The Observer (Kearny, New Jersey)

The Observer is an American newspaper based in New Jersey.

The Observer
Front page of the first issue of The Arlington Observer.
TypeNewspaper, tabloid
FoundedMay 14, 1887 (1887-05-14)
LanguageEnglish
Headquarters39 Seeley Ave., Kearny, New Jersey
OCLC number15795218
Websitetheobserver.com

About

The Observer is a weekly newspaper based out of Kearny, New Jersey. It also serves the neighboring communities of Harrison, East Newark, North Arlington, Lyndhurst, Belleville, Bloomfield and Nutley.[1] Jim Hague, a long-time sportswriter, has written for the newspaper since 2002.[2] Other staff writers of The Observer have written for the New York Daily News, The Jersey Journal, the Hudson Dispatch, "The Bergen Record," DiversityInc and the associated press.[1]

History

The forerunner of The Observer was a weekly newspaper, entitled the Kearny Republican.[3] It officially began operation on May 14, 1887, as The Arlington Observer. The name Arlington is from the section of Kearny along the Greenwood Lake Branch of the Erie Railroad. The first issue was a single-page news broadsheet, filled with stories about the town and its residents. Early issues contained stories of local businesses, institutions such as the town's five churches, one public school, the shipyards, and manufacturing companies that framed the hub of the area. Annual subscription was $1.50, or 3ยข per copy.[2] The title was changed to The Observer in 1889, and was shortly named The Kearny Observer during a portion of 1936, before reverting to its original title later that year.[4]

By 1939, the paper was recognized for wielding a powerful influence in its section of New Jersey.[5] The newspaper registered the domain theobserver.com in 1996, and in the early 2000s, it changed its format from broadsheet to tabloid, and featured the addition of sporadic color printing. In 2012, it offered readers an online e-Edition, which features breaking news with video and audio.[2]

gollark: Maybe faster healing somehow, but good luck finding genes for that.
gollark: But most war is not actually melee combat now.
gollark: Obviously you can probably do... bigger muscles, or something, just remove myostatin, but I don't think that's very useful in modern warfare.
gollark: How would you actually do that? What traits would make soldiers significantly better, and are actually mostly genetic (and easily editable)?
gollark: I think that would imply that you actually mix the genes (and fairly evenly).

References

Citations
Bibliography
  • American Annals of the Deaf Staff (1939), American Annals of the Deaf, 84, p. 204, retrieved 9 April 2019
  • Canessa, Kevin (10 May 2017), "The Observer turns 130...", The Observer, retrieved 9 April 2019
  • The Observer Staff (2016), "About us", The Observer, retrieved 9 April 2019
  • U.S. Government Printing Office Staff (1970), Congressional Record, 116, p. 44181, retrieved 9 April 2019
  • Wright, William C. (1977), Directory of New Jersey Newspapers, 1765-1970, p. 108, retrieved 9 April 2019
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