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The Daily Clarion Archive

  • Meridian, Mississippi
  • 18631866

About

The 19th-century history of Mississippi's current state-wide newspaper, the Clarion-Ledger (1941-present), is the story of a succession of powerful and influential white Democratic newspapermen, sometimes also politicians. The paper began in 1837 as the four-page weekly Eastern Clarion (1837-63) in the town of Paulding, located in east-central Mississippi. After 1839, the new owner, Simeon Roe Adams, turned the paper into a regional powerhouse. Three years after Adams death in 1860, proprietors, Asa R. Carter and James J. Shannon moved production to Meridian, a recently established railroad boom town. Two versions of the paper were published: the Daily Clarion (1863-66) which dropped to two pages in 1863-65; and the Weekly Clarion (1863-82). After the Civil War, Shannon moved the Clarion to Jackson where it became the state's most influential Democratic newspaper.

Archive Info

  • 691
  • Meridian, Mississippi
  • 18631866
0

Source Information

The Daily Clarion, 1863–1866 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2024. Last updated: June 21, 2022

Recent Article Clippings

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Asa Fletcher wounded

Asa Fletcher wounded

The Daily Clarion
Meridian, Mississippi
 • Page 2
Clipped 
Work and the Southerner

Work and the Southerner

The Daily Clarion
Meridian, Mississippi
 • Page 3
Clipped 
Col. William B. Wade Death 1865

Col. William B. Wade Death 1865

The Daily Clarion
Meridian, Mississippi
 • Page 3
Clipped 
F W Jordan, Jasper County

F W Jordan, Jasper County

The Daily Clarion
Meridian, Mississippi
 • Page 2
Clipped 
F. W. Jordan - Jasper County

F. W. Jordan - Jasper County

The Daily Clarion
Meridian, Mississippi
 • Page 2
Clipped 

Archive Info

  • 691
  • Meridian, Mississippi
  • 18631866
0

Source Information

The Daily Clarion, 1863–1866 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2024. Last updated: June 21, 2022