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The Standard was created by William R. Givens in 1907, when he acquired the News and Times, which had been an amalgamation of the Kingston News and Evening Times in 1903. The two men amalgamated the papers on 1 December 1926, creating the Whig-Standard. The word "Kingston" was dropped from the name in 1973, but was reinstated in the early 1990s.
Newspaper Area County Frequency Ownership Notes Abington Mariner [1] Abington: Plymouth: Weekly: New Media Investment Group: The Advocate: Fairhaven: Bristol: Weekly: News Corporation: Also covers Acushnet Agawam Advertiser News [1] Agawam: Hampden: Weekly: Turley Publications: Allston/Brighton TAB [1] Boston: Suffolk: Weekly: New Media ...
This category is for papers that were established in the early 1800s in the United States, in editorial support of the Whig Party. Pages in category "Whig newspapers (United States)" The following 7 pages are in this category, out of 7 total.
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The famed underground dive bar has been at the corner of Main and Gervais streets in Columbia for 17 years. Now it is time to say goodbye.
It was meant as a competitor to the Whig’s daily, with two more pages to their six, and a dollar cheaper a year compared to their price of $6. On April 8, 1908, the News was taken over by a local syndicate of Conservatives made up of William R. Givens (a one-time News reporter), H. W. Richardson and W. F
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"Office Brownlow's Knoxville Whig" detail from The War in Tennessee by Theodore R. Davis (Harper's Weekly, April 9, 1864) The Whig was a typical nineteenth-century broadsheet, usually containing four pages, each divided into five (later six) columns. Editorials and news typically occupied the first two-and-a-half pages, and advertisements ...