This is a list of newspapers in Delaware .
Title | Locale | Year est. | Frequency | Publisher/parent company | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cape Gazette | Lewes | Weekly | |||
Community News | Hockessin | Weekly | Gannett | ||
Delaware Free News | Delaware | Online | |||
Delaware LIVE News | Delaware | Daily | Online | ||
Delaware State News | Dover | Daily | Independent Newsmedia Inc. | ||
The Delaware Wave | Bethany Beach | Weekly | Gannett | ||
Dover Post | Dover | Weekly | Gannett | ||
The Emerald Times | Delaware | Daily | Online | ||
High Tide News | Sussex County | Monthly | Online | ||
HOY en Delaware | Delaware | 1996 | Monthly | HOY en Delaware, LLC | Print, online and Fb |
Middletown Transcript | Middletown | Weekly | Gannett | ||
Milford Beacon | Milford | Gannett | |||
Milford LIVE | Milford | Daily | Online | ||
The News Journal | Wilmington | Daily | Gannett [1] | ||
Newark Post | Newark | Weekly | Adams Publishing Group | ||
Smyrna/Clayton Sun-Times | Smyrna | Weekly | Gannett | ||
Sussex Countian | Georgetown | Weekly | Gannett | ||
Town Square LIVE | New Castle County | Daily | Online | ||
New Castle Weekly | New Castle County | Weekly | |||
EL TIEMPO HISPANO | Newark | Monthly | Hola Delaware, LLC | Bilingual, Print, online |
Title | Locale | Year est. | Ceased | Frequency | School | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
The Hornet Newspaper | Dover | active | Delaware State University | [2] | ||
The Review | Newark | 1882 | active | University of Delaware | [3] | |
The Whetstone | Dover | 2021 | Wesley College | [4] | ||
Title | Locale | Year est. | Ceased | Frequency | Publisher/parent company | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Wilmington Chronicle | Wilmington | 1760 | 1760 | [lower-alpha 1] | ||
Wilmington Courant | Wilmington | 1762 | 1762 | Weekly | James Adams | [lower-alpha 2] |
Preston Lea was an American businessman and politician from Wilmington, in New Castle County, Delaware. He was a member of the Republican Party who served as Governor of Delaware.
The 1810 and 1811 United States Senate elections were elections that had the Democratic-Republican Party maintain their majority in the United States Senate. The minority Federalists had gone into the elections with such a small share of Senate seats that, had they won all of the elections, they would still not have reached a majority.
The Hermanner Volksblatt was a weekly German newspaper published in Hermann, Missouri from around 1856 until 1928. In the early 1870s, the paper briefly changed publishers and was known as the Gasconade Zeitung and the Hermanner Volksblatt und Gasconade Zeitung, before returning to its original name where it remained until April 18, 1928.
The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Wilmington, Delaware, USA.
The Griffin Daily News is a daily paper serving Griffin, Georgia and Spalding County. It is published in print and online. with a circulation of about 7,000.
The Exponent Telegram is a daily newspaper serving Clarksburg, West Virginia and the surrounding community. It has a daily print circulation of about 14,000, and a Sunday circulation of about 18,000.
The Maryland Independent is a semi-weekly newspaper that began publication in September 1874 in Port Tobacco, Charles County, Maryland.
The Sumter News was a newspaper serving Sumter, South Carolina. It became the True Southron and eventually merged with The Watchman to form The Watchman and Southron.
The Clayton Herald was an American weekly newspaper based in Clayton, Delaware, United States. It was founded by Mrs. R. S. McConaughy, believed to be the only woman to start a Delaware newspaper. She published it for three years until her death in December 1869, after which the paper was relocated to Smyrna and renamed the Herald and Intelligencer. It ceased publication in 1871. The paper's motto was "Independent in Everything; Neutral in Nothing."
The Delaware Straight-Out Truth Teller was an American semi-monthly newspaper based in Wilmington, Delaware. It was founded in 1872 by William Dean and John A. Brown in response to political dissension in relation to the United States presidential election of that year. The paper supported the Straight-Out Democratic Party presidential candidate Charles O'Conor and was a strong opposer of Liberal Republican Party candidate Horace Greeley. Its motto was "O'Conor & Adams; Honesty, Patriotism and Statesmanship." The paper appears to have ceased publishing after the election ended.
The Faulkland Quiz was an American weekly newspaper based in Faulkland, Delaware. It was founded, edited, and published by John T. Mullins and was in operation for at least one year, ceasing publication in c. 1893. The paper had a circulation of 1,000 by the beginning of 1893 and its motto included the statement "For The Masses."
The Whetstone, Wesley’s student newspaper, ran several editorials this week blasting the school's leadership, in particular President Robert Clark, for a lack of honesty and strong guidance.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: editors list (link)Newspapers that are freely available on the Internet