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The Middletown Tribune, Republican newspaper in Middletown, Connecticut including 1893-1906, daily ex. Sun [6] [4] News and Advertiser , including 1851-1854, weekly [ 4 ] Penny Press , including 1884-1939, daily ex. Sun. [ 4 ]
In 1967, Neil Ellis, a real estate developer with an interest in journalism, bought two weekly newspapers, the Rockville Journal and South and East Windsor Inquirer. The weeklies were merged into the daily Journal Inquirer in 1968. [1] The paper moved from a garage in the Rockville section of Vernon to its present location in Manchester in 1974.
The Inner-City News / The Inner-City: 1980s [28] current: Monthly newspaper [28] LCCN sn95063181; OCLC 33438306; Free online archive; Only member of the National Newspaper Publishers Association in Connecticut. [29] Estimated readership of 50,000 in 2003. [30] Subject of a controversy over a sponsored content deal with Yale University in 2003 ...
Over the years, the company grew to include the communities of Colchester, East Hartford, Enfield, Glastonbury, Hebron/Columbia, Jewett City, Killingly/Plainfield, Manchester, Putnam, South Windsor, Stafford, Vernon, Windham/Mansfield, Windsor and Windsor Locks. [1] Carol Hovland died in May 2010 and Kenneth Hovland died in October 2011.
The Record-Journal is an American daily newspaper based in Meriden, Connecticut, that dates back to the years immediately following the American Civil War.It was owned by the Record-Journal Publishing Company, [2] a family-owned business entity, until it was sold to Hearst Communications Connecticut Media Group in November 2023.
The Hartford Courant is the largest daily newspaper in the U.S. state of Connecticut, and is advertised as the oldest continuously published newspaper in the United States.A morning newspaper serving most of the state north of New Haven and east of Waterbury, its headquarters on Broad Street in Hartford, Connecticut was a short walk from the state capitol.
The Hartford Times was a daily afternoon newspaper serving the Hartford, Connecticut, community from 1817 to 1976.It was owned for decades by the Gannett Company which sold the financially struggling paper in 1973 to the owners of the New Haven Register, who failed to turn things around leading to its closure in 1976.
Hersam Acorn Newspapers was a family-owned weekly newspaper company [1] based in Ridgefield, Connecticut, United States.The company published 19 weeklies in Fairfield and New Haven counties, Connecticut, and Westchester County, New York, and several shopper publications in Connecticut, Massachusetts, New York and Vermont.