List of defunct newspapers of the United States
Encyclopedia
This is a list of defunct newspaper
Newspaper
A newspaper is a scheduled publication containing news of current events, informative articles, diverse features and advertising. It usually is printed on relatively inexpensive, low-grade paper such as newsprint. By 2007, there were 6580 daily newspapers in the world selling 395 million copies a...

s of the United States
United States
The United States of America is a federal constitutional republic comprising fifty states and a federal district...

. Only notable names among the thousands of such newspapers are listed, primarily major metropolitan dailies which published for ten years or more.

The list is sorted by distribution and state
U.S. state
A U.S. state is any one of the 50 federated states of the United States of America that share sovereignty with the federal government. Because of this shared sovereignty, an American is a citizen both of the federal entity and of his or her state of domicile. Four states use the official title of...

 and labeled with their city of publication if not evident from their name.

National

  • Daily Worker
    Daily Worker
    The Daily Worker was a newspaper published in New York City by the Communist Party USA, a formerly Comintern-affiliated organization. Publication began in 1924. While it generally reflected the prevailing views of the party, some attempts were made to make it appear that the paper reflected a...

  • The National
  • Negro World
    Negro World
    Negro World was a weekly newspaper, established in January 1918 in New York City, which served as the voice of the Universal Negro Improvement Association and African Communities League, an organization founded by Marcus Garvey in 1914...

  • Police Gazette
    Police Gazette
    The National Police Gazette, commonly referred to as simply the Police Gazette, was an American magazine founded in 1845 by two journalists, Enoch E. Camp, also an attorney, and George Wilkes, a transcontinental railroad booster...

  • The Spotlight
    The Spotlight
    The Spotlight was a weekly newspaper in the United States, published in Washington, D.C. from September 1975 to July 2001 by the now-defunct Liberty Lobby...


Alaska

  • Alaska Advocate
  • All-Alaska Weekly
  • Anchorage Times
    Anchorage Times
    The Anchorage Times was a daily newspaper published in Anchorage, Alaska that became known for the pro-business political stance of longtime publisher and editor, Robert Atwood. Competition from the McClatchy-owned Anchorage Daily News forced it out of business in 1992.-History:The Anchorage Times...

  • Jessen's Weekly/Jessen's Daily
  • Tundra Times

Arizona

  • Gila Bulletin (Rivers)
  • Poston Chronicle
  • Tucson Citizen
    Tucson Citizen
    The Tucson Citizen was a daily newspaper in Tucson, Arizona. It was founded by Richard C. McCormick with John Wasson as publisher and editor on October 15, 1870 as the Arizona Citizen....


Arkansas

  • Arkansas Gazette
    Arkansas Gazette
    The Arkansas Gazette, known as the oldest newspaper west of the Mississippi River, and located from 1908 until its October 18, 1991 closing at the now historic Gazette Building, was for many years the newspaper of record for Little Rock and the State of Arkansas...

    (Little Rock
    Little Rock, Arkansas
    Little Rock is the capital and the largest city of the U.S. state of Arkansas. The Metropolitan Statistical Area had a population of 699,757 people in the 2010 census...

    )
  • Communique
    Communique
    A communiqué is a brief report or statement released by a public agency.Communiqué may also refer to:* Communiqué , a rock band* Communiqué , 1979* Communiqué , 1987...

    (Denson)

California

  • Alta California (San Francisco
    San Francisco, California
    San Francisco , officially the City and County of San Francisco, is the financial, cultural, and transportation center of the San Francisco Bay Area, a region of 7.15 million people which includes San Jose and Oakland...

    )
  • California Eagle
    California Eagle
    The California Eagle was one of the oldest and longest-running African American newspapers in Los Angeles, California and the West. It started in 1879, founded by John J. Neimore, who had escaped slavery in Missouri...

    (Los Angeles
    Los Angeles, California
    Los Angeles , with a population at the 2010 United States Census of 3,792,621, is the most populous city in California, USA and the second most populous in the United States, after New York City. It has an area of , and is located in Southern California...

    )
  • Hollywood Star
    Hollywood Star
    The Hollywood Star was an idiosyncratic gossip tabloid published on an erratic schedule in Hollywood, California by William Kern, who wrote much of the magazine under the pseudonym "Bill Dakota." Published in a newspaper format , it appeared in 1976, and had stopped publishing by 1981...

  • Los Angeles Evening Express
  • Los Angeles Herald
  • Los Angeles Herald-Examiner
    Los Angeles Herald-Examiner
    The Los Angeles Herald Examiner was a major Los Angeles daily newspaper, published Monday through Friday in the afternoon, and in the morning on Saturdays and Sundays. It was part of the Hearst syndicate. The afternoon Herald-Express and the morning Examiner, both of which had been publishing in...

  • Manzanar Free Press
  • Peninsula Times-Tribune
  • Sacramento Union
    Sacramento Union
    The Sacramento Union was a daily newspaper founded in 1851 in Sacramento, California. It was the oldest daily newspaper west of the Mississippi River before it closed its doors after 143 years in January 1994, no longer able to compete with The Sacramento Bee, which was founded in 1857, just six...

  • San Francisco Herald
    San Francisco Herald
    The San Francisco Herald is a newsletter/website in San Francisco, California, founded by Gene Mahoney. It was a newspaper from its debut in July 1998 until January 2008. As the newspaper/magazine industry rapidly crumbled due to declining advertising and readership, the Herald became a newsletter,...

