Local Newspapers
Introduction ...
Below are the newspapers that have been published in the vicinity of Cedar.
Our newspaper information for Cedar is based on data taken from the Chronicling America website. For more information, please see our description of the Chronicling America website.
We don't know of any newspapers that were published in the immediate area of Cedar. That said, we do have a list of papers that were published in the broader area surrounding Cedar. Our list contains 30 papers that were published within 29 miles [46.7 km]<1> of Cedar.
Newspapers Neighboring Cedar ...
The following newspapers were published within 29 miles [46.7 km] of Cedar.
The papers have been grouped by the community in which they were published, with the communities listed in order of their distance from Cedar.
- Published In Troy [Lincoln County] ...
- The Troy Echo (from 1914)
- The Troy Herald (from 1910)
- The Troy Tribune (from 192?)
- Published In Sandpoint [Bonner County] ...
- Bonner County Advertiser (from 1947)
- Bonner County Daily Bee (from 1988)
- Bonner County Democrat (from 1908)
- Bonner County Progressive (from 1914)
- Northern Idaho News (from 1903)
- Pend d'Oreille Review (from 1905)
- Sandpoint Daily (from 1940)
- Sandpoint News-Bulletin (from 1944)
- The Bee Hive (from 1966)
- The Bonner County Issue (from 1910)
- The Daily Bulletin (from 1924)
- The Daily Panidan (from 1928)
- The Pend d'Oreille News (from 1892)
- The Sandpoint Bulletin (from 1940)
- The Sandpoint Daily Bee (from 1969)
- Published In Libby [Lincoln County] ...
- Lincoln County Herald (from 1913)
- The Kootenai Times (from 1913)
- The Kootenai Valley Eagle (from 1982)
- The Libby Herald (from 1911)
- The Libby Montanian (from 1897)
- The Libby News (from 1898)
- The Libby Times (from 1916)
- The Lincoln County Eagle (from 1981)
- The Silver Standard (from 1895)
- The Western News (from 1933)
- Western News And The Libby Times (from 1920)
- Western News (from 1902)
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- Cedar) to Point B.Our distance measurements begin at a specific point in Cedar. The point we use is located at these GPS coordinates - Latitude: 48.0860, Longitude: -116.0066 In this case, the coordinates for Cedar have been provided by the Geographic Names Information System (GNIS). |