Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Voted #1 Weekly Newspaper in Alabama by the Alabama Press Association. [citation needed] Cherokee County Herald: Centre: Weekly Chilton County News: Clanton: Weekly The Citizen of East Alabama: Phenix City: 1957 Weekly R.M. Greene Largest weekly newspaper in Alabama Clanton Advertiser: Clanton: Daily Clark County Democrat: Grove Hill 1856 ...
Thomasville is a city in Clarke County, Alabama, United States. At the 2020 census, the population was 3,649. Founded as a late 19th-century railroad town, it has transitioned over the course of more than a century into a 21st-century commercial hub. [3] It is the childhood hometown of author and storyteller Kathryn Tucker Windham.
Lagniappe Weekly is the largest independently owned weekly newspaper published in Mobile, Alabama.It features local news, music, events, arts, film and cuisine and for both Mobile and Baldwin counties including the communities of Fairhope, Daphne, Tillman's Corner, Theodore and Gulf Shores.
The Thomasville Historic District is a historic district in the city of Thomasville, Alabama, United States. Thomasville was founded in 1888, along the then newly constructed railroad between Mobile and Selma. The city's business district suffered a major fire in 1899, with only one brick building surviving. [2]
The Times-Journal newspaper is published twice a week [1] in Fort Payne, Alabama and serves the DeKalb County, Alabama region. The Times-Journal was a Southern Newspapers publication for 60 years before selling to Patrick Graham in 2019, [2] </ref> along with sister papers in Albertville and Scottsboro.
For the daily newspaper of Thomasville, GA, see Thomasville Times-Enterprise. Thomasville Times is a bi-weekly newspaper that primarily covers Thomasville, North Carolina, United States and eastern Davidson County. The newspaper, founded as a weekly in 1890, is owned by Paxton Media Group. As of 2002, the newspaper had a circulation of about ...
The Daily Home is a daily newspaper serving the Talladega County and St. Clair County, Alabama areas. Originally begun as a weekly in 1867 it was called Our Mountain Home until daily production began in 1909 at which point the name was changed to The Talladega Daily Home.
The plant was controlled by the Conant Thread Company until 1869, when J. & P. Coats, a Scottish thread company, assumed control over the manufacturing facilities. [3] Shortly after the takeover, the Coats company expanded the capacities of the plant and constructed additional mills to increase production and facilitate the production of yarn ...