  • San Mateo Daily News
    San Mateo Daily News
    The San Mateo Daily News was a free daily newspaper in San Mateo, California published 6 days a week with an average daily circulation of 22,000. The newspaper was founded August 9, 2000 by Dave Price and Jim Pavelich, who also published the Palo Alto Daily News...


Colorado

  • Colorado Springs Sun
    Colorado Springs Sun
    The Colorado Springs Sun was a tabloid-format newspaper published in Colorado Springs, Colorado, United States....

  • Granada Pioneer (Amache)
  • Rocky Mountain News
    Rocky Mountain News
    The Rocky Mountain News was a daily newspaper published in Denver, Colorado, United States from April 23, 1859, until February 27, 2009. It was owned by the E. W. Scripps Company from 1926 until its closing. As of March 2006, the Monday-Friday circulation was 255,427...

    (Denver
    Denver, Colorado
    The City and County of Denver is the capital and the most populous city of the U.S. state of Colorado. Denver is a consolidated city-county, located in the South Platte River Valley on the western edge of the High Plains just east of the Front Range of the Rocky Mountains...

    )

Connecticut

  • Farmington Valley Herald
  • Hartford Times, The
    The Hartford Times
    The Hartford Times was a daily afternoon newspaper serving the Hartford, Connecticut community from 1826 to 1976. Several accomplished individuals contributed to the newspaper, including Brit Hume, as a reporter; the television writer Robert Palm; the American painter, James Britton, employed as a...

  • Manchester Herald
  • Waterbury Democrat
  • Winsted Evening Citizen

See also: List of newspapers in Connecticut in the 18th century

Georgia

  • The Atlanta Georgian
  • The Atlanta Times
  • The Columbus Sun
  • Daily Intelligencer
    Daily Intelligencer
    The Daily Intelligencer was first published on June 1, 1849 as the young city of Atlanta's first successful daily newspaper.The founders were Benjamin Bomar, Z.A. Rice, Jonathan Norcross and I.O...

    (Atlanta
    Atlanta, Georgia
    Atlanta is the capital and most populous city in the U.S. state of Georgia. According to the 2010 census, Atlanta's population is 420,003. Atlanta is the cultural and economic center of the Atlanta metropolitan area, which is home to 5,268,860 people and is the ninth largest metropolitan area in...

    )
  • The Georgia Gazette
  • The Great Speckled Bird
    The Great Speckled Bird (newspaper)
    The Great Speckled Bird was a counterculture underground newspaper based in Atlanta, Georgia from 1968 to 1976. It was founded by New Left activists from Emory University and members of the Southern Student Organizing Committee, an offshoot of SDS. Founding editors included Tom and Stephanie...

    (Atlanta)
  • The Macon News

Illinois

  • Chicago Daily News
    Chicago Daily News
    The Chicago Daily News was an afternoon daily newspaper published between 1876 and 1978 in Chicago, Illinois.-History:The Daily News was founded by Melville E. Stone, Percy Meggy, and William Dougherty in 1875 and began publishing early the next year...

  • Chicago Inter Ocean
    Chicago Inter Ocean
    The Chicago Inter Ocean, also known as the Chicago Inter-Ocean, is the name used for most of its history for a newspaper published in Chicago, Illinois, from 1865 until 1914. Its editors included Charles A...

  • Chicago Times
    Chicago Times
    The Chicago Times was a newspaper in Chicago from 1854 to 1895 when it merged with the Chicago Herald.The Times was founded in 1854, by James W. Sheahan, with the backing of Stephen Douglas, and was identified as a pro-slavery newspaper. In 1861, after the paper was purchased by Wilbur F...

  • Chicago's American
    Chicago's American
    Chicago American, an afternoon newspaper in Chicago, Illinois, was the last flowering of the aggressive journalistic tradition depicted in the play and movie The Front Page....

  • Post Amerikan
    Post Amerikan
    The Post Amerikan was an alternative newspaper based in Bloomington-Normal, Illinois. The paper was founded in 1972....

    (Bloomington-Normal, Illinois
    Bloomington-Normal, Illinois
    Bloomington-Normal refers to the twin municipalities of Bloomington and Normal in McLean County, in Central Illinois. The combined population of the two communities in a special census in 2006 was 125,000.-Sports:...

    )
  • Skandinaven
    Skandinaven
    Skandinaven was a Norwegian language newspaper published in Chicago, Illinois from 1866 until 1941.-Background:Skandinaven was established by three Norwegian immigrants; John Anderson, Knud Langeland and Iver Lawson. John Anderson administered the business side of the newspaper. Iver Lawson...

     – Chicago
    Chicago
    Chicago is the largest city in the US state of Illinois. With nearly 2.7 million residents, it is the most populous city in the Midwestern United States and the third most populous in the US, after New York City and Los Angeles...


Kentucky

  • The Adair County News
    Adair County News
    The Adair County News was a weekly newspaper published on Wednesdays, in Columbia, Adair County, Kentucky The Adair County News was first published in 1887, and was last published in 1987.-Beginning:...

  • The Jeffersonian
    The Jeffersonian (newspaper)
    The Jeffersonian was a weekly newspaper published on Thursdays, in Jeffersontown, Jefferson County, Kentucky. The Jeffersonian was first published on June 13, 1907, and was last published in 1965.-Beginning:...

