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Mississippi newspapers, 1805-1940: a preliminary union list of Mississippi newspaper files available in county archives, offices of publishers, libraries, and private collections in Mississippi – via HathiTrust. Thomas D. Clark (1948). Southern Country Editor. Bobbs-Merrill. OCLC 525858.
Angry City Press, Cleveland, 1970 [1] Aquarius, Dayton; The Big Us, Cleveland, 1968–1970 (changed name to Burning River News) Columbus Free Press, Columbus, 1969–present; Cuyahoga Current, Cleveland, Ohio, 1972-[23] Great Swamp Erie Da Da Boom, Cleveland, 1970–1972; Hash, Warren, 1970–1972 [1] Independent Eye, Cincinnati; New Age, Athens
The Bolivar Commercial was a newspaper in Cleveland, Mississippi from 1916 to 2020. [1] It was owned by Walls Newspapers. [2]Amid large revenue losses associated with the COVID-19 pandemic, Commercial owner Lee Walls in April 2020 announced that the newspaper would cease publication at the end of the month. [3]
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The Cleveland News Leader was a Sunday morning newspaper printed from 2004 to 2009 in Cleveland, Mississippi. The newspaper was founded by David Johnson, who served as its editor and publisher [1]. The paper earned a reputation as an unusually hard-nosed newspaper for such a small town, making a name for itself exposing government corruption.
He spent 33 years between the Jackson Daily News and the Clarion Ledger, where he served as sports editor until his departure in 2012. The Hattiesburg American published Cleveland's first sports ...
The first such newspaper in Mississippi was the Colored Citizen in 1867. [1] More than 70 African American newspapers were founded across Mississippi between 1867 and 1899, in at least 37 different towns. [2] From 1900 to 1980, at least 116 more such newspapers were founded in the state, but increasingly concentrated in the larger cities. [3]
The Jackson-Medgar Wiley Evers International Airport is the busiest airport in Mississippi, carrying six out of every 10 passengers boarding at the state's seven commercial airports.