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Pittsburgh Chronicle : ウィキペディア英語版
Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph

The ''Pittsburgh Sun-Telegraph'' was an evening daily newspaper published in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania from 1927 to 1960. Part of the Hearst newspaper chain, it competed with the Pittsburgh ''Press'' and ''Post-Gazette'' until its eventual purchase by the latter paper. The ''Sun-Telegraph''s ancestry, which includes the ''Chronicle Telegraph'' and the earlier ''Chronicle'', stretches back to the first half of the 19th century.
==Chronicle==
The ''Morning Chronicle'' was established on June 26, 1841 by Richard George Berford. At first a semi-weekly paper, it became a daily on September 8 of the same year. The original editor was 19-year-old J. Heron Foster, who would later be the founding editor of the ''Spirit of the Age'' and the longer-lasting ''Pittsburgh Dispatch''.
A weekly edition of the paper first appeared in November 1841 with the title ''The Iron City and Pittsburgh Weekly Chronicle''.
On August 30, 1851 the daily paper changed its time of issue, becoming the ''Evening Chronicle''.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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