  • Kentucky Irish American
    Kentucky Irish American
    The Kentucky Irish American was an ethnic weekly newspaper in Louisville, Kentucky, which catered to Louisville's Irish community.It was first published on July 4, 1898, founded by William M. Higgins. It was a four-page weekly. Higgins would run the paper until his death on June 9, 1925...

  • The Kentucky Post
  • The Louisville Herald-Post
  • The Louisville Leader
    The Louisville Leader
    The Louisville Leader was a weekly newspaper published in Louisville, Kentucky.- History :The Louisville Leader was a weekly African American newspaper founded by I. Willis Cole in November 1917...

  • The Louisville Times
  • The Independent Press-Whitesville, KY ceased operation 1870
  • The Whitesville Independent Press, Whitesville, KY operated 2 years 1989-1991.

Louisiana

  • New Orleans States-Item
  • L'Abeille
    L’Abeille de la Nouvelle-Orléans
    The New Orleans Bee was a newspaper in New Orleans, Louisiana, founded on September 1 1827 by François Delaup and originally located at 94 St...

    (New Orleans Bee)
  • Baton Rouge State-Times

Maine

  • Evening Express
    Evening Express (Portland, Maine)
    The Evening Express was a daily evening broadsheet-format newspaper published in Portland, Maine, United States. It was owned by Guy Gannett Publishing Co. from 1925 until 1991. As of February 1991, the Monday-Saturday circulation was 22,700....

    (Portland
    Portland, Maine
    Portland is the largest city in Maine and is the county seat of Cumberland County. The 2010 city population was 66,194, growing 3 percent since the census of 2000...

    )
  • The Maine Times (Portland
    Portland, Maine
    Portland is the largest city in Maine and is the county seat of Cumberland County. The 2010 city population was 66,194, growing 3 percent since the census of 2000...

    )

Maryland

  • Baltimore American
  • Baltimore Evening Herald
  • Baltimore Evening Sun
  • Baltimore Morning Herald
    Baltimore Morning Herald
    The Baltimore Morning Herald was a daily newspaper published in Baltimore in the beginning of the Twentieth century.The first edition was published on February 10, 1900. The paper was absorbed by the Baltimore Evening Herald on August 31, 1904. On weekends, the Herald was known as the Baltimore...

  • Baltimore News-Post
  • Bethesda Tribune
  • Montgomery Journal
  • Rockville Times
  • Silver Spring Suburban Record
  • The Morning Herald
    Herald Mail
    The Herald-Mail is the Tri-State Area's newspaper serving the cities of Hagerstown, Maryland, Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, and Martinsburg, West Virginia and surrounding counties of Washington in Maryland, Franklin and Fulton in Pennsylvania, and Berkeley, Jefferson, and Morgan in West...

    (Hagerstown
    Hagerstown, Maryland
    Hagerstown is a city in northwestern Maryland, United States. It is the county seat of Washington County, and, by many definitions, the largest city in a region known as Western Maryland. The population of Hagerstown city proper at the 2010 census was 39,662, and the population of the...

    )
  • The Daily Mail
    Herald Mail
    The Herald-Mail is the Tri-State Area's newspaper serving the cities of Hagerstown, Maryland, Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, and Martinsburg, West Virginia and surrounding counties of Washington in Maryland, Franklin and Fulton in Pennsylvania, and Berkeley, Jefferson, and Morgan in West...

    (Hagerstown)

See also: List of newspapers in Maryland in the 18th century

Massachusetts

  • Boston Chronicle
    Boston Chronicle
    The Boston Chronicle was an American colonial newspaper published briefly from December 21, 1767 until 1770 in Boston, Massachusetts. The publishers, John Mein and John Fleeming, were both from Scotland. The Chronicle was a Loyalist paper in the time before the American Revolution...

  • The Boston Daily Advertiser
    Boston Daily Advertiser
    The Boston Daily Advertiser was the first daily newspaper in Boston, and for many years the only daily paper in Boston.-History:...

  • Boston Evening-Post
    Boston Evening-Post
    The Boston Evening-Post was a newspaper printed in Boston, Massachusetts, in the 18th century. Publishers included Thomas Fleet , Thomas Fleet Jr. , and John Fleet .-Further reading:...

    (1735-1775)
  • Boston Gazette
    Boston Gazette
    The Boston Gazette was a newspaper published in Boston, Massachusetts, in the British North American colonies. It began publication December 21, 1719 and appeared weekly.-Brief history:...

  • The Boston Journal
    The Boston Journal
    The Boston Journal was a daily newspaper published in Boston, Massachusetts from 1833 until October 1917 when it was merged with the Boston Herald....

  • The Boston News-Letter
    The Boston News-Letter
    First published on April 24, 1704, The Boston News-Letter is regarded as the first continuously published newspaper in British North America. It was heavily subsidized by the British government, with a limited circulation. The colonies’ first newspaper was Publick Occurrences Both Forreign and...

  • Boston Post
    Boston Post
    The Boston Post was the most popular daily newspaper in New England for over a hundred years before it folded in 1956. The Post was founded in November 1831 by two prominent Boston businessmen, Charles G...

  • Boston Post-Boy
    Boston Post-Boy
    The Boston Weekly Post-Boy and later Boston Post-Boy was a newspaper published by postmaster Ellis Huske in 18th-century Boston, Massachusetts. The paper appeared weekly, on Mondays....

    (1734-1754, 1757-1775)
  • The Boston Record
    The Boston Record
    The Boston Record was founded on September 3, 1884 by The Boston Daily Advertiser as an evening campaign newspaper. The Record was so popular that it was made a permanent publication.-Bibliography:...

