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The Advocate-Messenger is the result of the merger in 1940 of The Kentucky Advocate and The Daily-Messenger. The paper was purchased by Schurz Communications of South Bend, Indiana in 1978. In 2013, Advocate Messenger printing operations moved from Danville to Winchester Kentucky. [5] Boone Newspapers formed a subsidiary, Bluegrass Newsmedia LLC.
The Advocate-Messenger, a twice-weekly (Tuesday and Friday) newspaper, serves Danville and surrounding counties. Local radio stations include three AM stations: WDFB-AM (1170), WHBN (1420), WHIR (1230), and three FM stations: WDFB-FM (88.1), WLAI(107.1), and WRNZ (105.1). WDKY-TV was licensed to Danville but its facilities are located in Lexington.
The Advocate-Messenger: Danville: 1940 Tue–Sat Boone Newspapers Created by merger of The Kentucky Advocate and The Danville Daily–Messenger: The Anderson News: Lawrenceburg: 1877 Weekly Landmark Community Newspapers: The Banner–Republic: Morgantown: 1885 Weekly Jobe Publishing, Inc. Barren County Progress: Glasgow: 1882 Weekly Jobe ...
Year-round. Constitution Square Historic Site is a 3-acre (0.012 km 2) park and open-air museum in Danville, Kentucky. From 1937 to 2012, it was a part of the Kentucky state park system and operated by the Kentucky Department of Parks. When dedicated in 1942, it was known as John G. Weisiger Memorial State Park, honoring the brother of Emma ...
The Advocate-Messenger (Danville, KY), November 1, 1910. Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Kentucky's 6th district; In office March 4, 1905 – March 3 ...
Parksville, Kentucky. Parksville is a small unincorporated community on the Chaplin River in south central Boyle County, Kentucky, United States. It is located at the eastern end of Ky Route 300, where it intersects with Ky Route 34, near the US Post Office. The global position of Parksville is 37.597N latitude and -84.891W longitude.
Helen Fisher Frye. Helen Fisher Frye (June 24, 1918 – November 26, 2014) was an American educator and churchwoman who was a local leader for civil rights in her hometown of Danville, Kentucky, serving as the president of the Danville chapter of the NAACP. She was the first African American to enroll at Centre College and the first African ...
Waveland is the ancestral home of the Green family. It was built between 1797 and 1800 by Willis Green. The Green lore, as related around Danville, in the Southern Bluegrass region of Kentucky, begins with Willis and Sarah Reed Green, the parents of John Green and grandparents of Thomas Marshall Green, whose direct descendants include Adlai ...