Leader circulated in Scott County, Iowa, location of Davenport. Distributed on Thursdays, the newspaper contained re-printed content from the Dispatch and Argus, plus exclusive features and hard news stories from Davenport and the Iowa side of the Quad Cities.
The Daily Iowegian was a two-day (Tuesday and Friday) newspaper published in Centerville, Iowa and covering Appanoose and Wayne counties in Iowa and Putnam county in Missouri. It was owned by CNHI, LLC [2] The newspaper also published a Wednesday newspaper/shopper called Ad Express and has more than five times the circulation of the other days ...
Smith resigned and sued the newspaper for libel. The lawsuit was dismissed on the basis of the truth of the allegations in the news stories, but legal expenses have forced the newspaper to move to a twice-weekly schedule. [7] In 2022, the Wilson and Burns families sold the Carroll Times Herald and the Jefferson Herald to the Wagner family. [8]