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East Bay Media Group [1] (a.k.a. in 2024, [2] and officially copyrighted until at least 2022, [3] as East Bay Newspapers), registered as Phoenix-Times Publishing Company, [4] is a publisher based in Bristol, Rhode Island, United States, and owner of seven weekly newspapers in eastern Rhode Island and southeastern Massachusetts.
This is a list of all daily newspapers in Rhode Island. For weeklies, please see List of newspapers in Rhode Island.. The Boston Globe (Rhode Island) of Boston, owned by Boston Globe Media Partners, via their Providence-based bureau, covering all of Rhode Island
Providence Gazette, and Country Journal, 1762 Manufacturers and Farmer's Journal, Semiweekly, May 1, 1848-Dec. 30, 1907 [ 7 ] Providence Evening Bulletin. 1863–1995 [ citation needed ]
Discover the latest breaking news in the U.S. and around the world — politics, weather, entertainment, lifestyle, finance, sports and much more.
The East Bay contains the East Bay Bike Path which runs for 14.3 miles from Providence to Bristol. [2] In Bristol, the path begins at Independence Park on Thames St. and Oliver St. and in Providence, the path begins at India Point Park on Tockwotton St. and India St. In 2009, the bike path was inducted into the Rail-Trail Hall of Fame.
Breeze Publications is a privately owned publisher based in Lincoln, Rhode Island, serving northern and western Providence County with five free tabloid-format weekly newspapers. Founded in 1996 by Thomas V. Ward & James Quinn, Breeze Publications began—at first, produced in Ward's living room—with its flagship title, The Valley Breeze ...
East Providence is located between the Providence and Seekonk Rivers on the west and the Seekonk area of Massachusetts on the east. According to the United States Census Bureau, the city has a total area of 16.6 square miles (43 km 2), of which 13.4 square miles (35 km 2) is land and 3.2 square miles (8.3 km 2) (19.33%) is water.
The first known such newspaper, and the only one published in the 19th century, was John Henry Ballou's Eastern Review (1879–1880). [1] Rhode Island was thus the only state to show a net drop in African American newspapers between 1880 and 1890, namely from 1 to 0, as Irvine Garland Penn recorded in The Afro-American Press and Its Editors .