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* ''Red Ryder'' (1938-1964). American.

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* ''Red Ryder'' (1938-1964).(1938-1965). American.
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* ''[[Magazine/{{MAD}} MAD Magazine]]'' (1952-2018, 2018-present, now mostly reprints). American. Created in retaliation to UsefulNotes/TheComicsCode, contains parodies and satire of popular culture, as well as some recurring series.

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* ''[[Magazine/{{MAD}} MAD Magazine]]'' (1952-2018, 2018-present, now mostly reprints). American. Created in retaliation to UsefulNotes/TheComicsCode, MediaNotes/TheComicsCode, contains parodies and satire of popular culture, as well as some recurring series.
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** ''ComicBook/FantasticFour1961'' (1961-1996)
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** ''ComicBook/TheIncredibleHulk1968'' (1968-1998)


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** ''ComicBook/TheAmazingSpiderMan1963'' (1963-1998)
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** ''ComicBook/Batman1940'' (1940-2011). Batman's second magazine and first solo book.

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** ''ComicBook/Superman1939'' (1939-2011). Superman's second magazine and first solo book.



* ''Comicbook/{{Tex|Willer}}'', a western Italian comic still running monthly since 1948 with 590 issues.
* ''Franchise/{{Tintin}}'': Although Hergé, the author, died in 1983 and forbade in his will that anybody else publish new stories, it's always been in print since its debut in 1929, and probably should be considered Hall of Fame material--it'll obviously stay in print for a loooong time to come (in its original French version, anyway).

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* ''Comicbook/{{Tex|Willer}}'', ''ComicBook/{{Tex|Willer}}'', a western Italian comic still running monthly since 1948 with 590 issues.
* ''Franchise/{{Tintin}}'': ''ComicBook/{{Tintin}}'': Although Hergé, the author, died in 1983 and forbade in his will that anybody else publish new stories, it's always been in print since its debut in 1929, and probably should be considered Hall of Fame material--it'll obviously stay in print for a loooong time to come (in its original French version, anyway).
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Reached the 20-year mark as of today.

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* ''Manga/MinamiKe'' (2004-present, 24+ volumes)
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* ''Manga/JunjouRomantica'' (2002-present, 27+ volumes)

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* ''Manga/JunjouRomantica'' (2002-present, 27+ 28+ volumes)
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* ''Manga/{{Historie}}'' (2003-present, 11+ volumes)

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Added Canadian government gazettes.


* ''The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle'' (c. 900-1150)

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* ''The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle'' (c. 900-1150)900–1150)



* ''The Atlanta Constitution'' (1868-ongoing; known as the ''Journal-Constitution'' since 2001)

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* ''The Atlanta Constitution'' (1868-ongoing; (1868–present; known as the ''Journal-Constitution'' since 2001)



* ''Canada Gazette'' (1841–2014): The country's official federal government gazette, where new laws and regulations are officially published (contrast with ''Hansard'', which publishes parliamentary proceedings). It was print-only until 1998, when an online edition was added. In 2003, the online edition received the same official status as the print edition. Print publication ended on April 1, 2014.



* ''The Daily Telegraph'' (1820-ongoing)

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* ''The Daily Telegraph'' (1820-ongoing)(1820–present)



* ''Detroit Free Press'' (1831-ongoing)

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* ''Detroit Free Press'' (1831-ongoing)(1831–present)



* ''Gazette officielle du Québec'' (1869–present): The province's government newspaper.



* ''The Guardian'' (1821-ongoing; known as ''The Manchester Guardian'' until 1959.)

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* ''The Guardian'' (1821-ongoing; (1821–present; known as ''The Manchester Guardian'' until 1959.)



* ''The New Zealand Herald'' (Auckland) (1863-present)

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* ''The New Zealand Herald'' (Auckland) (1863-present)(1863–present)



* ''The News & Observer'' (1865-ongoing; though it only changed to the current name in 1880)
* ''The News Letter'' (Belfast) (1737-ongoing; claims to be the world's oldest continuously published English-language daily newspaper.)
* ''News of the World'' (1843-2011)
* ''The Observer'' (1791-ongoing)

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* ''The News & Observer'' (1865-ongoing; (1865–present; though it only changed to the current name in 1880)
* ''The News Letter'' (Belfast) (1737-ongoing; (1737–present; claims to be the world's oldest continuously published English-language daily newspaper.)
* ''News of the World'' (1843-2011)
(1843–2011)
* ''Nova Scotia Royal Gazette'' (1752–present): Originally the ''Halifax Gazette'', it published as a newspaper until three days after Canadian Confederation in 1867, at which time it adopted its current name and became the province's official legislative journal.
* ''The Observer'' (1791-ongoing)(1791–present)



* ''Ontario Gazette'' (1868–present): The province's government newspaper.



