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Cleveland: Cleveland Community News / The Greater Cleveland Community News: 1968 [21] Weekly [21] Official site; Cleveland: The Cleveland Gazette: 1883 [22] 1945 [22] Weekly [22] LCCN sn83035388; OCLC 9754948, 9754970, 9754999; Founded by Harry Clay Smith. [12] Became the longest-publishing African American weekly in the country. [23] Cleveland ...
The Barberton Herald (1923-2022) [2] Celina Democrat (1895–1921) [3] The Cedarville Herald (from July 1890 to December 1954) [4] Cincinnati Herald; The Cincinnati Post (1881–2007) [5] Cincinnati Times-Star (1880–1958) [6] Cincinnati Volksfreund; Cleveland Leader [7] Cleveland News (1905-1960) [8] Cleveland Press (1878-1982) [9]
Many of these shorter-lived newspapers, particularly in the 19th century, were political broadsheets produced only in connection with a specific election. African American newspapers published in Indiana today include the Gary Crusader, the Indianapolis Recorder, the Fort Wayne Ink Spot, and Evansville's Our Times Newspaper.
The News-Herald began as the Willoughby Independent on April 18, 1879, was renamed Willoughby Republican in 1920, and became the Lake County News-Herald in 1935. Its offices moved from downtown Willoughby to 38879 Mentor Avenue (U.S. Route 20) in 1950, then to its current location, 7085 Mentor Avenue, adjacent to Mentor, after 1973. [2]
It became the Cleveland News on September 13, 1905. [1] Daniel R. Hanna Sr., who had bought the morning newspaper the Cleveland Leader in 1910, bought the Cleveland News from Otis two years later, and consolidated operations in the new Leader Building at East 6th Street and Superior Avenue.
51 Fort Wayne, Indiana. 52 Fort Worth, Texas. ... Dallas Morning News; Fort Worth Star-Telegram; Atlanta, Georgia ... Examiner Newspaper Group; Jewish Herald-Voice ...
The Ink Spot was founded in 2018 as a replacement for Frost Illustrated, a newspaper that had served the city's minority community since the 1960s and folded in 2017. The founder was John Dortch, who also served as CEO of the Fort Wayne Black Chamber of Commerce. [6] The first issue was published on March 12, 2018, and was eight pages long. [4]
Frost was a member of the National Newspaper Association, the National Newspaper Publishers Association, and the Hoosier State Publishers Association, and the Greater Fort Wayne Chamber of Commerce. [7] Founded in 1968, at the outset the Frost had three competitors that catered to Fort Wayne's minority community. [8]