The Tri-weekly Columbus times. (Columbus, Ga.) 1850-185?

 

Title:

The Tri-weekly Columbus times.

Place of Publication:

Columbus, Ga.

Geographic coverage:

  • Columbus, Muscogee county

Publisher:

R.C. Forsyth, R. Ellis & Co.

Dates of publication:

1850-185?

Description:

  • Began in Apr., 1850? Ceased in Dec. 1852.

Frequency:

Triweekly

Languages:

  • English

Subjects:

  • Columbus (Ga.)--Newspapers.
  • Georgia--Columbus.--fast--(OCoLC)fst01214575
  • Georgia--Muscogee County.--fast--(OCoLC)fst01216552
  • Muscogee County (Ga.)--Newspapers.

Notes:

  • Also on microfilm: Athens, Ga. : University of Georgia Libraries.
  • Description based on: Vol. 2, no. 28 (July 7, 1851).
  • Merged with: Southern sentinel (Columbus, Ga.), to form: Tri-weekly times and sentinel.

LCCN:

sn86053046

OCLC:

13035684

The Tri-weekly Columbus times. July 16, 1851

About

James Van Ness founded the weekly Columbus Times on February 11, 1841. Ness, Columbus’ postmaster since 1828, was editor and proprietor of the Times until his retirement on April 10, 1844. John Forsyth and William L. Jeter then operated as co-owners of the newspaper. Jeter sold his share of the Times to former Macon Democrat editor Marcus Johnson in April, 1843. General James N. Bethune became involved with the paper in the mid-1840s and remained as publisher until Roswell Ellis and Company purchased the Times in 1849. Under Ellis, the Times experienced significant growth in scope and circulation. In 1852, with co-owner and former Enquirer editor Tennant Lomax, Ellis merged the Times with William H. Chamber’s Southern Sentinel to form the Weekly Times and Sentinel. In 1853, the two owners introduced a tri-weekly edition of the Times and Sentinel which they continued until 1858. R. Ellis and Company, with editorial assistance from Peyton H. Colquitt and James W. Warren, again expanded their paper to include a daily edition titled the Columbus Daily Times. On the topic of secession, the largely Democratic Times fell in favor of breaking from the Union which put the publication at odds with the Columbus Enquirer and some of the staff at the Daily Sun. The Times published weekly and daily editions until October, 1865, when the Daily Sun absorbed the Times.