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Notably, although the Louisiana Creole people were not considered Black until after the Civil War, the history of African American newspapers in Louisiana is sometimes considered to begin with the New Orleans Daily Creole, a Creole pro-slavery newspaper launched in 1856.
New National Era: Washington: D.C. 1870–1874 [82] Defunct New Orleans Tribune, The: New Orleans: Louisiana: 1985: Extant New York Amsterdam News: New York City: New York: 1909: Extant North Carolina Gazette: Raleigh: North Carolina: 1885–18? [83] Defunct North Carolina Republican: Raleigh: North Carolina: 1879–1880 [84] Defunct North Star ...
New Orleans Item-Tribune: New Orleans: 1924 1958 Began as Daily City Item in 1877 [4] L'Abeille (The New Orleans Bee) New Orleans: 1827 1923 New-Orleans Commercial Bulletin: New Orleans: 1832 1871 [25] New Orleans States-Item: New Orleans: 1958 1980 [26] The New Orleans Tribune: New Orleans: 1864 1870 [27] Opelousas Courier: Opelousas: 1852 ...
L'Union was the first African-American newspaper in the Southern United States. [a] The newspaper was based in New Orleans, Louisiana, and was published from 1862 to 1864.. Articles in L'Union were written in the French language, with the newspaper's primary readership being free people of color in the New Orleans area, especially in the faubourgs Marigny and Tr
Elaine Campbell founded The Ebony Journal, Iberia Parish's first Black-owned newspaper since Reconstruction, to fill a gap she saw in local coverage.
The Louisiana Weekly is a weekly newspaper published in New Orleans, Louisiana. It emphasizes topics of interest to the African-American community, especially in the New Orleans area and south Louisiana. It has an estimated weekly circulation of 6,500. [1] The Louisiana Weekly was established by the C.C. Dejoie family in 1925. [2]
Their sentiments echo those of residents who live in other towns along Louisiana’s Cancer Alley, an 85-mile (135-kilometer) corridor along the Mississippi River between New Orleans and Baton Rouge.
NEW ORLEANS (AP) — It's a media shake-up that will leave New Orleans with one major newspaper, instead of two, for the first time in nearly seven years.