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This is a list of newspapers in North Dakota. There were approximately 105 newspapers in North Dakota in 2020 according to the Library of Congress. The oldest newspaper still in print under the same name is the Hillsboro Banner, which dates from 1879. [1]
An article published in the St. Paul Pioneer Press and Tribune shortly after his death stated that he had been employed as a telegrapher with the Northern Pacific Railroad while the railroad was built from Duluth, Minnesota, to Bismarck, North Dakota. [3]: 19–20 Some writers have proposed that this occupied Kellogg's life from 1870 to 1873.
Bismarck Weekly Tribune nameplate, 1895. Founded in 1873 by Clement A. Lounsberry, the Bismarck Tribune published its first issue on July 11, 1873. [2] It has been known as the Bismarck Daily Tribune (1881–1916) and Bismarck Tri-Weekly Tribune (1875–1881).
The paper was established in 1873 and is the oldest continuing business in the city. The Tribune is the official newspaper of the city of Bismarck, Burleigh County, and the state of North Dakota. [1] The daily newspapers of other major cities in North Dakota are also available at area newsstands.
He was the father of Ed Schafer who was the former United States Secretary of Agriculture and North Dakota governor (1992 to 2000). [18] [19] Harold Schafer died December 2, 2001, in a Bismarck hospital after an extended illness, aged 89. A memorial service was held at Trinity Lutheran Church in Bismarck. [20]
[16] [17] She died in Bismarck, North Dakota, on June 22, 2020, [18] after having been diagnosed with kidney cancer. [13] The state governor, Doug Burgum, and the senator John Hoeven expressed their condolences. [19] Hoeven and Senator Kevin Cramer memorialized her in floor speeches to the United States Senate on June 24. [20]
On September 18, 2022, 18-year-old Cayler Ellingson was killed in a vehicle-ramming attack around McHenry, North Dakota. After he was struck by a Ford Explorer SUV driven by a 41-year-old man, Shannon Brandt, Ellingson was taken to a hospital in Carrington, North Dakota, where he was pronounced dead. Brandt called 9-1-1.
This would prove to be the first of many family owned business enterprises in Bismarck bearing the Wachter name. Wachter's one-man dray operation burgeoned into a substantial corporate enterprise with more than 50 teams of horses and the farmland needed to support them, cutting and delivering ice from the Missouri River, [4] hauling and selling coal and wood for heating, and providing ...