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First issue of The Ocala Evening Star
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Engraved advertisement of Sacramento housing, depicting the residence of Albert Gallatin. Described as " a superior engraving" by the paper.
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Shows the article of President James A. Garfield's death, published a day after he had died.
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Advertisement within the newspaper.
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Advertisement within the newspaper.
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Advertisement with a highly detailed engraving of three different storefronts selling items like pickaxes and horseshoes.
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Shows the article on the Chinese Exclusion act of 1882, published the day the article was passed.
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Shows the report of the shooting of President James A. Garfield
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John F. Morse was the first editor of the Sacramento Daily Record Union
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In this photograph of the Ocala Evening Star shows the immense advertising done on the last page of the newspaper.
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Mark Twain was a writer for the Sacramento Daily Record Union in the year 1866 where he published voyage logs of a trip he took to Hawaii. This was Twain's first claim to fame.
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This is a bust of Mark Twain created by the The Sacramento Daily Record Union to honor his pivotal role in the paper's rapid surge in popularity during the year of 1866 because of Twain publishing his voyage logs of his trip to the Sandwich Islands (Hawaii) in the paper.
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This issue from The Jersey City News shows the "help wanted" sections for both men and women. The fact that the newspaper includes jobs specific to men and women implies that The Jersey City News is intended to be read by all members of the community.
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A breakdown of Home Rule in Alaska.
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Article describing John Weir Troy.
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Alaska's history surrounding the nineteenth amendment.
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Alaska's history surrounding the nineteenth amendment.
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Six articles credited to the "United Press"
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An advertisement telling residents to "leave Skagway".
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Two publishers of The Daily Alaskan
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A picture of Troy, for reference.
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Durnad, E. Dana, and WM. J. Harris. “Thirteenth Census of the United States Taken in the Year 1910-Statistics for Hawaii,” 1913. https://www2.census.gov/library/publications/decennial/1910/abstract/supplement-hi.pdf.
Lamont, R.P, and W.M. Steuart. “Fifteenth Census of the United States:1930 Outlying Territories and Possessions,” 1932. https://www2.census.gov/prod2/decennial/documents/00476569ch3.pdf
Robert C. Schmitt, Demographic Statistics of Hawaii: 1778-1965. (Honolulu,1968). Robert C. Schmitt, Historical Statistics of Hawaii. (Honolulu,1977), http://www.ohadatabook.com/T01-01-13.pdf
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There were only three ads on this December 7th issue of the paper.
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Republican declaration: first page, on right side
Death of Queen Victoria: second page, full page.
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Joseph Pulitzer was the founder and publisher of the New York Evening World printing company. Born in Mako, Hungary, he moved to Boston, Massachusetts in 1864 and served in the Union Army during the American Civil War After the war, he moved to St. Louis, Missouri and gained a profit from his share in the newspaper, the Westliche Post. The profit he made helped him to purchase the St. Louis Dispatch and St. Louis Post and merge them into one newspaper, known as the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. In 1883, Pulitzer moved to New York City and purchased the New York World from financial speculator, Jay Gould. The success of the New York Evening World came out of Pulitzer’s rivalry with William Randolph Hearst (founder of the New York Journal). According to Pulitzer biographers George H. Douglas and Nancy Whitelaw, the success of the New York Evening World came from Pulitzer’s decision to make daily newspaper prices cheap for consumers and focus on lower-class citizens as well as immigrants.