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The Times of Northwest Indiana – Munster; The Courier-Times – New Castle; Farmer's Exchange – New Paris; Newburgh Chandler Register – Newburgh; Noblesville Daily Times – Noblesville; Sagamore News Media – Noblesville; Plain Dealer & Sun – North Vernon; Paoli News-Republican – Paoli; Indiana Plain Dealer – Peru; The Flyer Group ...
Hartford City's current (2009) News-Times is a descendant of the entity created by the merger of the Hartford City News and the Times-Gazette. [1] Hartford City Times (1852) First newspaper in Blackford County. [2] Blackford County News (1852–1859) [3] Register (1856) [4] Blackford County Democrat (1857–1861) [5] Hartford City Union (1861 ...
Front page of the Indianapolis Leader, one of Indiana's first African American newspapers. Newspaper rack with issues of the Gary Crusader in 2020. Various African American newspapers have been published in Indiana. The Evansville weekly Our Age, which was in circulation by 1878, is the first known African American newspaper in Indiana. [1]
The East Allen County Times was a freely circulated, monthly newspaper which was direct-mailed to zip codes 46774 in New Haven, 46741 in Grabill, 46743 in Harlan, 45745 in Hoagland, 46797 in Woodburn and 46773 in Monroeville with a circulation of over 13,000 addresses. It contained editorial content pertaining to Eastern Allen County, Indiana.
AIM Media Indiana (formerly Home News Enterprises) is an American printer and publisher of daily and weekly newspapers, based in Columbus, Indiana. Its flagship newspaper is The Republic in Columbus, and its other newspaper holdings also cover small cities and counties south and east of Indianapolis .
The South Bend News-Times was a daily newspaper in South Bend, Indiana, in the United States, from 1913 to 1938. The News-Times was formed on June 2, 1913, through a merger of the South Bend Times and South Bend News. The Times had been in operation under several names since it was founded in 1881 by Editor Henry A. Peed (1846-1905).
The newspaper was founded in 1837, making it the second oldest newspaper in the state of Indiana behind just the Vincennes Sun-Commercial. The newspaper is self-published and has been owned by the same family since 1849. [1] The newspaper has changed its name several times throughout its existence.
The News-Sentinel traces its origins to 1833, when The Sentinel was established as a weekly paper. The Sentinel was owned for a year and half in 1878-79 by Fort Wayne native William Rockhill Nelson who went on to found and make his fortune with The Kansas City Star.