  • The Boston Evening Transcript
    Boston Evening Transcript
    The Boston Evening Transcript was a daily afternoon newspaper in Boston, Massachusetts, published from July 24, 1830, to April 30, 1941.-Beginnings:...

  • Boston Traveler
  • Columbian Centinel
    Columbian Centinel
    The Columbian Centinel was a Boston, Massachusetts, newspaper established by Benjamin Russell. It continued its predecessor, the Massachusetts Centinel and the Republican Journal, which Russell and partner William Warden had first issued on March 24, 1784...

  • Editorial Humor
    Editorial Humor
    Editorial Humor is a now-defunct Massachusetts newspaper that consisted mostly of political cartoons and editorial/opinion pieces. Founded by Dean Wallace, it ran from 1990 to the end of 2001....

  • Essex Gazette
  • Holyoke Transcript-Telegram
    Holyoke Transcript-Telegram
    The Holyoke Transcript-Telegram, or T-T, was an afternoon daily newspaper covering the city of Holyoke, Massachusetts, USA, and adjacent portions of Hampden County and Hampshire County....

  • The Lowell Courier
  • Massachusetts Gazette
  • Massachusetts Spy
    Massachusetts Spy
    The Massachusetts Spy was a newspaper published by Isaiah Thomas in Boston and Worcester, Massachusetts in the 18th century.-Further reading:...

  • New England Chronicle
  • Provincetown Advocate
  • Publick Occurrences Both Foreign and Domestick (Boston)
  • Village Voice (Assonet
    Assonet, Massachusetts
    Assonet is one of two villages in the town of Freetown, Massachusetts in Bristol County, Massachusetts, United States. An original part of the town, Assonet was settled in 1659 along with the city of Fall River, then a part of Freetown. It rests on the banks of the Assonet River...

    )
  • Weekly Journal (East Freetown
    East Freetown, Massachusetts
    East Freetown is one of two villages in the town of Freetown, Bristol County, Massachusetts, United States. Added to the town in 1747, East Freetown was originally an outpost settlement of Tiverton, Rhode Island, then a part of Massachusetts. It rests on the shore of Long Pond.- History :East...

    )

See also: List of newspapers in Massachusetts in the 18th century

Michigan

  • The Ann Arbor News
  • Copper Island News, Hancock, Michigan
    Hancock, Michigan
    Hancock is a city in Houghton County; the northernmost in the U.S. state of Michigan, located on the Keweenaw Peninsula, or, depending on terminology, Copper Island. The population was 4,634 at the 2010 census...

  • Copper Island Sentinel, Calumet, Michigan
    Calumet, Michigan
    Calumet is a village in Calumet Township, Houghton County, in the U.S. state of Michigan's Upper Peninsula, that was once at the center of the mining industry of the Upper Peninsula. Also known as Red Jacket, the village includes the Calumet Downtown Historic District, listed on the National...

  • The Dearborn Independent
    The Dearborn Independent
    The Dearborn Independent, a/k/a The Ford International Weekly, was a weekly newspaper established in 1901, but published by Henry Ford from 1919 through 1927. It was notorious for its antisemitic content , and its publication in English of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion...

  • Detroit Times
    Detroit Times
    - Overview :The first iteration of the Detroit Times was an antislavery bulletin only printed from May - November, 1842 by Warren Isham.The second iteration began in November 1854. Published by G.S. Conklin and E.T. Sherlock, with John N. Ingersoll as editor...

  • The Grand Traverse Herald, Traverse City, Michigan
    Traverse City, Michigan
    Traverse City is a city in the U.S. state of Michigan. It is the county seat of Grand Traverse County, although a small portion extends into Leelanau County. It is the largest city in the 21-county Northern Michigan region. The population was 14,674 at the 2010 census, with 143,372 in the Traverse...

  • The Herald Press, St. Joseph, Michigan
    St. Joseph, Michigan
    St. Joseph is a city in the US state of Michigan. It was incorporated as a village in 1834 and as a city in 1891. As of the 2000 census, the city population was 8,789. It lies on the shore of Lake Michigan, at the mouth of the St. Joseph River, about east-northeast of Chicago. It is the county...

  • Hillsdale Whig Standard, Hillsdale, Michigan
    Hillsdale, Michigan
    Hillsdale is a city in the state of Michigan. As of the 2010 census, the city population was 8,305. It is the county seat of Hillsdale County, and is run as a council-manager government....

  • Iron Ore
    Iron Ore (newspaper)
    Iron Ore was a weekly newspaper published in Ishpeming, Michigan starting in 1886. Formed from the merger of two smaller papers, it lasted until 1951 when it merged with another local paper, the Reflector.- References :*...

    , Ishpeming, Michigan
    Ishpeming, Michigan
    Ishpeming is a city in Marquette County in the Upper Peninsula of the U.S. state of Michigan. The population was 6,686 at the 2000 census. This is down from a higher population in the 1950s and 1960s when the economically supportive iron ore mines had a much higher employment level...

  • Ironwood Daily Globe
    Ironwood Daily Globe
    The Ironwood Daily Globe is a daily newspaper based in Ironwood, Michigan.The Ironwood Daily Globe serves Gogebic and Ontonagon counties in Michigan and Iron County in Wisconsin....

