- The Virginia Gazette
The Virginia Gazette is the local
newspaper of the City of Williamsburg,James City County, Virginia . With the first edition in1736 by pioneering publisherWilliam Parks , the newspaper's original motto was "Containing the freshest Advices, Foreign and Domestick."1736: founded by William Parks
"The Virginia Gazette" was the first to be published in the area south of the
Potomac River in the colonial period of theUnited States .William Parks published the first four-page edition onAugust 6 ,1736 . Three years earlier, he had founded "The Maryland Gazette" in Annapolis. In1743 , Parks built a paper mill in Williamsburg. He purchased the raw material to create newsprint fromBenjamin Franklin .As Williamsburg was the center of growing tensions in the
Virginia Colony which led to theAmerican Revolution , the newspaper was one of the centers of activity in the capital of Virginia, and dutifully published accounts. When at the urging of Gov.Thomas Jefferson the capital was relocated to Richmond in1780 , the newspaper followed.Hiatus: 1780-1930
In Richmond, there were many newspapers already established. With the capitol gone, Williamsburg lost its prominence. Early 19th century transportation was largely by
canal s and navigableriver s. It was not located along a waterway like many early communities in the United States. Early railroads beginning in the 1830s also did not come its way. With the exception of some activity during thePeninsula Campaign in1862 during theAmerican Civil War , the coming ofCollis P. Huntington 'sChesapeake & Ohio Railroad (with mostly through-coal traffic) in the1881 , and the ongoing activities of theCollege of William & Mary , Williamsburg became a sleepy and somewhat forgotten town through much of 150 years following the American Revolutionary War. This very lack of rebuilding and expansion laid the groundwork for dreams of The Rev. W.A.R. Goodwin ofBruton Parish Church for restoration of the colonial capital city.1930: Return to Colonial Williamsburg
Initially, Dr. Goodwin wanted to save his historic church building, and this he accomplished. However, he began to realize that much of the other colonial era buildings also remained, but were at risk. He sought financing from a number of sources before successfully drawing the interests and major financial support of
Standard Oil heir andphilanthropist John D. Rockefeller Jr. and his wife, which resulted in the creation ofColonial Williamsburg , today one of the world's major tourist attractions. At theWren Building , Dr. Goodwin was in the early stages in the work there when he suggested to the owners of "The Virginia Gazette" that the colonial-era newspaper return to Williamsburg. They agreed, and the first issue was publishedJan. 10 ,1930 .The paper won Virginia’s prestigious
Copeland Award three times for community excellence in publishing, in1969 ,1980 and1994 . Long a weekly newspaper, the "Gazette" expanded to twice-weekly in1984 . It is now owned by the "Daily Press", a Tribune Co. daily inNewport News .Copies dating to the August 6, 1736 first issue have been preserved in the
Library of Congress .To assist researchers of colonial life and issues on the Internet, the
Colonial Williamsburg Foundation provides on-line editions of the original "Gazette", complete with index.ources
* [http://www.vagazette.com/services/va-services_gazhistory,0,5332906.story?page=1 History of the "Virginia Gazette"]
* [http://www.lva.lib.va.us/whatwehave/news/va9_18thnews.htm Library of Virginia]
* [http://departments.umw.edu/hipr/www/Fredericksburg/newspapers/vagazette.htm University of Mary Washington, Virginia Gazette webpage]
* [http://www.loc.gov/rr/news/18th/777.html Library of Congress]External links
* [http://www.vagazette.com/ The "Virginia Gazette" web site]
* [http://research.history.org/DigitalLibrary/BrowseVG.cfm Digital Virginia Gazette, 1736-1780]
* [http://gaspee.org/VirginiaGazette.html Colonial Williamsburg Foundation's Links to "Virginia Gazette" related web sites]
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