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It was founded in 1868 as the Democratic Press, a weekly newspaper. [1] It became the Sedalia Democrat soon after. It began its daily edition, originally called the Daily Democrat, December 19, 1871 until 1873. [2] It was also published as the Sedalia Weekly Democrat from 1872 and the Sedalia Evening Democrat from 1891 until 1906. [3]
Sedalia Democrat - Sedalia; South County Times - Crestwood, Sunset Hills, Affton, Sappington Concord Village, and Fenton [3] Southeast Missourian - Cape Girardeau; Springfield News-Leader - Springfield; St. Joseph News-Press - St. Joseph, St. Louis Globe-Democrat - St. Louis; St. Louis Intelligencer - St. Louis [4] [5] St. Louis Post-Dispatch ...
The following is a list of people who were born in, have lived in, or are otherwise associated with American city of Sedalia, Missouri; they are known as Sedalians.In addition to what follows, a list of more than fifty Sedalia "Old Timers", who had met at the Sedalia Courthouse on the previous evening, was published in the December 12, 1893, issue of the Sedalia Bazoo; the list indicated when ...
An 18-year-old man from Hughesville, Missouri, was driving north on Missouri Highway O near Sedalia in a 2005 Peterbilt 379 when the semi-truck hit a pedestrian, 60-year-old Jay L. Bone, according ...
Gary Craig, Rochester Democrat and Chronicle April 26, 2024 at 11:06 AM Monroe County District Attorney Sandra Doorley at sentencing of Kelvin Vickers Jr., who fatally shot Rochester police ...
The Democrat was the name for various newspapers, especially in the U.S. for papers affiliated with the Democratic Party. The Democrat, a weekly newspaper published in Lithgow, New South Wales in Australia; The Democrat (1864–1874), [1] a newspaper in Davenport, Iowa [2] It was succeeded by the Davenport Democrat.
The first known African American newspaper in Missouri was the Welcome Friend of St. Louis, which was in circulation by 1870. [1] Yet the first surviving issue of any such newspaper dates from 20 years later in 1890, when the sole surviving issue of The American Negro of Springfield was published.
In 1940, it was published three times a week under the name the St Francois County Journal. On September 3, 1946, the St Francois County Daily Journal was published for the first time. Noah A. Grieg was a big part of the paper becoming a daily publication. [3] Madison County's newspaper, the Democrat News, also ran in the