Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
(Includes information about weekly rural newspapers in Georgia) Louis Turner Griffith; John Erwin Talmadge (1951). Georgia Journalism, 1763-1950. University of Georgia Press. OCLC 1405638. Millard B. Grimes (1985). The Last Linotype: The Story of Georgia and Its Newspapers Since World War II. Mercer University Press. ISBN 978-0-86554-190-0.
The gangway was last inspected in December 2023 by the McIntosh County-based Crescent Equipment Company, the natural resources department said in a statement later Sunday.
Dec. 4—The McIntosh County Commission denies all the allegations in a lawsuit filed by a group of Sapelo Island residents that claims the county discriminated based on race when it passed a new ...
Seven people are dead after a dock collapse on Georgia's Sapelo Island that occurred on Saturday, Oct. 19. An additional eight people have been hospitalized, six of whom were critically injured.
The first such newspaper in Georgia was The Colored American, founded in Augusta in 1865. [1] However, most were founded in Atlanta. While most such newspapers in Georgia have been very short-lived, a few, such as the Savannah Tribune, Atlanta Daily World, and Atlanta Inquirer, have had extensive influence over many decades. [2]: 119
In 1970 advertising director Bruce Still left his job at the Gwinnett Daily News to start a weekly publication in Lawrenceville, the Lawrenceville Home Weekly. [6] [7] In 1973 it was renamed The Home Weekly [8] and was published until 1987, when it was renamed The Gwinnett Home Weekly to reflect its expanded readership and circulation. [9]
Get the latest news, politics, sports, and weather updates on AOL.com.
The McIntosh County Shouters are a group of traditional Gullah musical performers from the community of Briar Patch in Bolden, Georgia (located in McIntosh County). They have kept the ring shout , one of the oldest continuously practiced African-American traditions, alive.