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Metro. Metro is a free daily newspaper in Philadelphia which began publishing on January 24, 2000. [1] Originally published by Metro International, it was the first Metro edition published in North America and the ninth edition since the first in Stockholm in 1995. Since December 2019, it has been owned and published by Schnepps Media, which ...
History 19th century The Inquirer Building at 400 North Broad Street in Logan Square, formerly known as the Elverson Building, was home to the newspaper from 1924 to 2011.. The Philadelphia Inquirer was founded June 1, 1829, by printer John R. Walker and John Norvell, former editor of Philadelphia's largest newspaper, the Aurora & Gazette.
Pennsylvania metropolitan areas. Pennsylvania has 14 U.S. Census Bureau -designated metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) and four combined statistical areas (CSAs). As of 2020, Philadelphia, the seventh-largest United States metropolitan area, is the state's largest metropolitan area followed by Pittsburgh and Allentown.
Trolley. 63rd–Malvern / Overbrook. 13th Street. Baltimore Avenue trolley line. 61st–Baltimore / Angora. Chester Avenue trolley line. Yeadon. Darby Transit Center (limited) Woodland Avenue trolley line.
Philadelphia Metro: 2000 Daily Philadelphia Business Journal: 1982 Weekly The Hawk: 1929 Weekly The Temple News: 1921 Weekly The Daily Pennsylvanian: 1885 Daily The Triangle: 1926 Weekly Philadelphia News: 1995 Weekly Impacto Latin Newspaper: 1998 Weekly The Jewish Exponent: 1887 Weekly The Philadelphia Evening Post: 2015 Bi-monthly ...
The Metro Chinese Weekly, is a Chinese language newspaper that is based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.Published every Friday, it serves the Greater Philadelphia area, including Northern Delaware and Southern New Jersey, and is produced by New Mainstream Press, a publishing company that caters specifically to Asian-American communities.
Philadelphia Business Journal. Philadelphia Daily News. Philadelphia Front Page News. Philadelphia Gay News. The Philadelphia Inquirer. The Philadelphia Public School Notebook. The Philadelphia Tribune. Philadelphia Weekly. The Public Record (newspaper)
The former SEPTA Route 6 trolley in Philadelphia, c.1980. SEPTA was created by the Pennsylvania legislature on August 17, 1963, to coordinate government funding to various transit and railroad companies in southeastern Pennsylvania. It commenced on February 18, 1964.