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Southeast Iowa Union – Mount Pleasant (was formerly the Fairfield Daily Ledger, Mount Pleasant News and the Washington Evening Journal) Muscatine Journal – Muscatine; Newton Daily News – Newton; Oelwein Daily Register – Oelwein; The Oskaloosa Herald – Oskaloosa; Ottumwa Courier – Ottumwa; Quad-City Times – Davenport; Sioux City ...
Blanchard is a city in Page County, Iowa, United States. The population was 29 at the 2020 census. [3] A small section of the city unofficially reaches into Missouri. [4] This territory is known as South Blanchard. [5]
The Globe Gazette traces its history back to July 17, 1858, and a weekly newspaper called The Cerro Gordo Press, named for Cerro Gordo County. [2] By the time Lee Enterprises acquired the newspaper in 1925, [3] under its current name, it had been known as the Republican, the Express, the Express-Republican, the Freeman, the Western Democrat, the Herald, the Times-Herald, the Gazette, and the ...
Opinion: Reflecting on Zachariah's short life, I can't help thinking about how Iowa wants to meddle in personal, painful decisions, writes Fern Kupfer 'Before and After Zachariah': What the story ...
The Daily Nonpareil is southwest Iowa's largest newspaper. [2] It was founded on May 2, 1857. [3]The paper was acquired in 2011 by Berkshire Hathaway, when it bought the paper's then parent, the Omaha World-Herald and its other subsidiary newspapers in Kearney, Grand Island, York, North Platte, and Scottsbluff, Nebraska. [4]
The newspaper is the result of a 1901 merger of the Dubuque Herald and the Dubuque Telegraph. [3] A descendant of the Dubuque Visitor (founded in 1836), the Dubuque Herald ' s first editor was Dennis Mahony. [4] The Telegraph was founded in 1870, and before merging with the Herald had absorbed eight local publications. [3]
The Omaha World-Herald Company bought the Ames Tribune in 1999 from Gartner, Gerlach, and the estate of David Belin. [3] Stephens Media purchased the Tribune from the Omaha World-Herald Company in 2010. [4] [5] In 2015, the Stephens Media newspapers were sold to New Media Investment Group. [6]
The Muscatine Journal traces its history to October 27, 1840, when the first issue of the weekly Bloomington Herald was released. [2] On June 7, 1849, the town's name was officially changed from Bloomington to Muscatine , and the newspaper then became the Muscatine Journal .