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The Hartford Courant is the largest daily newspaper in the U.S. state of Connecticut, and is advertised as the oldest continuously published newspaper in the United States.A morning newspaper serving most of the state north of New Haven and east of Waterbury, its headquarters on Broad Street in Hartford, Connecticut was a short walk from the state capitol.
Hartford Courant – Hartford; New Britain Herald – New Britain; The Hour – Norwalk; Journal Inquirer – Manchester; The Middletown Press – Middletown; New Haven Register – New Haven; The News-Times – Danbury; Record-Journal – Meriden; The Register Citizen – Torrington; Republican-American – Waterbury
This is a list of online newspaper archives and some magazines and journals, including both free and pay wall blocked digital archives. Most are scanned from microfilm into pdf, gif or similar graphic formats and many of the graphic archives have been indexed into searchable text databases utilizing optical character recognition (OCR) technology.
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CTNow is a free weekly newspaper in central and southwestern Connecticut, United States, published by the Hartford Courant.. The previous iteration of CTNow was New Mass. Media, a privately owned weekly newspaper company until 1999, when its owners, including founding publisher Geoffrey Robinson, sold the company to The Hartford Courant for an undisclosed sum.
As of 2015, the paper had a weekday circulation of 64,210, the second largest in the state after the Hartford Courant. [10]Its main daily competitors are new Hearst stablemate the Post, located in Bridgeport, which covers Stratford, Milford, and portions of the lower Naugatuck Valley (Ansonia, Derby, Oxford, Seymour, and Shelton), and the Waterbury Republican-American, which covers Greater ...
The Hartford Times was a daily afternoon newspaper serving the Hartford, Connecticut, community from 1817 to 1976. It was owned for decades by the Gannett Company which sold the financially struggling paper in 1973 to the owners of the New Haven Register , who failed to turn things around leading to its closure in 1976.
From 1975 to 1980, he served as editorial cartoonist for the Journal-Herald in Dayton, Ohio. [4] He spent the next 35 years of his career as the first full-time editorial cartoonist for the Hartford Courant from December 15, 1980, until the end of 2015, when he accepted a voluntary buyout plan. [1]