* ''Pittsburgh Post-Gazette'' (1786-ongoing; originally a weekly simply called ''The Gazette'', it became a daily in 1844 and acquired its present name, following several additional changes, in 1927.)
* ''The Plain Dealer'' (Cleveland) (1842-ongoing)
* ''Post & Inrikes Tidningar'' (1645-ongoing). This is the government newspaper of Sweden, and the oldest currently published newspaper in the world. It has basically been online-only since 2007, but four physical copies of each new issue are still printed, in order to maintain its status as a "print" publication.

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* ''Pittsburgh Post-Gazette'' (1786-ongoing; (1786–present; originally a weekly simply called ''The Gazette'', it became a daily in 1844 and acquired its present name, following several additional changes, in 1927.)
* ''The Plain Dealer'' (Cleveland) (1842-ongoing)
(1842–present)
* ''Post & Inrikes Tidningar'' (1645-ongoing).(1645–present). This is the government newspaper of Sweden, and the oldest currently published newspaper in the world. It has basically been online-only since 2007, but four physical copies of each new issue are still printed, in order to maintain its status as a "print" publication.



* ''The Press'' (Christchurch) (1861-present). Though founded six months before the ''Otago Daily Times'', ''The Press'' was a weekly until March 1863, while the ''ODT'' has been a daily since its establishment.

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* ''The Press'' (Christchurch) (1861-present).(1861–present). Though founded six months before the ''Otago Daily Times'', ''The Press'' was a weekly until March 1863, while the ''ODT'' has been a daily since its establishment.

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Another example. Also, the proper name of the Montreal anglophone daily is simply The Gazette.


* ''Gazeta de Barcelona'' (1641-1808)

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* ''Gazeta de Barcelona'' (1641-1808)(1641–1808)



* ''La Gazette'' (French weekly) (1631-1915)

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* ''La Gazette'' (French weekly) (1631-1915)(1631–1915)
* ''The Gazette'' (Montreal) (1778–present).



* ''The Montreal Gazette'' (1778–present)



* ''New York Post'' (1801-ongoing; claims to be America's longest continuously-published newspaper)
* ''The New York Times'' (1851-ongoing)

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* ''New York Post'' (1801-ongoing; (1801–ongoing; claims to be America's longest continuously-published newspaper)
* ''The New York Times'' (1851-ongoing)(1851–present)


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* ''Newport Mercury'' (Rhode Island) (1758–2019): Published regularly until December 1776, when the British occupied the city during the [[UsefulNotes/TheAmericanRevolution Revolutionary War]]. Publication resumed when the British left in 1779. In 1928, the ''Newport Daily News'' bought the ''Mercury'', but the ''Mercury'' continued as a weekly subscription paper until 2005, when it was relaunched as a free alt-weekly. Weekly publication ended in April 2018, but the ''Mercury'' continued for about a year as a free monthly and an insert in the ''Daily News''.


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* ''Quebec Chronicle-Telegraph'' (Quebec City) (1764–present) – Another claimant to the "oldest newspaper in North America" title. Started as the ''Quebec Gazette'', a weekly with English and French editions; missed a few days during the 1775 siege of the city. In 1832, it became a daily, publishing in English and French on alternate days (no Sundays) until becoming an English-only paper in 1842. Mergers with other papers led to name changes to ''Quebec Chronicle and Quebec Gazette'' and ''Chronicle-Telegraph'', with "Quebec" added to the masthead in 1934. It returned to its original weekly schedule in 1972.

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* ''Liverpool Daily Post'' (1855-ongoing)
* ''London Gazette'' (1665-ongoing). This is the official government paper-of-record of the UK and does not function like a standard newspaper.
* ''Magyar Közlöny'' (1848-ongoing; official legislative newspaper of Hungary. Between 1849 and 1867 its legal predecessor functioned as a government newspaper only since legislature was suspended.)
* ''El Mercurio de Valparaíso'' (1827-ongoing)
* ''The Montreal Gazette'' (1778-ongoing)

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* ''Liverpool Daily Post'' (1855-ongoing)
(1855–present)
* ''London Gazette'' (1665-ongoing).(1665–present). This is the official government paper-of-record of the UK and does not function like a standard newspaper.
* ''The London Free Press'' (Ontario) (1849–present)
* ''Magyar Közlöny'' (1848-ongoing; (1848–present; official legislative newspaper of Hungary. Between 1849 and 1867 its legal predecessor functioned as a government newspaper only since legislature was suspended.)
* ''El Mercurio de Valparaíso'' (1827-ongoing)
(1827–present)
* ''The Montreal Gazette'' (1778-ongoing)(1778–present)
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* ''The Sun Times'' (Owen Sound, Ontario) (1853–present): Date applies to the paper's oldest predecessor, the ''Times''. The current name was adopted with the 1918 merger of the ''Times'' and the ''Sun'' (founded in 1893).

