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Seipel was a founding board member and first president of 1708 Gallery in Richmond's Shockoe Bottom, [22] now located on West Broad Street, in Richmond's Arts and Cultural District. While working in Savannah, he was the juror for Richmond's 1708 Gallery's 13th Annual SECAC (Southeastern College Art Conference) and MACAA (Mid-Atlantic College ...
Lee Enterprises acquired the Richmond Times-Dispatch and eight other Virginia newspapers they already manage for Berkshire Hathaway in March 2020 as part of a larger $140 million deal that included 111 publications across 10 states. [24] [25] In July 2022, Kelly Till became the first female publisher of the paper. [26]
In 1923, he became an associate editor, and later editor, of the Richmond Times-Dispatch. [1] He returned as to The Norfolk Ledger Dispatch as editor in 1928, remaining in that position until his death. [1] He served on the board of Norfolk Newspapers, Inc., the parent company of both The Virginia Pilot and the Ledger Dispatch. [2]
Bocock's obituary ran in the Richmond Times Dispatch on December 10, 1985. She was 84 years old at the time of her death on December 9, 1985: She was a member of the Historic Richmond Foundation's executive committee...and many of her projects were completed through the foundation. "She was sort of the preservation conscience of Richmond for so ...
In 1928, he left The News Leader for the Richmond Times-Dispatch, where he became Chief Editorial Writer in 1934, and editor in 1936. During his time with the Richmond Times-Dispatch Dabney also served as the Upper South correspondent for the New York Times. [6] As editor, Dabney was responsible for the editorial page.
Cochrane and his six brothers and sisters grew up in humble circumstances. Their rural Goochland County home lacked both plumbing and central heating. His father died of pneumonia when Harwood was 16 years old, and his mother ran a soup kitchen in Richmond, Virginia.
The Richmond Times-Dispatch reported that Harding died in hospice care on March 22, 2019, at the age of 81, of natural causes. Her memorial service was held April 13, 2019, at 11 a.m. at Monumental United Methodist Church in Emporia, Virginia .
Edward Emerson Lane (January 28, 1924 – August 19, 2009) was a Virginia lawyer and politician. [1] As a Democrat, Lane represented Richmond, Virginia (and for a limited time parts of surrounding Henrico County) in the Virginia House of Delegates from 1954 until 1978, and also was his party's (unsuccessful) candidate for Attorney General of Virginia in 1977.