The New York Star or the Daily Star (1868–1891) was a New York City newspaper.
6-474: New York Star may refer to: New York Star (1800s newspaper) , a New York City newspaper from about 1868 to 1891 New York Star , a theatrical weekly magazine founded in 1908 which merged with the Vaudeville News in 1926 New York Star (1948–1949) , a newspaper that lasted from 1948 and 1949 a fictional newspaper in the 1946 film Night Editor
12-639: A fictional newspaper in the television show Sex and the City See also [ edit ] New York Stars (disambiguation) Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title New York Star . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=New_York_Star&oldid=1253109674 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
18-605: A piece on the "long, very remarkable, and altogether disastrous history" of the paper. The gossip column Bab's Babble by Isabel Mallon got its start in the Star around 1888. The title New York Star has been used multiple times for unrelated newspapers, including the New York Morning Star (1810–13), a newspaper in the 1820s, the New York Evening Star founded by Major Noah in 1833 or 34,
24-531: A six-month option from owner Collis Potter Huntington to buy the Star in 1891. Munsey turned the paper into a tabloid and renamed it the Daily Continent as of February 1, 1891. When it did not succeed after a few months, he returned the new paper to Huntington. When Munsey's plan to take over the paper were announced, the Sun , still nursing the slight which led to the founding of the Star , published
30-472: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages New York Star (1800s newspaper) The paper was founded around early 1868 by employees of The Sun , who feared that the recent purchase of the Sun by Charles Anderson Dana would turn the political bent of that paper Republican. Joe Howard, Jr. soon took control of the paper and remained on as editor, publisher and subsequently chief proprietor until
36-423: The spring of 1875. A series of other editors and owners followed, each generally unsuccessful in their attempts to make the paper profitable. It went from daily publication to weekly, but then William Dorsheimer purchased the paper in 1885 and restarted daily publication, running the paper until his death in 1888. Finally, Frank Munsey , who would years later be known as a great consolidator of newspapers, took
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