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Boston Traveller : ウィキペディア英語版
Boston Evening Traveller

The ''Boston Evening Traveller'' (1845–1967) was a newspaper published in Boston, Massachusetts. It came out daily, with weekly and semi-weekly editions, under a variety of ''Traveller'' titles. It was absorbed by the ''Boston Herald'' in 1912, and ceased publication in 1967.
==History==
Compared to other papers in Boston in the 1840s, the ''Traveller'' was notable for its significantly lower retail price, and for being sold on the street. It supported the views of the Free Soil Party and the Republican Party. Its office was at no.31 State Street (c.1851–1894).〔The Traveller occupied a building which had a number of previous lives. "The Rogers Buildings, erected about 1800, was one of the first brick blocks in Boston. It was sold in 1811 to James Harrison, who in turn sold it to Daniel Dennison Rogers, when the block was known as Rogers Buildings. In 1833 Henry B. Rogers, son of the former, sold it to Israel Thorndike, and it became known as Thorndike's Buildings. In 1838 Israel Thorndike sold it to the National Insurance Company, but it continued to be known as Thorndike's Buildings until the Evening Traveller took up its quarters here in 1851. It was known as the Old Traveller Building from December 1851 to 1894, when it was torn down to make way for the present Worthington Building which was built in 1895." Cf. 〕
In 1857 the ''Boston Atlas,'' the ''Boston Chronicle'' and the ''Evening Telegraph'' were merged into the ''Traveller.'' As of 1878, one guide described it as "the largest four-page evening paper in New England: five editions daily; the semi-weekly and weekly of each week contains sermons of Henry Ward Beecher; 'Review of the Week;' market and shipping reports; latest news and choice reading, prepared expressly for the family fireside."
Among the publishers: Roland Worthington. Editors included Ferdinand Andrews, Samuel Bowles,〔 James W. Clark,〔 Reuben Cook,〔 Ernest Gruening, Manton Marble, Joseph B. Morss,〔 George Punchard, Albert Edward Winship. Contributors included William Foster Apthorp, Charles Creighton Hazewell,〔 Henry James.〔Henry James' first published writing appeared in the Daily Traveller. Cf. 〕
In the 1900s, the paper was headquartered at no.76 Summer Street (c.1902–1912).〔 In 1912 the Herald bought the Traveler and merged the papers into the ''Boston Traveler and Evening Herald,'' now published from the Herald's facility at no.171 Tremont Street.〔 "The new company published the morning ''Herald'' and the evening ''Traveler'' until 1967, when, due to declining circulation, they were combined into a morning newspaper known as the ''Herald-Traveler''."〔Boston Globe, Dec 27, 1987〕

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