    , Ironwood, Michigan
    Ironwood, Michigan
    Ironwood is a city in Gogebic County in the U.S. state of Michigan, about south of Lake Superior. The population was 6,293 at the 2000 census. The city is on US 2 and is situated opposite the Montreal River from Hurley, Wisconsin. It is the westernmost city in Michigan, situated on the same line...

  • St Joseph Herald, Saint Joseph, Michigan
  • St Joseph Traveler Herald, Saint Joseph, Michigan
  • The Hillsdale Standard, Hillsdale, Michigan
    Hillsdale, Michigan
    Hillsdale is a city in the state of Michigan. As of the 2010 census, the city population was 8,305. It is the county seat of Hillsdale County, and is run as a council-manager government....

  • The Weekly Press, Saint Joseph, Michigan
  • Iosco County Gazette Index, Iosco County, Michigan
    Iosco County, Michigan
    -Demographics:As of the census of 2000, there were 27,339 people, 11,727 households, and 7,857 families residing in the county. The population density was 50 people per square mile . There were 20,432 housing units at an average density of 37 per square mile...


Missouri

  • Kansas City Times
    Kansas City Times
    The Kansas City Times was a morning newspaper in Kansas City, Missouri, that was published from 1867 to 1990.The morning Kansas City Times, under ownership of afternoon The Kansas City Star, won two Pulitzer Prizes and was actually bigger than its parent when its name was changed to the...

  • Kansas City Journal-Post
    Kansas City Journal-Post
    The Kansas City Journal-Post was a newspaper in Kansas City, Missouri from 1854 to 1942 which was the oldest newspaper in the city when it folded....

  • Evening and Morning Star
    Evening and Morning Star
    The Evening and the Morning Star was an early Latter Day Saint periodical published monthly in Independence, Missouri, from June 1832 to July 1833, and then in Kirtland, Ohio, from December 1833 to September 1834...

  • St. Joseph Gazette
    St. Joseph Gazette
    The St. Joseph Gazette was a newspaper in St. Joseph, Missouri from 1845 until June 30, 1988, when its morning position was taken over by its sister paper, the St...

  • St. Louis Globe-Democrat
    St. Louis Globe-Democrat
    The St. Louis Globe-Democrat was originally a daily print newspaper based in St. Louis, Missouri from 1852 until 1986...

  • St. Louis Sun
    St. Louis Sun
    The St. Louis Sun was a short lived daily newspaper based in St. Louis, Missouri published by Ingersoll Publications. The Sun began publishing on September 25, 1989, and was never as competitive as the much-established St. Louis Post-Dispatch...


New Hampshire

  • New Hampshire Weekly
  • Morning Star
    The Morning Star (19th century U.S. newspaper)
    The Morning Star was a weekly newspaper owned and published by Freewill Baptists in 19th century New England, which campaigned vigorously for the abolition of slavery long before such a political stance was widely considered to be respectable in America....

    (Dover
    Dover, New Hampshire
    Dover is a city in Strafford County, New Hampshire, in the United States of America. The population was 29,987 at the 2010 census, the largest in the New Hampshire Seacoast region...

    )

See also: List of newspapers in New Hampshire in the 18th century

New Jersey

  • Centinel of Freedom (Newark)
  • Daily Journal (Elizabeth)
  • Morning Star (Newark)
  • Newark Evening News
    Newark Evening News
    The Newark Evening News was an American newspaper published in Newark, New Jersey. As New Jersey's largest city, Newark played a major role in New Jersey's journalistic history. At its apex, The News was widely regarded as the newspaper of record in New Jersey. It had bureaus in Montclair,...

  • Newark Gazette
  • Paterson Evening News
  • Paterson Morning Call
  • Paterson Morning News
  • Paterson Press-Guardian

New York

  • Brooklyn Eagle
    Brooklyn Eagle
    The Brooklyn Daily Bulletin began publishing when the original Eagle folded in 1955. In 1996 it merged with a newly revived Brooklyn Daily Eagle, and now publishes a morning paper five days a week under the Brooklyn Daily Eagle name...

    (Brooklyn, New York)(1841-1955)
  • Buffalo Courier-Express
    Buffalo Courier-Express
    The Buffalo Courier-Express was a morning newspaper in Buffalo, New York. It ceased publication on September 1982.The Courier-Express was created in 1926 by a merger of the Buffalo Daily Courier and the Buffalo Morning Express. William James Conners, owner of the Buffalo Courier, brought the two...

  • Guardian (New York City
    New York City
    New York is the most populous city in the United States and the center of the New York Metropolitan Area, one of the most populous metropolitan areas in the world. New York exerts a significant impact upon global commerce, finance, media, art, fashion, research, technology, education, and...

    )
  • Freie Arbeiter Stimme
    Freie Arbeiter Stimme
    The Freie Arbeiter Stimme was the longest-running anarchist periodical in the Yiddish language, founded initially as an American counterpart to Rudolf Rocker's London-based Arbeter Fraynd . The early Yiddish spelling, פֿרייע אַרבייטער שטיממע , reflects the early 20th century fashion to Germanize...

    (New York City)
  • Long Island Press
    Long Island Press
    The Long Island Press is a free newsweekly serving Long Island with extensive coverage of arts and entertainment, sports, and alternative political viewpoints. The newspaper started in 2003 after its parent company, Morey Publishing, bought The Long Island Ear, which was a free bi-monthly...

    (Jamaica, New York)
  • New York Age
    New York Age
    The New York Age was a black newspaper from 1887 to 1953, and was one of the most influential black newspapers of its time.The paper had it origins as the weekly New York Globe , an African-American newspaper, that was published weekly from at least 1880 to November 8, 1884...

