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The Middletown Times, daily newspaper in Middletown during 1913-1914 [6] or during 1914-January 1915 [4] The Middletown Tribune, Republican newspaper in Middletown, Connecticut including 1893-1906, daily ex. Sun [6] [4] News and Advertiser, including 1851-1854, weekly [4] Penny Press, including 1884-1939, daily ex. Sun. [4]
Pope John Paul II was the subject of three premature obituaries.. A prematurely reported obituary is an obituary of someone who was still alive at the time of publication. . Examples include that of inventor and philanthropist Alfred Nobel, whose premature obituary condemning him as a "merchant of death" for creating military explosives may have prompted him to create the Nobel Prize; [1 ...
This is a list of online newspaper archives and some magazines and journals, including both free and pay wall blocked digital archives. Most are scanned from microfilm into pdf, gif or similar graphic formats and many of the graphic archives have been indexed into searchable text databases utilizing optical character recognition (OCR) technology.
The Hartford Courant is the largest daily newspaper in the U.S. state of Connecticut, and is advertised as the oldest continuously published newspaper in the United States.A morning newspaper serving most of the state north of New Haven and east of Waterbury, its headquarters on Broad Street in Hartford, Connecticut was a short walk from the state capitol.
The News-Times was founded on September 8, 1883 as the Danbury Evening News by James Montgomery Bailey. In 1933, it merged with the Danbury Times, which was founded on May 17, 1927, thereafter to be known as the Danbury News-Times. The Ottaway Community Newspapers chain purchased the paper in 1955.
Former offices of the Nottingham Daily Express, Upper Parliament Street, Nottingham Main entrance with the heads of the Liberal leaders. The Nottingham Daily Express was a local newspaper published in Nottingham between 1860 and 1918. It was a radical, Liberal and strongly Nonconformist newspaper. [1]
Connecticut's first newspaper by and for African Americans was The Clarksonian, published from 1843 to 1844 in Hartford. [1] The first known paper after that came much later, however, with the Hartford Herald in 1918. [2] Connecticut's African American community has also historically been served by papers from neighboring states such as ...
The second paper to use the title started in 1825 when Jonathan Dunn published the Nottingham Mercury from his offices on South Parade in Nottingham under its proprietor Thomas Wakefield. It struggled to gain readership so was renamed the Nottingham and Newark Mercury. From 1827 to 1838 Matthew Henry Barker was the editor.