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The Daily Gleaner is a morning daily newspaper serving the city of Fredericton, New Brunswick, and the upper Saint John River Valley.The paper was printed Monday through Saturday, until dropping to Tuesday through Saturday in 2022 and announced it would only publish the printed copy three days a week starting March 2023.
In May 1968 Irving bought the Fredericton Daily Gleaner from Michael Wardell. With this purchase Irving became the owner of all five daily newspapers published in New Brunswick. The sale of the Gleaner was not made public by either party, and was only revealed by Senator Charles McElman in a speech on the floor of the Canadian Senate in March ...
The Daily Gleaner is published in Fredericton as a city daily and there are also three weekly newspapers available. The Telegraph-Journal, based in Saint John, publishes a provincial edition and has a bureau in Fredericton.
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Fredericton – The Daily Gleaner (3x weekly) Grand Bay-Westfield – The River Valley News; Grand Falls – The Victoria Star; Miramichi – Miramichi Leader; Moncton – Times & Transcript (3x weekly) Oromocto – Post Gazette; Saint John – Telegraph-Journal (3x weekly) St. Stephen – Saint Croix Courier; Shediac – L'Étoile Shediac, Le ...
In 1901, he returned to Fredericton to serve as the sporting editor for The Fredericton Gleaner (now known as The Daily Gleaner). [5] [8] Throughout the 1920s, Black promoted New Brunswick as an adequate hunting place to Major League Baseball players. [9]
The inquiry documented the decades-long chain of events that finally lead to Toft's conviction, showing that various reports to Fredericton City police, the RCMP, the Daily Gleaner, the CBC, the Attorney General, and Cabinet Ministers failed to lead to disciplinary action against Toft and other institution staff. [11]
The paper has been published out of Saint John since 1862, when it was started as The Morning Telegraph. [2] The paper merged with several other New Brunswick papers in the following decades: the Morning Journal in 1869, [3] The Sun in 1910, [4] and The Daily Journal in 1923, which is when it first adopted the name Telegraph-Journal. [5]