Andover Townsman and Andover By-Pass: Difference between pages

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The ''Andover Townsman'' began publication on October 14, 1887 and was located on 37 Main Street. John N. Cole, an original owner, believing that Andover should have a newspaper of its own, bought Andover Press, which had published the Andover Adveriser. The Townsman was  actually Andover's 3rd weekly paper.  The Journal of Humanity and Herald of the American Temperance Society ran from 1829-1833.  The Andover Advertiser ran from 1853 to 1866.


The Andover Press also featured a print shop and a small book store.  
The Andover-By-Pass (Route 125) was constructed to reduce traffic on the Phillips campus. Academy trustees under the leadership of Alum Thomas Cochran bought the land and the state constructed the road, which opened in 1931.


The second editor was John Cole's son Philip. Bessie Goldsmith worked for the paper in the 1920's.
Cochran 
Cochran Wild Life Sanctuary
See
* "History of the Andover By-Pass (Route 125)"''Townsman'', September 17, 2015, page 11
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In 1935 Elmer Grover bought the controlling interest and changed the name to Townsman Press, Inc. He  also changed the format to a news magazine style, patterned the paper after ''Life Magazine''.
--[[User:Eleanor|Eleanor]] ([[User talk:Eleanor|talk]]) 13:41, 12 February 2016 (EST)


In 1947 the paper was sold to Josiah K. Lily who returned the paper to its original format.


In 1949 the paper was sold to Irving E. Rogers Sr.; Irving Rogers Jr. took over in 1982.
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It was later sold to Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc. of Montgomery, Alabama which is part of the North of Boston Media Group.
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The Centennial Issue of the Andover Townsman was published July 21, 1988.  The special issue is a retrospective of town history.
 
See
 
* ''Andover Townsman'', July 21, 1988
* "History and Headlines for the Townsman", Advertising Supplement, the ''Andover Townsman'', May 28, 1992, page 2 A.
 
* [http://andover.mvlc.org/opac/en-US/skin/default/xml/rdetail.xml?r=487303&t=andover%20century%20of%20change&tp=title&l=5&d=1&hc=1&rt=title ''Andover a Century of Change:1896 - 1996''] by Eleanor Motley Richardson, (974.45 Ric) pages 136 & 137.
* "History and Headlines from the Townsman", Advertising Supplement, ''The Andover Townsman'', May 28, 1992, page 2A.
 
*"In a century of change, the Townsman has been there," ''Andover Townsman'', October 7, 1999, p. 13A.
 
*"Town seeks newspaper racks bylaw," ''Andover Townsman'', February 2, 2006.
 
*"Chronicling the town's news for 127 years," ''Andover Townsman'', October 30, 2014, p.18.
 
--[[User:Glenda|Glenda]] 12:56, November 24, 2006 (EST)<!-- insert signature here, if desired --><br>
--[[User:Kim|Kim]] 10:57, November 7, 2014 (EST)
 
--[[User:Eleanor|Eleanor]] ([[User talk:Eleanor|talk]]) 15:12, 26 March 2015 (EDT)


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Revision as of 14:46, 12 February 2016

The Andover-By-Pass (Route 125) was constructed to reduce traffic on the Phillips campus. Academy trustees under the leadership of Alum Thomas Cochran bought the land and the state constructed the road, which opened in 1931.

Cochran Cochran Wild Life Sanctuary See

  • "History of the Andover By-Pass (Route 125)"Townsman, September 17, 2015, page 11


--Eleanor (talk) 13:41, 12 February 2016 (EST)




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