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Kentucky Publishing The Casey County News: Liberty: 1904 [15] Weekly Paxton Media Group: Central Kentucky News-Journal: Campbellsville: 1910 Paxton Media Group: The Citizen–Times: Scottsville: 1918 Weekly Robert Pitchford Created from merger between The Citizen (1908) and Allen County Times (1890) [16] Clinton County News: Albany: 1949 [17 ...
The community is located in east-central Warren County along U.S. Route 31W (US 31W) during its concurrency with US 68/KY 80.It is located less than a mile east of Plum Springs, and about 1.5 miles (2.4 km) southwest of US 31W/US 68/KY 80's junction with Kentucky Route 526 (KY 526), just off the northeastern edge of Bowling Green city limits. [2]
News-Democrat & Leader; News Journal (Kentucky) O. The Oldham Era; P. The Paducah Sun; The Paintsville Herald; R. Richmond Register; S. The State Journal (Kentucky) T ...
The history of the Banner dates back to 1885, [3] when the first-ever edition of its predecessor, the Green River Republican.It was the sole newspaper covering the Butler County area for about 97 years until November 1982, when Roger and Deborah Givens established the Butler County Banner as a weekly newspaper, [4] making Butler County one of the 36 counties in Kentucky served locally by two ...
The Courier Journal will have a reporter and photographer in Letcher County today. Follow along for updates. Letcher County courthouse shooting: Ky. judge shooting stuns Letcher County. Who is ...
March 22, 1902 issue of the Kentucky Reporter of Owensville. Alice Allison Dunnigan, pioneering journalist whose newspaper career began at the Rising Sun and Globe Journal in Hopkinsville, Kentucky. [1] This is a list of African American newspapers that have been published in Kentucky. It includes both current and historical newspapers.
The State Journal offices, c. 1916. In 1900, John Meloan established The Kentucky State Journal, an eight-page, six-column Democratic morning daily. [2] In 1908, Graham Vreeland established the Frankfort News. [7] In 1911, both papers united to become The Frankfort News-Journal and was renamed The State Journal in 1912. [2]
The newspaper was founded in the 1960s by Aubrey C. and Dorothy Wilson as The Cave City Progress. The newspaper expanded its coverage area in the late 1970s, opening a news bureau in Glasgow and changing the name to The Barren County Progress. Editorial management of the newspaper passed on to A.C. Wilson Jr. at about that same time.