Southern newspapers before the Civil War were individualistic, caustic, and for the most part politically partisan. The typical newspaper devoted a page to foreign news, contained a section devoted to literary items, and had an outspoken editorial page. Editors borrowed liberally from each other, usually but not always citing the sources of their borrowings. The last page was filled with advertisements but they were also scattered throughout the paper, frequently appearing on page one
The Florida Press Association, in celebrating the 75th anniversary of that organization, asked me to...
The year 1860 was one of political unrest and agitation in Florida. Most Southerners argued with an ...
Union Nationalism in Florida Herbert J. Doherty Jr. The Joint Operations of the Federal army and Nav...
In 1849, the editor of the Tallahassee Floridian & Journal, one of the state’s leading newspapers, r...
During the more than one hundred years since the printing of the first newspaper in Ocala, this comm...
In the days prior to the firing on Fort Sumter, readers of the Charleston Daily Courier were kept we...
FLORIDA GUBERNATORIAL POLITICS: THE FULLER WARREN YEARS David R. Colburn and Richard K. Scher THE Ne...
FLORIDA\u27S FIRST RAILROAD COMMISSION, 1887-1891 (PART I) Durward LongFEDERAL RELATIONS WITH THE AP...
Carpetbag Imperialism in Florida 1862-1868 George Winston Smith Independentism: A Challenge to the F...
DEFEAT IN VICTORY: YANKEE EXPERIENCE IN EARLY CIVIL WAR JACKSONVILLE Richard A. Martin LIEUTENANT CO...
The editors commend to the careful attention of all of our readers the provocative lead article in t...
From the first newspaper in 1783, to the Golden Age of Florida newspapers and this year’s Pulitzer P...
On the eve of the Civil War Tallahassee and Leon County were the center of Florida’s economic, polit...
POLITICS OF PATRONAGE: FLORIDA REPUBLICANS DURING THE HOOVER ADMINISTRATION David J. GinzlCUBAN PATR...
A review of Territorial Florida Journalism. By James Owen Knauss, DeLand, Florida, The Florida, Stat...
The Florida Press Association, in celebrating the 75th anniversary of that organization, asked me to...
The year 1860 was one of political unrest and agitation in Florida. Most Southerners argued with an ...
Union Nationalism in Florida Herbert J. Doherty Jr. The Joint Operations of the Federal army and Nav...
In 1849, the editor of the Tallahassee Floridian & Journal, one of the state’s leading newspapers, r...
During the more than one hundred years since the printing of the first newspaper in Ocala, this comm...
In the days prior to the firing on Fort Sumter, readers of the Charleston Daily Courier were kept we...
FLORIDA GUBERNATORIAL POLITICS: THE FULLER WARREN YEARS David R. Colburn and Richard K. Scher THE Ne...
FLORIDA\u27S FIRST RAILROAD COMMISSION, 1887-1891 (PART I) Durward LongFEDERAL RELATIONS WITH THE AP...
Carpetbag Imperialism in Florida 1862-1868 George Winston Smith Independentism: A Challenge to the F...
DEFEAT IN VICTORY: YANKEE EXPERIENCE IN EARLY CIVIL WAR JACKSONVILLE Richard A. Martin LIEUTENANT CO...
The editors commend to the careful attention of all of our readers the provocative lead article in t...
From the first newspaper in 1783, to the Golden Age of Florida newspapers and this year’s Pulitzer P...
On the eve of the Civil War Tallahassee and Leon County were the center of Florida’s economic, polit...
POLITICS OF PATRONAGE: FLORIDA REPUBLICANS DURING THE HOOVER ADMINISTRATION David J. GinzlCUBAN PATR...
A review of Territorial Florida Journalism. By James Owen Knauss, DeLand, Florida, The Florida, Stat...
The Florida Press Association, in celebrating the 75th anniversary of that organization, asked me to...
The year 1860 was one of political unrest and agitation in Florida. Most Southerners argued with an ...
Union Nationalism in Florida Herbert J. Doherty Jr. The Joint Operations of the Federal army and Nav...