Jones Valley Times: Difference between revisions

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The '''''Jones Valley Times''''', a weekly [[Timeline of newspapers in Birmingham|newspaper]] published in [[Elyton]], was the first such publication in [[Jefferson County]]. It lasted for only two years, between [[1845]] and [[1847]]. Critic [[John Witherspoon Dubose]] described the paper as "neither fish, flesh, nor fowl" in its politics, and characterized its operations as "precarious".
The '''''Jones Valley Times''''', a weekly [[Timeline of newspapers in Birmingham|newspaper]] published in [[Elyton]], was the first such publication in [[Jefferson County]]. It lasted for only two years, between [[1845]] and [[1847]]. Critic [[John Witherspoon Dubose]] described the paper as "neither fish, flesh, nor fowl" in its politics, and characterized its operations as "precarious". [[George Cruikshank]] later explained that "a paper that had no politics had no right to expect support from men who kept their politics warm."


The newspaper's assets were purchased in [[1849]] by [[Joseph Smith]] and [[Baylis Grace]], who launched the ''[[Central Alabamian]]'' that year.
The newspaper's assets were purchased in [[1849]] by [[Joseph Smith]] and [[Baylis Grace]], who launched the ''[[Central Alabamian]]'' that year.
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==References==
==References==
* {{Dubose-1887}}
* {{Dubose-1887}}
* {{Cruikshank-1920}}
* Jackson, Harvey H. (2000) ''The WPA Guide to 1930s Alabama'' Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, p. 167. ISBN 0817310282
* Jackson, Harvey H. (2000) ''The WPA Guide to 1930s Alabama'' Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, p. 167. ISBN 0817310282



Revision as of 10:51, 4 September 2014

The Jones Valley Times, a weekly newspaper published in Elyton, was the first such publication in Jefferson County. It lasted for only two years, between 1845 and 1847. Critic John Witherspoon Dubose described the paper as "neither fish, flesh, nor fowl" in its politics, and characterized its operations as "precarious". George Cruikshank later explained that "a paper that had no politics had no right to expect support from men who kept their politics warm."

The newspaper's assets were purchased in 1849 by Joseph Smith and Baylis Grace, who launched the Central Alabamian that year.

References