Type | Daily and weekly newspaper |
---|---|
Owner(s) | Various (see prose) |
Founder(s) | Joseph A. Hemann |
Founded | 1850 |
Political alignment | Democratic Party |
Language | German |
Ceased publication | 1908 |
Headquarters | Cincinnati, Ohio, United States |
OCLC number | 9664107 |
The Cincinnati Volksfreund was a daily and weekly German-language newspaper that was based in Cincinnati, Ohio, and published between 1850 and 1908 with offices located on the southwest corner of Vine and Longworth Streets.[1]
The paper was founded in October 1850 by Joseph A. Hemann and his editorials began appearing in March 1853 in the weekly edition, the Cincinnati Wöchentlicher Volksfreund. Originally neutral in politics, the newspaper later became the leading German Democratic newspaper of Ohio.
Editors and owners
- 1850–1863 – Joseph Anton Hemann, founder, publisher, editor
- 1863–1869 – Johann B. Jeup & Co.
- 1870–1871 – Volksfreund Publishing Co.
- 1872–1873 – Limberg & Thilly
- 1873–1879 – Limberg & Heinrich Haacke
- 1880–1908 – Heinrich Haacke and Co.
See also
References
- ^ Kenny, Daniel (1875). Illustrated Cincinnati. Stevens. p. 69. Retrieved May 19, 2013.
- ^ Griswold, Ada Tyng (1911). Annotated Catalogue of Newspaper Files in the Library of the State Historical Society of Wisconsin. Democrat printing Company. p. 222.
Categories:
- Defunct daily newspapers
- Defunct weekly newspapers
- Defunct newspapers published in Cincinnati
- Newspapers disestablished in 1908
- Newspapers established in 1850
- German-American culture in Cincinnati
- Daily newspapers published in the United States
- 1908 disestablishments in Ohio
- 1850 establishments in Ohio
- German-language newspapers published in Ohio