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Extended Newspaper ListIntroduction ...
Below are 40 newspapers that have been published within 16 miles [25.7 km]<1> of Smith Crossroads. The list has been sorted by paper name.
- Camp Hill News (from 1907)
- Camp Hill Star (from 1924)
- Dadeville Democrat (from 18??)
- Dadeville Democrat (from 18??)
- Dadeville Spot Cash (from 1917)
- Dadeville Weekly Head Light And News (from 187?)
- Dadeville Weekly Head Light (from 187?)
- East Alabama Monitor (from 186?)
- East Alabama Monitor (from 186?)
- Greene County Gazette (from 1830)
- Messenger (from 1866)
- Opelika Daily Morning Industrial News (from 1890)
- Opelika Daily News (from 1904)
- Opelika Free Press And East Alabamian (from 1930)
- Opelika Herald (from 1893)
- Opelika Industrial News (from 1890)
- Opelika Observer (from 1873)
- Opelika Tri-Weekly Locomotive (from 186?)
- Opelika Union (from 1865)
- Opelika Weekly Era And Whig (from 1871)
- Opelika Weekly Locomotive (from 18??)
- Opelika Weekly Observer (from 187?)
- Opelika Weekly Times (from 1874)
- Southern Reformer (from 187?)
- Spot Cash (from 1898)
- Tallapoosa Courier (from 1905)
- Tallapoosa Democrat (from 1878)
- Tallapoosa News (from 186?)
- Tallapoosa Times (from 185?)
- Tallapoosa Voice (from 1890)
- The Alabama Review (from 1881)
- The Alabama Weekly Review (from 1881)
- The Auburn Bulletin & The Lee County Eagle (from 198?)
- The Auburn Bulletin (from 1968)
- The Auburn Gazette (from 1852)
- The Auburn Plainsman (from 19??)
- The Auburn Times (from 1935)
- The Auburn Times (from 1937)
- The Auburn Villager (from 2006)
- The Camp Hill News (from 1949)
- The Camp Hill Times (from 1900)
- The Dadeville Banner & Times (from 18??)
- The Dadeville Banner (from 18??)
- The Dadeville Herald (from 189?)
- The Dadeville Record (from 1949)
- The Dadeville Record (from 1932)
- The East Alabama Head Light (from 187?)
- The East Alabamian (from 1868)
- The Free Press (from 1901)
- The Independent (from 189?)
- The Lake Martin News (from 1970)
- The Lee County Bulletin (from 1937)
- The Lee County Eagle (from 19??)
- The Notasulga Journal (from 1908)
- The Notasulga News (from 1930)
- The Notasulga Times (from 1976)
- The Opelika Daily Times (from 1874)
- The Opelika Democrat (from 1887)
- The Opelika Eagle (from 1947)
- The Opelika Leader (from 1878)
- The Opelika Locomotive (from 1871)
- The Opelika Morning Post (from 1908)
- The Opelika New Era (from 1869)
- The Opelika Observer (from 1875)
- The Opelika Post (from 1894)
- The Opelika Recorder (from 186?)
- The Opelika Semi-Weekly Democrat (from 1889)
- The Opelika Times (from 1877)
- The Opelika-Auburn News (from 1969)
- The People's Choice (from 1894)
- The Progressive Age (from 18??)
- The Saturday Evening News (from 1883)
- The Sketch Book (from 1860)
- The Southern Era (from 1860)
- The Southern Republic (from 1861)
- The Tallapoosa Gazette (from 18??)
- The Tallapoosa New Era (from 1886)
- The Tallapoosa News (from 1914)
- The Tallapoosa Record (from 1949)
- The Tallapoosa Weekly Gazette (from 1879)
- The Tallapoosian (from 186?)
- The Times (from 1886)
- The Tri-Weekly Era And Whig (from 1870)
- The True Union (from 1871)
- The Union Republican (from 1869)
- The Weekly Era And Whig (from 1870)
- The Weekly Southern Era (from 185?)
- Tri-Weekly New Era (from 1870)
- Weekly Observer (from 1872)
Off-the-Road Links ...
The official website for Chronicling America
Unfortunately, we don't know of an official website for Smith Crossroads. If you can help, please contact us through our Feedback Page. The official website for State of Alabama: https://www.alabama.gov/
Footnotes ...
<1> | Our distances are not driving distances, but are calculated as a 'straight-line' distance. A straight line distance ignores obstructions like rivers, canyons, lakes, et cetera - it's truly a line drawn from Point A (ie- Smith Crossroads) to Point B.Our distance measurements begin at a specific point in Smith Crossroads. The point we use is located at these GPS coordinates - Latitude: 32.7260, Longitude: -85.6611 In this case, the coordinates for Smith Crossroads have been provided by the Geographic Names Information System (GNIS). |
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