Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Newspapers on Microfilm at the Tennessee State Library and Archives, Nashville: Tennessee Secretary of State. (Searchable by locale) Bibliography of Tennessee Bibliographies: Newspapers, Nashville: Tennessee Secretary of State "Tennessee". CJR's Guide to Online News Startups. New York: Columbia Journalism Review.
In 2014, Boone Newspapers bought several newspapers from Evening Post Industries. [ 7 ] Boone, who died of cancer in 1983, won a Pulitzer Prize in 1956 for an anti- segregation editorial in the Tuscaloosa News , where he was the longtime editor and publisher, about the admission of the first Black student to the University of Alabama. [ 8 ]
Elizabethton (/ ə ˈ l ɪ z ə b ɛ θ t ə n / [7]) is a city in, and the county seat of Carter County, Tennessee, United States. [8] Elizabethton is the historical site of the first independent American government (known as the Watauga Association, created in 1772) located west of both the Eastern Continental Divide and the original Thirteen Colonies.
After Tennessee withdrew from the Union in June 1861, the Confederate Army occupied East Tennessee and arrested several noted Union supporters. Throughout the summer of that year, Brownlow dedicated much of the Whig to defending these Unionists. [12]: 138–150 By October, the Whig was the last pro-Union newspaper in the Confederacy.
Captain William Rule launched The Knoxville Daily Journal on February 26, 1885, after previous experience in the Tennessee newspaper industry. The paper claimed a history reaching to the Whig in Elizabethton, where Rule worked for William G. Brownlow; the two men had also launched the Chronicle and Whig in the 1870s but sold it in 1882. [2]
Shifflett had been booked on a probation violation charge, according to the Knoxville News Sentinel. Shifflett had "some sort of medical emergencyâ according to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigations. Jail or Agency: Anderson County Detention Facility; State: Tennessee; Date arrested or booked: 4/13/2016; Date of death: 4/14/2016; Age at death: 58
The Tennessean (known until 1972 [2] as The Nashville Tennessean) is a daily newspaper in Nashville, Tennessee.Its circulation area covers 39 counties in Middle Tennessee and eight counties in southern Kentucky.
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more