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Texas newspapers, 1813-1939: A union list of newspaper files available in offices of publishers, libraries, and a number of private collections. Houston. {}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher ; John Melton Wallace (1966), Gaceta to Gazette: A Check List of Texas Newspapers, 1813-1846; G. Thomas Tanselle (1971). "General Studies: Texas".
AIM Media Texas is a United States publisher of daily and non-daily newspapers, primarily in the Rio Grande Valley region of Texas. In 2012, Freedom Communications began selling most of its newspaper portfolio. [ 1 ]
This is a list of defunct newspapers of the United States. Only notable names among the thousands of such newspapers are listed, primarily major metropolitan dailies which published for ten years or more.
Several African-American-owned newspapers are published in Houston. Allan Turner of the Houston Chronicle said that the papers "are both journalistic throwbacks — papers whose content directly reflects their owners' views — and cutting-edge, hyper-local publications targeting the concerns of the city's roughly half-million African-Americans."
The Valley Morning Star, established in 1909 as the Harlingen Star, is an American newspaper published in Harlingen in the U.S. state of Texas. [2] [3] In 1938, The New York Times reported on a printer's strike at the newspaper that was organized by the Typographical Union. [4] In 1951, the newspaper was bought by Raymond C. Hoiles. [5]
The Baytown Sun was founded in Goose Creek, Texas, as the weekly publication, Goose Creek Gasser, in 1919. By 1928, the paper was operating under the name Daily Tribune . Due to the economic pressures caused by the Great Depression , in 1931 the Daily Tribune merged with newspapers in the nearby communities of Pelly and Baytown.
The Lufkin Daily News was the first daily newspaper in Lufkin, founded in 1906 [2] by Charles L. Schless, who came to the city from Chicago to begin the afternoon publication. In 1909, he organized local stockholders to form a company and bought the Lufkin Tribune , a weekly in operation since 1887.
The Monitor is a newspaper in McAllen, Texas that covers Starr and Hidalgo counties. It was owned by Freedom Communications until 2012, when Freedom papers in Texas were sold to AIM Media Texas. [2] The Monitor's Spanish-language sister paper, La Frontera, shut down in 2009. [3] It shares content with the Valley Morning Star and The Brownsville ...