Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The newspaper is owned by Phillip and Jeanne Ann Reid, who also own the Vinita Daily Journal, the Perry Daily Journal, the Nowata Star, the OKC Tribune the Afton/Fairland American and the GrandLaker . [2] Southwestern Oklahoma State University graduate James Craddock purchased the Weatherford Democrat, the newspaper that he would rename the ...
The List of newspapers in Oklahoma lists every daily and non-daily news publication currently operating in the U.S. state of Oklahoma.The list includes information on where the publication is produced, whether it is distributed daily or non-daily, what its circulation is, and who publishes it.
Defunct newspapers published in Tulsa, Oklahoma (2 P) Pages in category "Newspapers published in Tulsa, Oklahoma" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total.
Other publications include the Oklahoma Indian Times, the Tulsa Daily Commerce and Legal News, the Tulsa Beacon, This Land Press, and the Tulsa Free Press. Until 1992, the Tulsa Tribune served as a daily major newspaper competing with the Tulsa World. The paper was acquired by the Tulsa World that year. [2]
Weatherford Democrat; Type: Daily newspaper: Format: Broadsheet: Owner(s) Community Newspaper Holdings Inc. Publisher: Jeff Smith [1] Editor: James Walker [2] Founded: 1895 [citation needed] Headquarters: 512 Palo Pinto Street, Weatherford, Texas 76086 United States: Circulation: 1,463 (as of 2023) [3] Website: weatherforddemocrat.com
Mt. Vernon Register-News - three days per week (previously daily) of Mount Vernon, Illinois, and its sister weekly, McLeansboro Times-Leader weekly of McLeansboro, Illinois, both closed in February 2018
Weatherford is the hometown of astronaut Thomas P. Stafford, veteran of four space flights and commander of the Gemini 9, Apollo 10 missions and the Apollo–Soyuz project. [18] The museum is located at the Thomas P. Stafford Airport. [18] Weatherford also has The Oklahoma Heartland of America Museum, which opened in 2007. [19]
Custer County was formed on 1891 as an original county from former Cheyenne land, and called G County. [3] On November 6, 1896, it was renamed Custer County after General George Armstrong Custer, who had fought the Southern Cheyenne Indians at the Battle of the Washita 20 miles west in Roger Mills County.