    (New York City)
  • New York Daily Column (New York City), late 1960s
  • New York Daily Mirror
    New York Daily Mirror
    The New York Daily Mirror was an American morning tabloid newspaper first published on June 24, 1924, in New York City by the William Randolph Hearst organization as a contrast to their mainstream broadsheets, the Evening Journal and New York American, later consolidated into the New York Journal...

    (New York City)
  • New York Evening Journal (New York City), it existed in 1904
  • New York Herald
    New York Herald
    The New York Herald was a large distribution newspaper based in New York City that existed between May 6, 1835, and 1924.-History:The first issue of the paper was published by James Gordon Bennett, Sr., on May 6, 1835. By 1845 it was the most popular and profitable daily newspaper in the UnitedStates...

    (New York City)
  • New York Herald Tribune
    New York Herald Tribune
    The New York Herald Tribune was a daily newspaper created in 1924 when the New York Tribune acquired the New York Herald.Other predecessors, which had earlier merged into the New York Tribune, included the original The New Yorker newsweekly , and the Whig Party's Log Cabin.The paper was home to...

    (New York City)
  • New York Journal American
    New York Journal American
    The New York Journal American was a newspaper published from 1937 to 1966. The Journal American was the product of a merger between two New York newspapers owned by William Randolph Hearst: The New York American , a morning paper, and the New York Evening Journal, an afternoon paper...

    (New York City)
  • New York Morning News (New York City, 1844–46), edited by John L. O'Sullivan
    John L. O'Sullivan
    John Louis O'Sullivan was an American columnist and editor who used the term "Manifest Destiny" in 1845 to promote the annexation of Texas and the Oregon Country to the United States. O'Sullivan was an influential political writer and advocate for the Democratic Party at that time, but he faded...

    , popularized the phrase "Manifest Destiny
    Manifest Destiny
    Manifest Destiny was the 19th century American belief that the United States was destined to expand across the continent. It was used by Democrat-Republicans in the 1840s to justify the war with Mexico; the concept was denounced by Whigs, and fell into disuse after the mid-19th century.Advocates of...

    "
  • New York Morning Telegraph (New York City), merged with Daily Racing Form
    Daily Racing Form
    The Daily Racing Form is a tabloid newspaper founded in 1894 in Chicago, Illinois by Frank Brunell. The paper publishes the past performances of race horses as a statistical service for bettors on horse racing in the United States....

  • New York National Democrat (New York City), 1850s
  • New York Sun
    New York Sun (historical)
    The Sun was a New York newspaper that was published from 1833 until 1950. It was considered a serious paper, like the city's two more successful broadsheets, The New York Times and the New York Herald Tribune...

    (New York City)
  • The New York Sun (New York City, 2002-2008)
  • New York Star (New York City)
  • New York Tribune
    New York Tribune
    The New York Tribune was an American newspaper, first established by Horace Greeley in 1841, which was long considered one of the leading newspapers in the United States...

    (New York City)
  • New York World
    New York World
    The New York World was a newspaper published in New York City from 1860 until 1931. The paper played a major role in the history of American newspapers...

    (New York City)
  • New York World Journal Tribune
    New York World Journal Tribune
    The New York World Journal Tribune, also known as the World-Journal-Tribune, was a newspaper published in New York City from September 1966 until May 1967...

    (New York City)
  • New York World-Telegram
    New York World-Telegram
    The New York World-Telegram, later known as the New York World-Telegram and Sun, was a New York City newspaper from 1931 to 1966.-History:...

    (New York City)
  • Newburgh Evening News (Newburgh, New York)
  • PM
    PM (newspaper)
    PM was a leftist New York City daily newspaper published by Ralph Ingersoll from June 1940 to June 1948 and bankrolled by the eccentric Chicago millionaire Marshall Field III....

    (New York City)
  • Syracuse Herald-Journal
  • Troy News

See also: List of newspapers in New York in the 18th century

Ohio

  • Cincinnati Herald
  • The Cincinnati Post
    The Cincinnati Post
    The Cincinnati Post is a discontinued afternoon daily newspaper that was published in Cincinnati, Ohio. Distributed in Northern Kentucky as The Kentucky Post, it was owned by the E. W. Scripps Company. Since the 1980s, its editorial stance was usually conservative. The Post published its final...

  • Cincinnati Volksfreund
    Cincinnati Volksfreund
    The Cincinnati Volksfreund was a daily and weekly German-language newspaper based in Cincinnati, Ohio, and published between 1850 and 1908. The paper was founded in October 1850 by Joseph A. Hemann and his editorials began appearing in March 1853 in the weekly edition called the Cincinnati...

  • Cleveland News
    Cleveland News
    The Cleveland News was a daily and Sunday American newspaper in Cleveland, Ohio, published from 1905 to 1960, when it was absorbed by rival paper The Plain Dealer.-History:...

  • Cleveland Press
    Cleveland Press
    The Cleveland Press was a daily American newspaper published in Cleveland, Ohio from November 2, 1878, through June 17, 1982. From 1928 to 1966, the paper's editor was Louis Seltzer....

  • The Columbus Citizen-Journal
    The Columbus Citizen-Journal
    The Columbus Citizen-Journal was a daily morning newspaper in Columbus, Ohio published by the Scripps Howard company. It was formed in 1959 by the merger of The Columbus Citizen and The Ohio State Journal. It shared printing facilities, as well as business, advertising, and circulation staff in a...

