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157 N. Main St. Suffolk, Virginia 23434. United States. Circulation. 11,165 (as of 2021) [1] Website. suffolknewsherald.com. The Suffolk News-Herald is a newspaper serving Suffolk, Virginia, United States. The News-Herald is published weekly on Wednesdays , and is available free at newsstands and businesses throughout Suffolk and surrounding areas.
Suffolk News-Herald: Suffolk: 1873 Daily Sussex-Surry Dispatch: Emporia: Weekly Womack Publishing Co. Inc. [2] Tidewater News: Franklin: Thrice weekly published three times a week Tidewater Review: West Point: Weekly Tronc, Inc. El Tiempo Latino: Arlington: 1991 Weekly Spanish language newspaper Times-Virginian [17] Appomattox: 1892 Weekly ...
Suffolk (locally / ˈsʌfʊk / SUF-uuk) is an independent city in Virginia, United States. As of 2020, the population was 94,324. [4] It is the 10th-most populous city in Virginia, the largest city in Virginia by boundary land area as well as the 14th-largest in the country. [5] Suffolk is located in the Hampton Roads metropolitan area.
Updated September 13, 2024 at 10:09 AM. A late-night shooting near a bus servicing business in southeast Virginia Thursday left two men dead and three seriously injured, police said. The shooting ...
2767-5971. Website. dailypress.com. The Daily Press Inc. is a daily morning newspaper published in Newport News, Virginia, which covers the lower and middle Peninsula of Tidewater Virginia. It was established in 1896 and bought by Tribune Company in 1986. Current owner Tribune Publishing spun off from the company in 2014.
1837 Suffolk head-on collision. / 36.72250°N 76.61361°W / 36.72250; -76.61361. The 1837 Suffolk head-on collision was the first ever head-on train collision to result in fatalities. The accident occurred on August 11, 1837 in Suffolk, Virginia, United States. [1]
Clint Jenkins. Clinton L. Jenkins is an American politician. A Democrat, he was a member of the Virginia House of Delegates, representing the 76th district from 2020 to 2024.
Nansemond. The Nansemond are the Indigenous people of the Nansemond River, a 20-mile-long tributary of the James River in Virginia. Nansemond people lived in settlements on both sides of the Nansemond River where they fished (with the name "Nansemond" meaning "fishing point" in Algonquian), harvested oysters, hunted, and farmed in fertile soil.