The Journal Review is a newspaper based in Crawfordsville , Indiana , USA with a circulation of 6,000. It is a daily except Sunday paper and reports national news and news for the surrounding Montgomery County area in print and online. The paper was founded in 1929 as an independent daily from the merger of the Journal and the Review. This small town newspaper has chronicled multiple notable events.
6-546: In 1879 The Crawfordsville Journal named its only nineteenth century female associate editor, Mary Hannah Krout . She was associate editor for 3 years. The Crawfordsville Weekly Journal published in 1890 an obituary for Fisher Dougherty, an Abolitionist whose home was a station on the Underground Railroad in Crawfordsville. In 1891 The Crawfordsville Journal reported on the phenomenon known as
12-551: A Lafayette audience on women's suffrage. She taught for over a decade and began writing for newspapers. She got a job with the Crawfordsville Journal in 1879 and became the associate editor in 1881. She became editor of the Terre Haute Express in 1882. In 1888, she moved to Chicago. She wrote, "In 1888 I came to Chicago. I was willing to do anything in the line of newspaper work only to gain
18-673: A foothold. I was confident of my ability to work my way up to the tiptop of my desires. Finally I obtained a position as society reporter on the Chicago Inter-Ocean." For 10 years Krout was on the staff of the Chicago Inter-Ocean , serving as its staff correspondent in Hawaii during the revolution in 1893, and furnishing special data subsequently for the United States Department of State . She
24-579: The Crawfordsville Monster In 1910 The Crawfordsville Daily Journal reported on Theodore Roosevelt stopping to campaign in Crawfordsville. In 1918 The Crawfordsville Daily Journal reported on a city-wide parade ex-president William H. Taft lead to officially open a local Bank. Crawfordsville Journal History Crawfordsville Review History Daily Argus History New Review History Mary Hannah Krout Mary Hannah Krout (November 3, 1851 – May 31, 1927)
30-737: Was also staff correspondent in London from 1895 to 1898, then went to China for a syndicate of representative newspapers specially to investigate the commercial relations of China and the United States. In 1907, Krout visited Australia for a second time, lecturing on American political and economic conditions and writing a series of articles for the Sydney and Auckland press on American topics. Later she engaged in miscellaneous literary work, and lectured on literary and other topics. According to Indiana Authors and their Books (1944), "Always, when
36-561: Was an American journalist, author, and advocate for women's suffrage. Mary Hannah Krout was born November 3, 1851, in Crawfordsville, Indiana , to Robert Kennedy and Caroline VanCleve (Brown) Krout. She attended a subscription school in Crawfordsville and then a public school. While still in school, she had several poems published, including "Little Brown Hands," which was widely reprinted and even incorporated into grade school readers. She soon began her speaking career, addressing
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