  • Dayton Journal-Herald
  • Evening and Morning Star
    Evening and Morning Star
    The Evening and the Morning Star was an early Latter Day Saint periodical published monthly in Independence, Missouri, from June 1832 to July 1833, and then in Kirtland, Ohio, from December 1833 to September 1834...

  • The Jackson County Press
  • Penny Evening Telegram (Springfield), 1860s
  • Springfield Republic
  • Toledo News-Bee
    Toledo News-Bee
    The Toledo News Bee is a defunct newspaper that served Toledo, Ohio and much of northwestern Ohio in the early part of the 20th century. It was formed from the 1903 merger of The Toledo News andThe Toledo Bee, and was published until August 2, 1938, when it was purchased by The Toledo Blade for...

  • Toledo Times

Oregon

  • Oregon Journal
    Oregon Journal
    The Oregon Journal was Portland, Oregon's daily afternoon newspaper from 1902 to 1982. The Journal was founded in Portland by C. S. Jackson, the publisher of Pendleton, Oregon's East Oregonian newspaper, after a group of Portlanders convinced Jackson to help in the reorganization of the Portland...

    (Portland
    Portland, Oregon
    Portland is a city located in the Pacific Northwest, near the confluence of the Willamette and Columbia rivers in the U.S. state of Oregon. As of the 2010 Census, it had a population of 583,776, making it the 29th most populous city in the United States...

    )
  • Portland News (Portland
    Portland, Oregon
    Portland is a city located in the Pacific Northwest, near the confluence of the Willamette and Columbia rivers in the U.S. state of Oregon. As of the 2010 Census, it had a population of 583,776, making it the 29th most populous city in the United States...

    )
  • Portland News-Telegram (Portland
    Portland, Oregon
    Portland is a city located in the Pacific Northwest, near the confluence of the Willamette and Columbia rivers in the U.S. state of Oregon. As of the 2010 Census, it had a population of 583,776, making it the 29th most populous city in the United States...

    )
  • Portland Telegram (Portland
    Portland, Oregon
    Portland is a city located in the Pacific Northwest, near the confluence of the Willamette and Columbia rivers in the U.S. state of Oregon. As of the 2010 Census, it had a population of 583,776, making it the 29th most populous city in the United States...

    )

Pennsylvania

  • Evening Chronicle (Allentown)
  • Gwiazda
    Gwiazda (newspaper)
    Gwiazda was a weekly newspaper published in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in Polish from 1902 to 1985, with an English section gradually introduced, starting in 1958....

    (Philadelphia
    Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
    Philadelphia is the largest city in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and the county seat of Philadelphia County, with which it is coterminous. The city is located in the Northeastern United States along the Delaware and Schuylkill rivers. It is the fifth-most-populous city in the United States,...

    )
  • Garfield Thomas Water Tunnel
    Garfield Thomas Watertunnel (newspaper)
    The Garfield Thomas Watertunnel was a counterculture underground newspaper based in University Park, Pennsylvania. It was named after a military research facility at the nearby Pennsylvania State University, named for a Penn State journalism graduate killed in World War II...

  • Montgomery County Record
  • Philadelphia Bulletin
    Philadelphia Bulletin
    For the 2004 resurrection of the Bulletin, see The Bulletin .The Philadelphia Bulletin was a daily evening newspaper published from 1847 to 1982 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. It was the largest circulation newspaper in Philadelphia for 76 years and was once the largest evening newspaper in the...

  • Philadelphia Journal
    Philadelphia Journal
    The Philadelphia Journal was a tabloid published from December 5, 1977 until December 15, 1981; barely a month after the Journal's demise, the Philadelphia Bulletin also ceased publication, leaving the city with only one newspaper owner and two titles—The Philadelphia Inquirer and the Philadelphia...

  • Philadelphia Press
    Philadelphia Press
    The Philadelphia Press is a defunct newspaper that was published from August 1, 1857 to October 1, 1920.The paper was founded by John W. Forney. Charles Emory Smith was editor and owned a stake in the paper from 1880 until his death in 1908...

  • Philadelphia Public Ledger
  • Pittsburgh Press
    Pittsburgh Press
    The Pittsburgh Press is an online newspaper in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA, currently owned and operated by the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Historically, it was a major afternoon paper...

  • Philadelphia Record
  • Quakertown Free Press

See also: List of newspapers in Pennsylvania in the 18th century

Puerto Rico

  • El Imparcial
    El Imparcial
    El Imparcial, founded in 1918, was a Puerto Rican newspaper.In the 1970s Miguel A. García Méndez bought the newspaper. The building where the newspaper was run then was destroyed by political sabotage in a fire...

    (San Juan
    San Juan, Puerto Rico
    San Juan , officially Municipio de la Ciudad Capital San Juan Bautista , is the capital and most populous municipality in Puerto Rico, an unincorporated territory of the United States. As of the 2010 census, it had a population of 395,326 making it the 46th-largest city under the jurisdiction of...

    )
  • El Mundo
    El Mundo (Puerto Rico)
    -History:El Mundo was founded in 1919 by Romualdo Real.In 1929, former corrector-turned-administrator Angel Ramos and journalist José Coll Vidal, bought the newspaper when Real retired. In 1946 Ramos was the sole owner of the newspaper.-Acquisitions:...

