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The ''Syracuse Telegram'' was established in 1922 in Syracuse, New York by William Randolph Hearst. Between the years 1922-1925, the newspaper was published as both ''Syracuse Telegram'' and ''Syracuse Evening Telegram'' and the Sunday edition was called the ''Syracuse American'',〔 and alternately the ''Syracuse Sunday American''.〔 In November, 1925, Hearst gained controlling interest in another Syracuse daily, the ''Syracuse Journal'' (1899–1929) which he merged with the ''Telegram''. The name was changed to the ''Journal-Telegram'' and was later shortened to ''Syracuse Journal''. The ''Syracuse Telegram'' was a sole and separate company from a defunct newspaper called the ''Syracuse Telegram and Courier'' which operated during the years 1856 to 1905. ==History== The ''Syracuse Telegram'' was established in Syracuse, New York by William Randolph Hearst. It was later consolidated with the ''Syracuse Journal'', another Hearst newspaper in Syracuse. By 1922, Syracuse was the thirteenth city in which Hearst established a daily metropolitan newspaper. His papers had an aggregate circulation of more than 6,000,000 and consumed more than twelve percent of all the newsprint paper used in the United States.〔 Hearst took full advantage of the economic boom, and starting in 1921, he went on a "buying spree" and purchased three newspapers; the ''Times'' in Detroit, the ''Record'' in Boston, and the ''Post-Intelligencer'' in Seattle. In 1922, he added the ''Herald'' in Los Angeles, the ''Herald'' in Washington, D.C., established the ''New York Daily Mirror'' and started a new daily, the ''Oakland Post-Enquirer'' Hearst stepped into the political arena in New York State and by late 1922 he acquired five Upstate, New York papers; the ''Syracuse Telegram'', ''Rochester Journal'', the ''Post-Express'' in Albany, the ''Albany Times Union''〔 and the ''Oswego Daily Press'' in Fulton, New York. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Syracuse Telegram」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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