Skip to content
Tennessee Encyclopedia Logo
  • Home
  • About
    • This Land Called Tennessee
    • Foreword
    • Acknowledgments
    • Authors
    • Staff Members
    • Supporters
  • Categories
  • Objects
    • Entries
    • Images
    • Interactives
  • Contact
    • Suggest A Topic
    • Corrections
  • Donate
  • Browse Site »
  • A
  • B
  • C
  • D
  • E
  • F
  • G
  • H
  • I
  • J
  • K
  • L
  • M
  • N
  • O
  • P
  • Q
  • R
  • S
  • T
  • U
  • V
  • W
  • X
  • Y
  • Z
  • 0-9

Journalism

Knoxville Journal

When the Knoxville Journal ceased operation in 1991, a Knoxville institution died. Although the paper's exact ancestry was sometimes in dispute, the Journal itself liked to claim that it was the descendant of the irascible William G. "Parson" Brownlow's feisty…

Knoxville News-Sentinel

Currently the only daily newspaper in Knoxville, the News-Sentinel began in December 1886 as the evening Sentinel published by John Travis Hearn, a native of Shelbyville, Kentucky. The first four-page edition of the Sentinel was printed on a steam-operated flatbed…

Langford, Laura Carter Holloway

Laura Carter Holloway Langford was born in Nashville in 1843. Her birth date is often given as 1848, but census records from 1860, 1870, and 1910, as well as various genealogical databases, confirm the earlier date. Laura was one of fourteen children of…

Lawrence, William

This Nashville native rose to the navy's top ranks and received national honor after six years as a prisoner of war in North Vietnam, during which time he wrote "Oh Tennessee, My Tennessee," the official state poem. Lawrence excelled at…

Lea, Luke

A key figure in the reform and prohibition movements and a major player in the early twentieth-century Democratic Party, Luke Lea was prominent in Tennessee history during the early twentieth century. A descendant of the pioneer Overton and Cocke families,…

Lundy, Benjamin

Benjamin Lundy, pioneering abolitionist, was born in New Jersey on January 4, 1789, to Quaker parents, Joseph and Eliza Lundy. In 1808 Lundy moved to Wheeling, Virginia, to pursue a career in saddle-making. There Lundy experienced his first contact with…

Manumission Intelligencer and Emancipator

The Emancipator, published in 1820 in Jonesborough, Tennessee, by Elihu Embree, was the first newspaper in the United States devoted entirely to the abolitionist cause. It was an outgrowth of Embree’s first newspaper, the Manumission Intelligencer, published the year before.…

McCord, Jim Nance

Governor, progressive agricultural reformer, publisher, and public official Jim Nance McCord was born in Unionville, Bedford County, in 1879. His parents, Thomas N. and Iva Stelle McCord, were farmers and the young McCord learned the value of hard work on…

McDowell, John H.

John H. McDowell, newspaper editor and leader in the Agricultural Wheel and Farmers' Alliance, was born December 12, 1844, near Trenton in Gibson County, the son of John Davis and Nancy H. Irwin McDowell. Young McDowell attended St. Andrews College…

Meeman, Edward John

Influential mid-twentieth-century journalist and newspaper editor Edward J. Meeman was born in Evansville, Indiana, to German-born, Catholic, working-class parents. His father was a cigar maker and a local union official. Meeman received his education in Evansville public schools, graduating from…

Memphis Commercial Appeal

Although the title Commercial Appeal dates from 1894, the roots of this newspaper reach back to the early decades of Memphis's history. One ancestor, the Weekly (later Daily) Appeal, began in 1841 under Henry Van Pelt. A strongly sectional and…

Memphis Free Speech

Founded in 1888 by the Reverend Taylor Nightingale, the Memphis Free Speech was published on the grounds of Nightingale's church, the First (Beale Street) Baptist Church. The name of the paper changed to Free Speech and Headlight when J. L.…

Memphis Labor Review

Founded in 1917 and edited by owner and publisher Jake Cohen (1877-1945), this weekly newspaper served as the official organ of the Memphis Trades and Labor Council, an American Federation of Labor affiliate. Prior to his journalistic efforts, the Russian-born…

