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"Texas Newspapers by Ethnic, Religious Professional, or Political Orientation". Dolph Briscoe Center for American History, University of Texas at Austin. August 6, 2012. Penny Abernathy, "The Expanding News Desert: Texas", Usnewsdeserts.com, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. (Survey of local news existence and ownership in 21st century)
The newspaper was established in June 1890 as the weekly Killeen Herald, owned by W.E. Bennett. Bennett sold the newspaper in 1893, and ownership of the newspaper changed several times before Bennett repurchased it in 1903. After a failed transition to a daily, William H. Carter bought it that year and reverted it to a weekly format.
The Texas Tribune is a nonprofit politics and public policy news website headquartered in Austin, Texas. [1] [2] Its stated aim is to promote civic engagement through original, explanatory journalism and public events. [3] The Texas Tribune, like the Voice of San Diego and MinnPost before it, is part of a trend toward web-based, non-profit ...
There have been three newspapers based in Marshall, Texas: the Texas Republican (1849–1872), the Tri-Weekly Herald (1874), and the current Marshall News Messenger (originally the Marshall Morning News). The Marshall Morning News was founded in 1919, with the first issue appearing September 7. [2] It was founded by Homer Price and Bryan ...
The organization defined "major newspaper" as the one hundred largest daily newspapers. They found an increase among major newspaper making no endorsement from 9 in 2004, to 8 in 2008, to 23 in 2012, to 26 in 2016, to 44 in 2020 to 71 non-endorsers in 2024.
Downtown office of the Longview News-Journal. The News-Journal operates out of its modern three-story brick editorial offices in downtown Longview. The daily Marshall News Messenger and Texas Community Media's 12 non-daily East Texas papers are produced in the News-Journal's newsroom and printed and distributed from its Longview production plant.
The Mid-Valley Town Crier covers community news in an eight-community region of South Texas, spanning Weslaco, Donna, Mercedes, Progreso, Edcouch, Elsa, La Villa and Monte Alto. MVTC reaches tens of thousands of readers weekly, providing more than general news and features from the area but promotions and supplemental publications.
Stories differ on how the newspaper was formed. Histories of the city of Winnsboro indicate that the newspaper was formed in 1908 by a merger of the "wet" and "dry" newspapers in the town—one newspaper serving those holding views against the sale of liquors and one serving those holding views favoring the sale of liquors—the Winnsboro News and the Winnsboro Messenger.