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Its current building, at 15 Franklin St. in downtown Petersburg, was built in 1921, along with what was then a state-of-the-art press. This was before the merger of the two papers into The Index-Appeal & Evening Progress, shortened to The Progress-Index in 1923. [2] In 2014, Times-Shamrock sold The Progress-Index to New Media Investment Group. [3]
"Virginia Newspapers in Public Libraries: Annotated List of Virginia Newspapers". Virginia Magazine of History and Biography . Vol. 8, No. 4 (Apr., 1901), pp. 337-346 (Alexandria etc.) JSTOR 4242373
Award winning Progress-Index reporters Bill Atkinson and Kristi Higgins, joined by News Leader reporter Lyra Bordelon, editor Jeff Schwaner and P-I reporter Allie Pitchon at the Virginia Press ...
Erik Edwin Wilkerson, 46, of Kennewick, died Nov. 13 in Kennewick. He was born in Kennewick and was a lifelong Tri-Cities resident. He was a maintenance manager for Navarro-ATL of Richland.
The Tri-Cities of Virginia (also known as the Tri-City area or the Appomattox Basin) is an area in the Greater Richmond Region which includes the three independent cities of Petersburg, Colonial Heights, and Hopewell and portions of the adjoining counties of Chesterfield, Dinwiddie, and Prince George in south-central Virginia.
Blandford Cemetery is a historic cemetery located in Petersburg, Virginia.Although in recent years it has attained some notoriety for its large collection of more than 30,000 Confederate graves, it contains remains of people of all classes and races as well as veterans of every American war. [3]
Old Blandford Church Petersburg Virginia - panoramio. The Blandford Church is the oldest building in Petersburg, Virginia whose history is well documented. It is at the highest point in the city, atop Well's Hill. It is today (2019) part of a memorial to Southern soldiers who died during the Civil War. [3]
Petersburg, Va., from Duns Hill, c. 1880 The Civil War headquarters staff of the Army of the Potomac's 5th Corps at the home of Col. Isaac E. Avery near Petersburg, photographed by Matthew Brady in June 1864; the following month, on July 3, Avery was killed in the Battle of Gettysburg.