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Seachtain – Irish language newspaper which eventually replaced Foinse, included with the Wednesday Irish Independent Goitse – local weekly Irish language newspaper for the Gaeltacht parish of Gweedore .
On 2 February 2017, The Irish Post announced that it acquired the broadcaster Irish TV, [12] [13] [14] only to be closed a month later. Founder Breandán Mac Lua was the first editor; other editors of the paper have included Donal Mooney [ 15 ] who joined as a journalist in 1973, Frank Murphy, Martin Doyle, Mal Rogers, [ 16 ] Siobhan Breatnach ...
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.
The Lurgan Mail was founded in 1889 by Lewis Robert Richardson. The Lurgan Mail is a tabloid weekly newspaper based in Lurgan, County Armagh in Northern Ireland.It is published on Wednesday evenings, though each edition always bears the Thursday date [2] and reports not only news in Lurgan, but also in nearby towns such as Waringstown and others in Craigavon Borough area.
A yellow wind warning for Clare, Kerry and Galway will be in place from 5am to 11pm on Wednesday. Irish premier Leo Varadkar said flooding is “becoming more frequent and becoming more severe ...
The Derry Journal and General Advertiser was a four-page paper that cost one penny and was initially published on Wednesday and Saturday. In October of the same year as its launch, the paper's publication days were changed to Tuesday and Friday, and 1877 it became a daily paper for a brief time, however, this lasted just three months and the paper became a tri-weekly publication after three ...
The paper is published every Wednesday, and has the largest circulation of any North West of Ireland Printing and Publishing Company title, averaging at 13,169 for the first half of 2010. Its sister titles include the Ulster Herald, Tyrone Herald, Donegal News (Monday and Friday editions), Strabane Chronicle and Gaelic Life.
The Leitrim Observer was founded by the Mulvey family in 1889. [citation needed] It was bought by Pat Dunne, for a rumoured sum of £150, some time before 1910.When the Black and Tans came to Carrick-on-Shannon during the War of Independence, they badly burned the newspaper's premises, destroying many of its early files.