White-Plains Gazette, December
30, 1828 |
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The White-Plains
Gazette was the first newspaper published in White Plains.
At the time it was begun, by Smith Harpending of New York City,
the only other newspapers in Westchester County were the Westchester
and Putnam Sentinel, published in Peekskill, and the Westchester
Herald, published in Sing Sing. The White-Plains Gazette was
short-lived, and it was replaced by the Westchester Spy in
May 1830.
Nineteenth-century
newspapers were quite unlike their modern counterparts. Only four
pages in each issue, they were published weekly. They had little
local news, since communities were small enough that most people
already knew of day-to-day happenings, and they had no pictures
except small standardized cuts in some advertisements. Newspapers
featured serialized literary works, politics, news of faraway events,
and advertisements, which were featured prominently on the front
page. It is these advertisements that give researchers a picture
of life in local communities.
This record is also associated with:
White Plains
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