Geneva Gazette

Geneva Gazette[1][2][3] was an upstate New York 19th century newspaper that was discontinued in 1901.

History

The first issue was published June 21, 1809.[4] The paper,[5] which also used the title Geneva Daily Gazette, was cited by other newspapers,[2] including The New York Times.[1][6][7] Its print frequency was daily for some of its years,[8] weekly others. The Geneva Gazette and Mercantile Advertiser was another name they used.[9]

In 1887 they appealed to their readership on behalf of an 1878-founded clerically-operated medical facility, writing that "its doors are ever open to the unfortunate without distinction of faith or nationality."[10] This was several years before the 1898 opening of a local hospital.

In 1890 the Gazette was one of several newspapers to print (for a fee) a state government notice.[11]

References

  1. "A Card From Canal Commissioner Wright". The New York Times. August 28, 1875.
  2. "At War of 1812's end, celebration in Sackets Harbor". Watertown Daily Times. March 1, 2015. in the Geneva (N.Y.) Gazette
  3. "The Disaster on Seneca Lake". The New York Times. May 20, 1861.
  4. "The Geneva Gazette (Geneva, N.Y.)". Library of Congress.
  5. R. Gregory Lande (2020). Spiritualism in the American Civil War. p. 195. The Geneva Gazette, December 24, 1858. 39. Spiritualism.
  6. "A Gale on Seneca Lake". The New York Times. July 31, 1863.
  7. "Front Page 1 No Title". The New York Times. September 7, 1853. The Geneva Gazette states that recently
  8. "Geneva Daily Gazette (Geneva, N.Y.) 18??-1???". Library of Congress. Retrieved August 1, 2021.
  9. "The Geneva Gazette, and General Advertiser (Geneva, Ontario County, N.Y.)". Library of Congress.
  10. "Geneva General Hospital History". Retrieved August 1, 2021.
  11. "Documents of the Assembly of the State of New York". 1890. p. 121.


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