Baltimore Gazette
The Baltimore Gazette, also known as the Baltimore Daily Gazette and The Gazette, was a daily newspaper published in Baltimore, Maryland between 1862 and 1875. It broke some high-profile stories including the fact that The Turk, allegedly a chess playing machine, worked because a human chess master was operating it from the inside. The paper was associated with several high-profile figures in publishing and politics, including William Hinson Cole and William Wilkins Glenn. In 2016, the name was revived in the form of a website which published phony news stories.
Wikipage redirect
primaryTopic
Baltimore Gazette
The Baltimore Gazette, also known as the Baltimore Daily Gazette and The Gazette, was a daily newspaper published in Baltimore, Maryland between 1862 and 1875. It broke some high-profile stories including the fact that The Turk, allegedly a chess playing machine, worked because a human chess master was operating it from the inside. The paper was associated with several high-profile figures in publishing and politics, including William Hinson Cole and William Wilkins Glenn. In 2016, the name was revived in the form of a website which published phony news stories.
has abstract
The Baltimore Gazette, also kn ...... published phony news stories.
@en
founding date
1862-10-07
type
Wikipage page ID
51,805,773
page length (characters) of wiki page
Wikipage revision ID
1,017,495,024
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
ceased publication
1875-12-31
foundation
1862-10-07
founders
Edward F. Carter and William H. Neilson
@en
name
Baltimore Gazette
@en
owners
William Wilkins Glenn, Frank Key Howard, and William H. Carpenter
@en
publishing city
publishing country
type
Daily newspaper
@en
wikiPageUsesTemplate
comment
The Baltimore Gazette, also kn ...... published phony news stories.
@en
label
Baltimore Gazette
@en
sameAs
wasDerivedFrom
isPrimaryTopicOf
name
Baltimore Gazette
@en