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The newspaper has not missed an issue since March 17, 1897, when the Stump family, leaving Missouri, printed the first weekly edition in a baggage car of a train on the way to their new home. The News went daily (except Sunday) in 1901, and a Sunday edition was added in 1916 (although it was later abandoned, and then reintroduced).
The Port Arthur News is the only daily newspaper serving Port Arthur. Operating since 1897 The News is one of the oldest continually operated businesses in Port Arthur. It is currently owned and operated by Boone Newspapers. From 1932–1941 Port Arthur had a second newspaper called The Peoples Press.
The Peoples PressOCLC 49565998 was a weekly newspaper in Port Arthur, Texas, published from 1932 until 1941. Its circulation was reported as 1,500 for 1933-39 and 2,500 for 1940–41. The editor was Carl White, who was previously the editor of Peoples Press in Port Neches from 1925 until 1931. [1]
In 1991, Cox sold the Leader and the Port Arthur newspaper to American Publishing Company, which in turn dealt them to Community Newspaper Holdings in 1999. [5] After cutting publication from seven days to three (Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday) in 2011 [ 6 ] and later to two days, the pair was sold to Boone Newspapers Inc. in 2014.
While on Matsushima, he participated in the Battle of Port Arthur and other combat engagements. He was awarded the Order of the Golden Kite, 5th class on 1 April 1906. After the end of the war, Ōsumi returned to the Naval War College, emerging as a lieutenant commander on 29 September 1906.
Martin Bryant was born on 7 May 1967 at Queen Alexandra Hospital in Hobart, Tasmania. [2] He was the first child of Maurice and Carleen Bryant. Although his family's home was in Lenah Valley, Bryant spent some of his childhood at their beach home in Carnarvon Bay, adjacent to the Port Arthur Historic Site.
Benjamin Wegner Nørregaard. A picture from his book The Great Siege: The Investment and Fall of Port Arthur (1906).. Benjamin Wegner Nørregaard (3 October 1861 – 24 April 1935) was a Norwegian military officer, railway engineer, adventurer, journalist, diplomat and internationally renowned war correspondent.
Joe Vialls self-published a number of books including Deadly Deception at Port Arthur, The Murder of Policewoman Yvonne Fletcher and Lockerbie and the Bombing of Pan Am 103, and was the author of hundreds of internet articles.
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