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Indiana Tribüne

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Indiana Tribune was a German-language daily newspaper[1] published in Indiana, US.

General

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In August 1878, Louis D. Hild founded a new pro-Republican, German-language, four-page weekly newspaper, the Indiana Tribune. The circulation was originally 800 copies. In April 1882, the newspaper was purchased by the Tribune Company. The Tribune had a four-page daily circulation of 3,000 in 1882. On 7 March 1907, the publisher combined the two newspapers Indiana Tribune and Daily Telegraph into a single newspaper titled the Indianapolis Telegraph and Tribune. On 1 June 1918, the publishing house closed.[2]

Other German-language newspapers in Indiana

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Pro-Republican

  • Free Press of Indiana (1853-66).
  • Indiana German Newspaper (1874-77)

Pro-Democratic

  • Indiana Volksblatt (1848-75)
  • Daily Telegraph (1865-1907)

References

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  1. ^ David J. Bodenhamer, Robert Graham Barrows: The Encyclopedia of Indianapolis. 1994, p. 616 (Google Books)
  2. ^ About Indiana tribune. (Indianapolis, Ind.) 1878-1907, retrieved 29 December 2020