Local Newspapers for the Mexican Cemetery ...
Below are the newspapers that have been published in the vicinity of the Mexican Cemetery.
Our newspaper information for the Mexican Cemetery is based on data supplied by the Chronicling America website. For more information, please see our description of the Chronicling America website.
Hint: When we started searching newspapers, we only looked for obituaries. Eventually we realized that our search was too narrow and there was much that we were missing. Now we include things like around-the-town and gossip columns, birth and death announcements.
We have some family members who owned businesses and now we search for articles and advertistments for those businesses. Some family members could have been better behaved and a search of police blotters contained some surprises.
The following newspapers were published within 17 miles [27.4 km]<1> of the Mexican Cemetery. These papers have been grouped by the community in which they were published, with the communities listed in the order of their distance from the Mexican Cemetery.
- Published In Columbus
- Columbus Banner Press (from Columbus Banner Press)
- The Banner Press Newspaper (from The Banner Press Newspaper)
- The Colorado Citizen (from The Colorado Citizen)
- The Colorado County Citizen (from The Colorado County Citizen)
- The Columbus Times (from The Columbus Times)
- The Columbus Weekly Times (from The Columbus Weekly Times)
- Jump to our expanded list of Newspapers Published in Columbus.
- Published In Garwood
- Published In New Ulm [Austin County, TX]
- Published In Sealy [Austin County, TX]
- Columbus Banner Press (from Sealy Weekly News)
- The Banner Press Newspaper (from The Sealy Chronicle)
- The Colorado Citizen (from The Sealy News)
- The Colorado County Citizen (from The Sealy News)
- The Columbus Times (from The Sealy Semi-Weekly News)
- Jump to our expanded list of Newspapers Published in Sealy.
Footnotes ...
<1> | Our distances are not driving distances, but are calculated as a 'point-to-point' distance. A straight line distance ignores obstructions like rivers, canyons, lakes, et cetera - it's truly a line drawn from Point A (ie- ) to Point B.Our distance measurements begin at a specific point at the Mexican Cemetery. The point we use is located at these GPS coordinates - Latitude: 29.6688, Longitude: -96.4197 In this case, the coordinates for the Mexican Cemetery have been provided by the Geographic Names Information System (GNIS). |