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Still more Canadian examples.


* ''The Intelligencer'' (Belleville, Ontario) (1834–present)



* ''Punch'' (1841-2002)
* ''Rocky Mountain News'' (Denver) (1859-2009)

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* ''Punch'' (1841-2002)
(1841–2002)
* ''The Recorder & Times'' (Brockville, Ontario) (1821–present) – The date applies to the "Recorder" part, originally the ''Brockville Recorder''. The current name dates to the 1918 merger of the ''Recorder'' with the ''Daily Times''.
* ''Rocky Mountain News'' (Denver) (1859-2009)(1859–2009)

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* ''Boston Herald'' (1846-ongoing)

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* ''Boston Herald'' (1846-ongoing)(1846–present)
* ''Brantford Expositor'' (Ontario) (1852–present)
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* ''Cornwall Standard-Freeholder'' (Ontario) (1846–present): Date applies to the paper's oldest predecessor, the ''Cornwall Freeholder''. The current name was adopted with the 1932 merger of the ''Freeholder'' and the ''Cornwall Standard'' (founded in 1886).


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* ''The Hamilton Spectator'' (Ontario) (1846–present; originally ''The Hamilton Spectator and Journal of Commerce'')


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* ''The Peterborough Examiner'' (Ontario) (1847–present)

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A couple more Canada examples.


* ''The Kingston Whig-Standard'' (Ontario) (1834–present) – Originally ''The British Whig'' and later ''The Kingston Whig''; adopted current name via a merger in 1926. The word "Kingston" was dropped in 1973 but restored some time in the early 1990s.



* ''Philadelphia Inquirer'' (1829-ongoing)

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* ''Ottawa Citizen'' (1845–present) — Founded as ''The Bytown Packet''; became the ''Bytown Citizen'' in 1851 and adopted the current name when Bytown was subsumed by Ottawa in 1855.
* ''Philadelphia Inquirer'' (1829-ongoing)(1829–present)

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* ''The Globe and Mail'' (1844-ongoing)

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* ''The Globe and Mail'' (1844-ongoing)(1844–present): The 1844 date applies to its oldest predecessor, ''The Globe''. The paper's current incarnation resulted from the 1936 merger of ''The Globe'' with ''The Mail and Empire'', itself founded by the 1895 merger of ''The Toronto Mail'' (1872) and ''The Empire'' (1887).



* ''Times Colonist'' (Victoria, British Columbia) — Debatable. The "Colonist" bit has been going since 1854, first as ''The British Colonist'' and later the ''Daily Colonist''. it merged with the ''Victoria Daily Times'' (established 1884) in 1980. However, the ''Daily Colonist'' characterized the merger as "the demise of two of Canada's oldest newspapers."



* ''Victoria Times-Colonist'' (British Columbia) — debatable. The "Colonist" bit has been going since 1854, when it was ''The British Colonist''; it merged with the ''Victoria Daily Times'' (established 1884) in 1980.


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* ''Winnipeg Free Press'' (1872–present): Originally the ''Manitoba Free Press''; adopted its current name on December 2, 1931. The paper published its first edition nearly a year before Winnipeg itself became incorporated.
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* ''The Atlantic Monthly'' (1857-ongoing; the word "Monthly" was removed from the cover in 2004, three years after it [[ArtifactTitle stopped publishing in every month]].[[note]]11 issues in both 2001 and 2002, and 10 issues in every year since.[[/note]] The name was officially changed to ''The Atlantic'' in 2007.)
* ''The Augusta Chronicle'' (1785-ongoing)
* ''Baltimore American'' (1773-1964, then the ''News-American'' until 1986)
* ''The Baltimore Sun'' (1837-ongoing)

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* ''The Atlantic'' (1857–present): Originally ''The Atlantic Monthly'' (1857-ongoing; Monthly''; the word "Monthly" was removed from the cover in 2004, three years after it [[ArtifactTitle stopped publishing in every month]].[[note]]11 issues in both 2001 and 2002, and 10 issues in every year since.[[/note]] The name was officially changed to ''The Atlantic'' in 2007.)
2007.
* ''The Augusta Chronicle'' (1785-ongoing)
(1785–present)
* ''Baltimore American'' (1773-1964, (1773–1964, then the ''News-American'' until 1986)
* ''The Baltimore Sun'' (1837-ongoing)(1837–present)



* ''Scientific American'' (1845-ongoing). The oldest continuously published magazine in the United States.

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* ''Scientific American'' (1845-ongoing).(1845–present). The oldest continuously published magazine in the United States.



* ''The Sydney Morning Herald'' (1831 (when it was founded; changed its name to current 10 years later) - present) Longest running newspaper in Australia. In fact, it was founded 70 years before Australia even existed as a country.