    (San Juan)
  • El Reportero (San Juan)

South Carolina

  • American General Gazette
  • Columbia Record
    Columbia Record
    The Columbia Record was an afternoon daily newspaper published in Columbia, South Carolina. It was established in 1897. In 1945 it was purchased by The State which is the morning daily paper in Columbia to form the State-Record Company. The company was purchased by Knight-Ridder in 1986 and...

  • The South-Carolina
  • The Greenville Piedmont
  • The Evening Post

Texas

  • Austin Citizen
  • Austin Tribune
  • Dallas A.M. Journal Express
    A.M. Journal Express
    A.M. Journal Express was a short-lived free daily newspaper in Dallas, Texas, owned by American Consolidated Media. In its six-month life span, it lost under $5 million, according to company chairman Jeremy Halbreich. The paper started on November 12, 2003, and closed on April 30, 2004. When plans...

  • Dallas Dispatch
    Dallas Dispatch
    The Dallas Dispatch was a daily evening newspaper published in Dallas, Texas from 1906 until it was combined with the evening Dallas Journal in 1938 to create The Dallas Dispatch-Journal, the name of which was shortened to The Dallas Journal in 1939 and which ceased publication in 1942.The...

  • Dallas Dispatch-Journal
  • Dallas Herald
    Dallas Herald
    Two newspapers of general circulation in Dallas, Texas have operated under the name Dallas Herald.- First Dallas Herald :...

  • Dallas Journal
  • Dallas Times Herald
    Dallas Times Herald
    The Dallas Times Herald, founded in 1888 by a merger of the Dallas Times and the Dallas Herald, was once one of two major daily newspapers serving the Dallas, Texas area. It won three Pulitzer Prizes, all for photography, and two George Polk Awards, for local and regional reporting...

  • El Paso Herald-Post
    El Paso Herald-Post
    The El Paso Herald-Post was an afternoon daily newspaper in El Paso, Texas, USA. It was the successor to the El Paso Herald, first published in 1881, and the El Paso Post, founded by the E. W. Scripps Company in 1922...

  • Fort Worth Press
  • Fort Worth Record
  • Houston Post
    Houston Post
    The Houston Post was a newspaper that had its headquarters in Houston, Texas, United States. In 1995, the newspaper was absorbed into the Houston Chronicle.-History:The newspaper was established on February 19, 1880, by Gail Borden Johnson...

  • Houston Public News
  • San Antonio Light

Utah

  • Topaz Times
  • Salt Lake Herald
  • Salt Lake Telegram
  • Salt Lake Observer

Virginia

  • Alexandria Gazette
    Alexandria Gazette
    Alexandria Gazette is a historical newspaper based in Alexandria, Virginia, United States. The newspaper was established on February 5, 1784 by George Richard & Company as the Virginia Journal. The Alexandria Gazette building was located at 317 King Street...

  • Arlington Daily
  • Arlington Sun
  • The Richmond News Leader
    The Richmond News Leader
    The Richmond News Leader was an afternoon daily newspaper published in Richmond, Virginia from 1888 to 1992. During much of its run, it was the largest newspaper source in Richmond, competing with the morning Richmond Times-Dispatch. By the late 1960s, afternoon papers had been steadily losing...


See also: List of newspapers in Virginia in the 18th century

Washington

  • Columbia Basin News
    Columbia Basin News
    Columbia Basin News was a morning daily newspaper published in Pasco, Washington in the United States from 1950 to 1963.A strike and subsequent lockout occurred at the Tri-City Herald in 1950...

  • Seattle Post-Intelligencer
    Seattle Post-Intelligencer
    The Seattle Post-Intelligencer is an online newspaper and former print newspaper covering Seattle, Washington, United States, and the surrounding metropolitan area...

    (print edition 1863-2009, online only edition 2009-)http://www.seattlepi.com/business/403793_piclosure17.html
  • The Seattle Star

Washington, DC

  • The Washington Daily News
    The Washington Daily News
    The Washington Daily News was an afternoon tabloid-style newspaper serving the Washington, DC, metropolitan area. In this case, the term "tabloid" is merely a reference to the paper format and does not imply a lack of journalistic standards....

  • Washington Star
    Washington Star
    The Washington Star, previously known as the Washington Star-News and the Washington Evening Star, was a daily afternoon newspaper published in Washington, D.C. between 1852 and 1981. For most of that time, it was the city's newspaper of record, and the longtime home to columnist Mary McGrory and...

  • Washington Herald
    Washington Herald
    The Washington Herald was an American daily newspaper in Washington, D.C., from October 8, 1906, to January 31, 1939. The Herald merged with the Washington Times on February 1, 1939, to become the Washington Times-Herald, which was purchased and merged with The Washington Post in 1954....

  • Washington Times-Herald
    Washington Times-Herald
    The Washington Times-Herald was an American daily newspaper published in Washington, D.C.. It was created by Cissy Patterson, when she bought the Herald and the Times from William Randolph Hearst, and merged them. The result was a '24 hour' newspaper, with 10 editions per day, from morning to...


Wisconsin

  • Green Bay News-Chronicle
    Green Bay News-Chronicle
    The Green Bay News-Chronicle was a daily newspaper published in Green Bay, Wisconsin from 1972 to 2005. The paper was owned and operated by Denmark, Wisconsin-based Brown County Publishing Company during much of its existence, and competed with the larger and more established Green Bay...

  • The Paper for Central Wisconsin, Oshkosh
  • Milwaukee Sentinel
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