Memphis Press-Scimitar

The history of the Memphis Press-Scimitar is shorter, though no less convoluted, than that of its main rival, the Commercial Appeal. In 1880 George P.M. Turner (1839-1900), owner-editor of papers in Mississippi and Arkansas, leader of Texas troops under Nathan…

Memphis World

Launched in 1931 by the Southern Newspaper Syndicate as a tri-weekly under the editorial direction of Lewis O. Swingler (1906-1962), the World later claimed to be the "South's Oldest and Leading Colored Semi-Weekly Newspaper." Though the World emphasized racial pride,…

Meriwether, Lide Smith

A leader of the first generation of southern feminists and social activists, Lide Smith Meriwether was president of the Tennessee Woman's Christian Temperance Union, serving from 1884 until 1897, and then as honorary president for life. Having organized the first…

Miller, Randolph

Randolph Miller, former slave and newspaper editor, was emancipated with hundreds of other African Americans on June 9, 1864, in Newton County, Georgia, as General William T. Sherman's army swept through the region. Miller came to Chattanooga in October of…

Milton, George Fort

George F. Milton, Chattanooga newspaper publisher and Democratic political activist, was born in Macon, Georgia, and educated in Chattanooga. After attending the University of the South at Sewanee, Milton entered the banking business in Chattanooga. He left banking to become…

Nashville Banner

The Nashville Banner published its first edition on April 10, 1876. William E. Eastman, one of the founding partners, served as its first president; Thomas Achison, another partner, was its first editor. Other partners included two local newsmen, John J.…

Nashville Globe

Founded in 1906, the Nashville Globe promoted self-reliance and racial solidarity as the best means for Nashville's African American community to succeed and prosper within the confines of the Jim Crow South. After an editorial run that lasted more than…

Page 2 of 4«1234»

Explore This Category

  • Entries (63)
  • Images (0)
  • Interactives (0)

Categories

  • African-American
  • Agriculture
  • Architecture
  • Arts
  • Civil Rights
  • Civil War
  • Commerce
  • Conservation
  • County History
  • Culture
  • Education
  • Event
  • Geography and Geology
  • Industry
  • Institution
  • Journalism
  • Labor
  • Law
  • Literature
  • Medicine
  • Military
  • Music
  • Native American
  • People
  • Place
  • Politics
  • Preservation
  • Primary City
  • Recreation
  • Religion
  • Science
  • Settlement
  • Social
  • Sports
  • Suffrage
  • Thematic Essay
  • Transportation
  • Women

  • 305 Sixth Ave. North
  • Nashville, TN 37243
  • (615) 741-8934
  • Monday – Friday
  • 8:00 AM – 4:30 PM

Online Edition © 2002 ~ 2018, The University of Tennessee Press, Knoxville, Tennessee. All Rights Reserved.

Functionality and information are in compliance with guidelines established by the American Association for State and Local History for online state and regional encyclopedias.

© 2018 Tennessee Historical Society | Built by R.Squared with eCMS WP
Close Sliding Bar Area

Popular Entries

  • Lamar Alexander
  • Daniel Boone
  • Civil Rights Movement
  • Civil War
  • Civil War Occupation
  • Columbia Race Riot, 1946
  • Alfred Leland Crabb
  • Cumberland Furnace
  • John Bartlett Dennis
  • J.R. "Pitt" Hyde III

Popular Images

  • Adelicia Acklen
  • Andrew Johnson
  • Andrew Johnson National Historic Site
  • Cordell Hull
  • Dolly Parton
  • National Campground
  • Opry House And Opryland Hotel
  • Shelby County
  • The Emancipator
  • Walking Horse National Celebration

Recent Updates

  • "Tennessee" Ernie Ford
  • 101St Airborne Division
  • Aaron Douglas
  • Beth Halteman Harwell
  • William Edward Haslam
  • The Patrons of Husbandry
  • World War I
  • Worth, Inc.
  • Zion Presbyterian Church
  • Felix Kirk Zollicoffer