Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Fayetteville Observer (established in 1816) is the oldest newspaper in North Carolina. The Star-News of Wilmington (established in 1867) is the oldest continuously running newspaper. Many of the newspapers in North Carolina have common parent companies, including Adams Publishing Group, Boone Newspapers, Champion Media, Community News ...
The Watauga Democrat is a weekly newspaper published in Boone, North Carolina. [2] It was first published in 1888 to share news about the local Democratic Party; today, it chronicles general local news in Watauga County. The Watauga Democrat was named a newspaper of general excellence by the North Carolina Press Association. [3]
Elizabethtown, later renamed Columbia, was established on the banks of the Scuppernong River in 1793, and became the Tyrrell County seat in 1799. [1] Somerset Place State Historic Site, a representative antebellum plantation dating from 1785, is located near Columbia.
A copy of Wednesday's front page shared by Caitlyn Yaede, the Tar Heel's print managing editor, quickly went viral on social media and was largely praised for the emotions it evoked.
The entire front page of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill’s student newspaper, The Daily Tar Heel, Wednesday displayed “text messages sent and received by UNC students ...
University of Mount Olive – UMO Today; University of North Carolina at Asheville – Banner [10] University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill – The Daily Tar Heel [10] University of North Carolina at Charlotte – The Niner Times [10] University of North Carolina at Greensboro – The Carolinian [10] University of North Carolina at Pembroke ...
Today, it is one of America's most widely used children's newspaper supplements. [5] In 1971, Sitton became the editor and the paper began buying and publishing smaller local newspapers, starting with The Island Packet in Hilton Head, South Carolina and The Cary News in Cary, North Carolina. [5]
The Hale family moved to New York after the newspaper buildings were destroyed in the Civil War. His son, Edward Joseph Hale returned to North Carolina in 1883 to revive the newspaper and continued ownership of the newspaper until 1919 when it was sold to a group of local businessmen. [5] The Fayetteville Publishing Company was founded in 1923.