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The News-Free Press gave Chattanooga its first full-color newspaper photos. Each newspaper won a single Pulitzer Prize. In 1956, Charles L. Bartlett of the Washington Bureau of The Chattanooga Times won the Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting, for articles leading to the resignation of the secretary of the Air Force, Harold E. Talbott.
Operation Tennessee Waltz was a sting operation set up by federal and state law enforcement agents, including the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and Tennessee Bureau of Investigation (TBI). The operation led to the arrest of seven Tennessee state lawmakers and two men identified as "bagmen" in the indictment on the morning of May 26 ...
Chattanooga Blade [16] Chattanooga Chattanooga Daily Rebel: Chattanooga [17] Chattanooga Evening News: Chattanooga 1888 Became Chattanooga News-Free Press in 1940, Chattanooga Free Press in 1993, and Chattanooga Times Free Press in 1999 [8] The Chattanooga Star: Chattanooga 1907 1908 Chattanooga Times: Chattanooga 1869 1999 [18] The Commercial ...
The Chattanoogan. The Chattanoogan and its website Chattanoogan.com is an online media outlet that concentrates on news from Chattanooga, Tennessee. It is published by John Wilson, previously a staff writer for the Chattanooga Free Press. The website was launched on September 1, 1999, and calls itself "one of the first full-service web-only ...
Signature. Adolph Simon Ochs (March 12, 1858 – April 8, 1935) was an American newspaper publisher and former owner of The New York Times and The Chattanooga Times, which is now the Chattanooga Times Free Press. Through his only child, Iphigene Ochs Sulzberger, and her husband Arthur Hays Sulzberger, Ochs's descendants continue to publish The ...
May 5, 2017 at 3:09 PM. A series of psychiatric facilities operated by the Church of Scientology in Cannon County, Tennesee were raided this week by police after they were alerted about patients ...
A front page of the Maryville Republican from 1867. This is a list of African American newspapers that have been published in Tennessee. It includes both current and historical newspapers. More than 100 such papers have been published in Tennessee. [ 1] The first was The Colored Tennessean, first published in Nashville on April 29, 1865.
1838 – Cherokee Nation removed from Chattanooga, marched out to ' Indian Territory ' (now Oklahoma) on the ' Trail of Tears '. 1840 – James Enfield Berry becomes mayor. [1] 1849 – Western & Atlantic Railroad begins operating. [2] 1851 – City chartered. [2][3] 1854 – Nashville & Chattanooga Railway in operation. [2]