Type | Daily newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Broadsheet |
Owner(s) | Charles E. Handy (1902) |
Publisher | The Courier Publishing Co. |
Editor | F. L. Hagadorn (1856) Charles E. Handy (1902) |
Founded | 1856 |
Ceased publication | November 22, 1905 |
Headquarters | Courier Buildings Montgomery and Genesee Streets Syracuse, New York |
Circulation | 17,120 (1900) |
The Syracuse Telegram and Courier was a daily newspaper serving Syracuse, New York. The paper was founded in 1856 and published under a series of different names until it stopped publishing in 1905 due to high levels of debt.
The Syracuse Daily Courier and Union logo, published on June 12, 1865:
The logo published on January 13, 1867 was titled Syracuse Courier and Union:
The logo published on March 9, 1889 was titled The Syracuse Courier:
The first logo published on January 1, 1898 was titled The Evening Telegram and Courier:
On May 16, 1905, the newspaper was simply known as Syracuse Telegram":
By May 30, 1905, as a result of new ownership, the newspaper sported the Syracuse Telegram logo:
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The Syracuse Telegram was established in 1922 in Syracuse, New York, by William Randolph Hearst. Between the years 1922–1925, the newspaper was published as both Syracuse Telegram and Syracuse Evening Telegram and the Sunday edition was called the Syracuse American, and alternately the Syracuse Sunday American.
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