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Athea. / 52.460926°N 9.289327°W / 52.460926; -9.289327. Athea ( / æˈteɪ / a-TAY; [2] Irish: Áth an tSléibhe or Áth Té) [3] is a village in west County Limerick, Ireland. Athea has a Roman Catholic church, and is the centre for the parish of Athea, which encompasses several nearby townlands.
The Evening News – opened in May 1996 and closed in September of the same year. The Evening Press – closed in 1995. The Evening Telegraph – closed 1924. The Freeman's Journal – merged with the Irish Independent in 1924. Irish Bulletin – official Irish Republic gazette; closed 1922. The Irish Press – closed in 1995.
The Limerick Leader prints three different editions: City, County and West Limerick. The Limerick Chronicle is owned by the Limerick Leader and is primarily a city paper. The Weekly Observer serves the western half of the county while the Vale Star covers South Limerick and North Cork. [citation needed] Anthem
Limerick Leader offices, O'Connell Street. The Limerick Leader is a weekly local newspaper in Limerick, Ireland. It was founded in 1889. [1] The newspaper is headquartered on Glentworth Street in the City. The broadsheet paper currently is distributed in three editions, City, County and West , with a small selection of content differing between ...
Website. www .limerickpost .ie. The Limerick Post is a free weekly newspaper, distributed throughout Limerick city and county, parts of counties Clare, Tipperary in the province of Munster, Ireland . The Limerick Post was established in 1986 and remains the only locally owned newspaper in Limerick. The Post is published each Thursday morning.
The news weekly Kentucky Irish American would be published from Limerick for nearly seventy years, starting in 1898. Historic preservation. Today, Limerick is a historic preservation district. It is bounded by Breckinridge Street to the north, 5th street to the east, Oak Street to the south, and the CSX railroad tracks to the west. South of Oak ...
The Leinster Leader is a newspaper published in Naas, County Kildare, Ireland. Johnston Press bought the Leinster Leader Group in 2005. The Leinster Leader Group, as well as publishing the Naas-based Leinster Leader also published The Dundalk Democrat, Leinster Express (), Limerick Leader, Offaly Express, and the Tallaght Echo.
The Leitrim Observer was founded by the Mulvey family in 1889. [citation needed] It was bought by Pat Dunne, for a rumoured sum of £150, some time before 1910. When the Black and Tans came to Carrick-on-Shannon during the War of Independence, they badly burned the newspaper's premises, destroying many of its early files. [citation needed]