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* ''The Sydney Morning Herald'' (1831 (when it was founded; changed its name to current 10 years later) - present) (1831–present; ''Sydney Herald'' until 1842) – Longest running newspaper in Australia. In fact, it was founded 70 years before Australia even existed as a country.



* ''Toledo Blade'' (1835-ongoing; known simply as ''The Blade'' since 1960)
* ''Victoria Times-Colonist'' - debatable. The "Colonist" bit has been going since 1854, when it was ''The British Colonist''; it merged with the ''Victoria Daily Times'' (established 1884) in 1980.
* ''Wiener Zeitung'' (1703-ongoing; official government newspaper of Austria, Ended its daily print edition on 30 June 2023; continues as an online publication, and plans to distribute a monthly print edition.)

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* ''Toledo Blade'' (1835-ongoing; (1835–present; known simply as ''The Blade'' since 1960)
* ''Victoria Times-Colonist'' - (British Columbia) — debatable. The "Colonist" bit has been going since 1854, when it was ''The British Colonist''; it merged with the ''Victoria Daily Times'' (established 1884) in 1980.
* ''Wiener Zeitung'' (1703-ongoing; (1703–present; official government newspaper of Austria, Ended its daily print edition on 30 June 2023; continues as an online publication, and plans to distribute a monthly print edition.)
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* ''Manga/{{Phoenix}}'' (1954-1988, 12 volumes)

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* ''Manga/{{Phoenix}}'' ''Manga/Phoenix1954'' (1954-1988, 12 volumes)
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* ''Manga/BigWindup'' (2003-present, 36+ volumes)
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* ''Manga/SgtFrog'' (1999-present, 31+ volumes)

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* ''Manga/SgtFrog'' (1999-present, 31+ 33+ volumes)
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* ''ComicStrip/{{Blondie}}'' (1930-present). American.

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* ''ComicStrip/{{Blondie}}'' ''ComicStrip/Blondie1930'' (1930-present). American.
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** ''Doctrine and Covenants'' – Since 1835.
** ''Pearl of Great Price'' – Since 1851, although portions of it date back to 1831, and some material has been added to it since its first publication.

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** ''Doctrine and Covenants'' ''Literature/DoctrineAndCovenants'' – Since 1835.
** ''Pearl ''Literature/{{The Pearl of Great Price'' Price}}'' – Since 1851, although portions of it date back to 1831, and some material has been added to it since its first publication.
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* ''On the Origin of Species'' - UsefulNotes/CharlesDarwin (1859-present)

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* ''On ''Literature/{{On the Origin of Species'' Species}}'' - UsefulNotes/CharlesDarwin (1859-present)
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* ''ComicStrip/MadamAndEve'' (1992-present). South African.
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* ''Sam and Silo'' (1977-present). American. A {{retool}} of ''ComicStrip/SamsStrip'' (1961-1963).

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* ''Sam and Silo'' ''ComicStrip/SamAndSilo'' (1977-present). American. A {{retool}} of ''ComicStrip/SamsStrip'' (1961-1963).

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Hagar was listed twice.


* ''Hälge'' (1991-present). Swedish



* ''ComicStrip/HagarTheHorrible'' (1973-present). American.
* ''Hälge'' (1991-present). Swedish
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Ivy, Ball Boy and Plum have all been dropped. In facr Plum is now considered an Old Shame because of it's racist depiction of Native Americans.


** ''Ball Boy'' (1975-present).

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** ''Ball Boy'' (1975-present).(1975-2010s).



** ''Ivy the Terrible'' (1985-present).

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** ''Ivy the Terrible'' (1985-present).(1985-2010s).



** ''Little Plum'' (1953-1986, 1998, 2002-2007, 2011-Present).

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** ''Little Plum'' (1953-1986, 1998, 2002-2007, 2011-Present).2011-2010s).
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* ''Arkansas Democrat-Gazette'' (Little Rock) (1819-present; spent most of the period from 1819–1991 as the ''Arkansas Gazette'' and was merged with the ''Arkansas Democrat'' in 1991)

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* ''Arkansas Democrat-Gazette'' (Little Rock) (1819-present; (1819–present; spent most of the period from 1819–1991 as the ''Arkansas Gazette'' and was merged with the ''Arkansas Democrat'' in 1991)



* ''Charleston Gazette-Mail'' (West Virginia) (1873-present; spent most of the period from 1873–2015 as the ''Charleston Gazette'' and was merged with the ''Charleston Daily Mail'' in 2015)

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* ''Charleston Gazette-Mail'' (West Virginia) (1873-present; (1873–present; spent most of the period from 1873–2015 as the ''Charleston Gazette'' and was merged with the ''Charleston Daily Mail'' in 2015)

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