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  1. The Louisville Times was a newspaper that was published in Louisville, Kentucky. It was founded in 1884 by Walter N. Haldeman, as the afternoon counterpart to The Courier-Journal, the dominant morning newspaper in Louisville and the commonwealth of Kentucky for many years.

    • Chapter 1: The Marse Watterson Years
    • Chapter 2: A Mysterious Death and The Judge Robert Worth Bingham Era
    • Chapter 3. Barry Bingham Sr. at The Helm
    • Chapter 4: 'Mr. Clean'
    • Chapter 5: The Fall of The House of Bingham
    • Chapter 6: A New Owner

    The first edition of the Courier Journal on Sunday, Nov. 8, 1868, was only four pages, but it was packed with news. The print was tiny, and there were no photographs or illustrations. One of the stories that first day told how 37 people had died in the previous week, six from consumption, as tuberculosis was then called, four from measles, three fr...

    Robert Worth Bingham served only 10 months on the bench, but was forever more prominently known as “Judge Bingham.” After his first wife, Eleanor, was killed by a speeding commuter train in 1913 (some said she may have thrown herself in front of it), he wed Mary Lily Flagler, the widow of Standard Oil and railroad magnate Henry Flagler, and reporte...

    With his father still in England but ailing (he would die the next year of Hodgkin’s lymphoma), Barry Bingham Sr. took over the newspaper, but in an unusual triumvirate that would preside for nearly three decades. Mark Ethridge ran the news side of the paper while Lisle Baker Jr. presided over the business. That left Bingham free to set policies, i...

    Worth’s death haunted Barry Jr., as he was almost universally known, Alex Jones later wrote in a New York Times story about the Binghams that won a Pulitzer Prize. George Barry Bingham Jr., the second-born son, found himself unexpectedly forced to assume stewardship of the papers, a role intended for his older brother. Nine days after Worth’s death...

    The first signs of a schism between Barry Jr. and his two sisters — Sallie, an author and feminist, and Eleanor — emerged in 1979, in a story in Louisville Magazine about the sisters titled “Bingham Black Sheep.” They called him sexist, even though five years earlier he’d named the first woman managing editor at a major daily paper and helped launc...

    In his first meeting with Courier Journal employees, Gannett chairman Al Neuharth promised to use “our substantial Gannett resources, money, talent and equipment to first preserve and then try to enhance the traditions of journalistic excellence that you have established.” But by the next year, according to "The Patriarch," Gannett established a 25...

  2. courier-journal.com. The Courier Journal, also known as the Louisville Courier Journal (and informally The C-J or The Courier ), and called The Courier-Journal between November 8, 1868, and October 29, 2017, is a daily newspaper published in Louisville, Kentucky and owned by Gannett, which bills it as "Part of the USA Today Network ".

  3. The nucleus of our digitized historic newspaper canon began with NDNP Phase I in 2005. Together with our KY-NDNP advisory board made up of historians, genealogists, archivists, and librarians from across the state, we chose to digitize 100,000 pages from 37 newspapers that best represented the state's six unique geographic regions.

  4. The Courier-Journal, nicknamed the "C-J", is the main newspaper for the city of Louisville, Kentucky, USA. According to the 1999 Editor & Publisher International Yearbook, the paper is the 48th largest daily paper in the United States and the single largest in Kentucky.

  5. Ohio River, Beargrass Creek, Floyds Fork, Harrods Creek. Website. LouisvilleKy.gov. Louisville is the largest city in the state of Kentucky in the USA. The settlement that became the City of Louisville was founded in 1778 by George Rogers Clark. It is named after King Louis XVI of France.

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