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PublishedMay 21, 2022
A typical report in the Lewiston Weekly Journal in 1886
Let’s just grab a handful of the news items reported on that day to get a sense of what the paper’s local coverage was like in those simpler times.
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PublishedMay 21, 2022
Francis Lane: First letter from the first editor
The want of a newspaper in this vicinity has long been felt and lamented, and it is the intention so to conduct the Journal that it may be acceptable to all parties, and a profitable visitant at every fireside.
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PublishedMay 21, 2022
May 21, 1847: First edition, front page
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PublishedMay 17, 2022
Mark LaFlamme: Working the news beat in 1847
Street Talk: The Lewiston newspaper's very first crime reporter probably spent more time in the taverns down on Lisbon Street than he'd like his editors to know about. But can you blame him?
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PublishedMay 15, 2022
A former Auburn man’s high-flying ‘airship’ caught the world’s attention in 1897
The true story of the once-acclaimed but now forgotten "Professor Barnard" and his fabulous flying machine
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PublishedMay 15, 2022
Celebrating 175 years of journalism, and our readers
President Theodore Roosevelt once famously said, 'There are two newspapers that I always like to get a hold of. One is the Philadelphia North American and the other is the Lewiston Evening Journal.'
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PublishedMay 14, 2022
‘I look forward to it every day:’ longtime Sun Journal readers reflect on newspaper
As the Sun Journal prepares to celebrate its 175th anniversary Saturday, we asked longtime readers to share what the newspaper has meant to them and why they continue getting the paper each morning.
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PublishedMarch 26, 2017
Allegations spur district attorney to halt private prisoner transports
District Attorney Andrew Robinson referred to a six-page letter written by an Androscoggin County Jail inmate who detailed the account of her five-day trip from Florida to Maine last November caged in the back of a private prisoner transport van during which she was denied bathroom breaks and subjected to other inhumane treatment.
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PublishedAugust 30, 2009
911 where are you?
More and more people are using cell phones to report emergencies, but the mobile 911 system has flaws. Has Maine’s action to raid the fund collected to improve emergency phone service slowed the state’s ability to maintain and improve needed technology?
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PublishedNovember 5, 2006
Published Nov. 5, 2006: How long did it take your school to respond?
The times are unsettling. Should it take 22 minutes for a stranger to be stopped in an elementary school? And should strangers be allowed to wander unconfronted in high schools? That’s what happened when a team of reporters tested security at 37 schools on a breezy October morning. The results are startling
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