Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
[2] In May 2017, they bought the Shelburne News, a weekly covering Shelburne, Vermont, and The Citizen, a weekly covering the towns of Charlotte and Hinesburg, Vermont. [3] In January 2019, the company had grown to include six weekly community newspapers and changed its name to the Vermont Community Newspaper Group. [4]
Deerfield Valley News - Wilmington, Vermont; Franklin County Courier- Enosburg Falls, Vermont; Hardwick Gazette - Hardwick, Vermont; Lake Champlain Islander - North Hero, Vermont [1] [2] Manchester Journal - Manchester, Vermont [3] News & Citizen - Morrisville, Vermont; The Mountain Times - Killington, Vermont; Northfield News & Transcript ...
In 1959, the newspaper was bought by Walker, who then sold the combined newspaper to Robert W. Mitchell and Gene Noble, owners of the Rutland Herald, in 1963. In 1979, Robert's son R. John became publisher of the Times Argus. [5] Mitchell and his son R. John bought out the Noble family in 1986, and the newspaper remains family-owned today.
Cabot is the location of the Cabot Creamery, founded in 1893 primarily as a butter factory to add value to milk production. Today the creamery is a producer and national distributor of dairy products, especially known for their cheddar cheese. Cabot Creamery is by far Cabot’s largest employer with a manufacturing and packaging plant at the ...
William T. Doyle (May 8, 1926 – August 15, 2024) was an American politician, academic, and author who served as a Republican member of the Vermont Senate.As a senator from the Washington Vermont Senate District from 1969 to 2017, he is the longest-serving state legislator in Vermont history.
The Rutland Herald, previously called the Rutland Daily Herald, is the second largest daily newspaper in the U.S. state of Vermont (after The Burlington Free Press).It is published in Rutland with its source of news geared towards the southern part of the state, along with the Brattleboro Reformer and the Bennington Banner.
The newspaper was established in 2006 as the Charlotte Citizen, but changed its name to The Citizen in 2011 to accommodate its expansion into neighboring Hinesburg, Vermont. [ citation needed ] The paper was part of Wind Ridge Publishing, owned by Holly Johnson. [ 4 ]
It is one of the official "newspapers of record" for the State of Vermont. [4] It was founded on June 15, 1827, as a weekly paper and turned daily in 1848 in response to the invention of the telegraph. Today, the Burlington Free Press is part of the USA Today Network and offers local news coverage both in print and online.