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After experiencing financial difficulties, the paper closed in 1873, though one scholar writes that it closed in 1869. Whether it ever reopened is not clear; the local black community believed that the paper never reopened after its 1873 closure, but some scholars say that the paper was reopened by
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The paper was "utterly opposed" to the social movement that sought to repatriate formerly enslaved people to Africa, and it voiced dissatisfaction with economic contracts being drawn up for enslaved people following the Civil War (which provided wages as opposed to land).
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and declared itself as the "Soldier's Organ". The paper did not actively disclose its editing teams; the bylines were largely of groups, including the
Cincinnati Young Men's Literary and Publishing Company, not individuals. Among those who contributed to the paper were
115:, a weekly African American newspaper, in Cincinnati. It was one of the only African American newspapers published during the Civil War, and only two surviving copies remain. The available evidence suggests that the paper was focused on the life of
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51:, in 1863. It was one of several black newspapers founded in Cincinnati during the nineteenth century, and it was one of only a few black papers in the country published during the
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published in the city around this time, and ultimately around a dozen were published by 1900. Two members of the city's black community were
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Jones Ross, Felicia G. (1996). "Democracy's textbook: A history of the black press in Ohio, 1865–1985". In Suggs, Henry Lewis (ed.).
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55:. The precise dates of its dissolution are not known. Only two surviving copies of the newspaper remain.
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91:), both of whom were active in the establishment of black periodicals in the state, including the
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Martin, Noel (2001). "Early printing and publishing in
Cincinnati". In Cornell, Alice M. (ed.).
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The wars of
Reconstruction: The brief, violent history of American's most progressive era
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124:(who may have published the paper), Charles W. Bell, Harry F. Leonard, and
350:"Joseph Carter Corbin and negro education in the University of Arkansas"
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Art as image: Prints and promotion in
Cincinnati, Ohio
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In 1863, Yancy, Woodson, and others established the
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117:African Americans serving during the Civil War
314:The black press in the middle west, 1865-1985
25:Front page of November 7, 1863, issue of the
416:Defunct newspapers published in Cincinnati
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16:Defunct African American newspaper in Ohio
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373:: Collaborative editorship in progress"
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406:African-American history in Cincinnati
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411:Defunct African-American newspapers
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63:The African American population of
29:– one of two known surviving issues
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355:Arkansas Historical Quarterly
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289:Egerton, Douglas R. (2014).
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401:1863 establishments in Ohio
77:African American newspapers
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136:Leonard and Bell in 1887.
126:George Washington Williams
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67:was one of the largest in
41:African American newspaper
348:Rothrock, Thomas (1971).
100:Disfranchised American
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331:Ohio University Press
128:– all young writers.
75:. There were several
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378:American Periodicals
234:, pp. 102, 185.
122:Joseph Carter Corbin
94:Palladium of Liberty
367:Woo, Jewon (2020).
73:American Civil War
53:American Civil War
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318:Greenwood Press
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85:Thomas Woodson
71:preceding the
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196:Martin 2001
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140:References
65:Cincinnati
59:Background
45:Cincinnati
145:Citations
272:Woo 2020
244:Woo 2020
184:Woo 2020
165:Woo 2020
97:and the
89:reverend
107:History
39:was an
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369:"The
335:ISBN
299:ISBN
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