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Dennis Hoey, Portland Press Herald, Maine November 28, 2023 at 6:47 PM The officers were making a felony stop on "armed suspects," Interim Assistant Chief of Police Robert Martin said.
The Portland Press Herald is produced, printed and distributed from the company’s headquarters in South Portland, Maine, with news bureaus in downtown Portland and at the State House in Augusta. The Portland Press Herald (abbreviated as PPH ; Sunday edition Maine Sunday Telegram ) is a daily newspaper based in South Portland, Maine , with a ...
The Maine Switch – Portland, published once a week on Thursdays; The Mid-Coast Forecaster – published weekly alongside The Northern Forecaster, The Portland Forecaster and The Southern Forecaster; Midcoast Villager – formed by the merger of the Courier Gazette, Camden Herald, Free Press, Republican-Journal, and villagesoup.com.
MaineToday Media, Inc. (abbreviated as MTM) was a privately owned news publisher of daily and weekly newspapers in the U.S. state of Maine, based in the state's largest city, Portland. It included the Portland Press Herald, the state's largest newspaper. In 2023, the group was sold to the nonprofit National Trust for Local News, which ...
Dec. 27—A downtown Portland hotel in the former headquarters of the Portland Press Herald has been sold. Fathom Cos., a Portland property development and hotel management company, said Monday ...
In 2015, the renovated building reopened as a boutique 110-room hotel known as the Press Hotel. [12] The hotel was sold to a San Francisco-based real estate private equity firm in 2021. [13] Guest rooms include custom wallpaper printed with headlines from the Portland Press Herald and each room has design elements take from a 1920s editor's ...
The earliest newspaper in Oregon was the Oregon Spectator, published in Oregon City from 1846, by a press association headed by George Abernethy. [2] This was joined in November 1850 by the Milwaukie Western Star and two partisan papers – the Whig Oregonian, published in Portland beginning on December 4, 1850, and the Democratic Statesman, launched in Oregon City in March 1851. [2]
Guy Gannett Communications was a family-owned business consisting of newspapers in Maine and a handful of television stations in the eastern United States.The company was founded by its namesake, Guy P. Gannett, in 1921, and was managed by a family trust from 1954 to 1998, when it sold most of its properties to The Seattle Times Company and Sinclair Broadcast Group.