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The Norfolk Weekly News-Journal – Norfolk (1900–1912) [17] The Norfolk weekly news – Norfolk (1899–1900) [18] The North Platte Semi-Weekly Tribune – North Platte (1895–1922) [19] The North Platte Tribune – North Platte (1890–1894) [20] Omaha Chronicle – Omaha (1933–1938) Omaha Daily Bee – Omaha (1872–1927; Omaha Bee-News ...
Lincoln County Tribune – North Platte (1885–1890) [citation needed] The McCook Tribune (1885–1912) [313] McCook weekly tribune (1883–1885) [314] Nebraska Advertiser – Brownville (1856–1899) [315] The Nebraska Advertiser – Nemaha City (1899–1908) [citation needed] Nebraska Palladium – St. Mary, Iowa (1854–1855) [316] Nebraska ...
The Daily Nonpareil is southwest Iowa's largest newspaper. [2] It was founded on May 2, 1857. [3]The paper was acquired in 2011 by Berkshire Hathaway, when it bought the paper's then parent, the Omaha World-Herald and its other subsidiary newspapers in Kearney, Grand Island, York, North Platte, and Scottsbluff, Nebraska. [4]
North Platte was established in 1866 when the Union Pacific Railroad was extended to that point. [6] It derives its name from the North Platte River. [7] [8]North Platte was the western terminus of the Union Pacific Railway from December 1866 until the next section to Ogallala was opened the following year. [9]
North Platte is the principal city of the North Platte television market which includes three counties in west-central Nebraska: Lincoln County, Logan County, and McPherson County. [ 8 ] The following is a list of television stations that broadcast from and/or are licensed to the city.
Mentor A. Brown, founder of the paper. The paper was founded in 1888, and was first published on October 22, 1888. [2] [3] Its founders included Mentor A. Brown (1853-1932), formerly of the Beatrice Press, and R.H. Eaton, who together organized the Hub Printing Company to publish the paper and to take over the Central Nebraska Press which dated from 1873.
On July 13, 1929, the town of North Platte, Nebraska, experienced a racial exodus (or race riot), when all black residents—somewhere between a few dozen and 200 in number—were ordered to leave by the town's white residents, following the killing of a policeman by a black man. Louis Seeman shot and killed Ed Green after he had been asked to ...
Television stations in North Platte, Nebraska (8 P) Pages in category "North Platte, Nebraska" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total.