Baltimore Gazette

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Baltimore_Gazette an entity of type: Thing

The Baltimore Gazette, also known as the Baltimore Daily Gazette and The Gazette, was a daily newspaper published in Baltimore, Maryland between 1862 and 1875. It broke some high-profile stories including the fact that The Turk, allegedly a chess playing machine, worked because a human chess master was operating it from the inside. The paper was associated with several high-profile figures in publishing and politics, including William Hinson Cole and William Wilkins Glenn. In 2016, the name was revived in the form of a fake news website. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Baltimore Gazette
rdf:langString Baltimore Gazette
rdf:langString Baltimore Gazette
xsd:integer 51805773
xsd:integer 1107711187
xsd:date 1875-12-31
xsd:date 1862-10-07
rdf:langString Edward F. Carter and William H. Neilson
rdf:langString William Wilkins Glenn, Frank Key Howard, and William H. Carpenter
rdf:langString Daily newspaper
rdf:langString The Baltimore Gazette, also known as the Baltimore Daily Gazette and The Gazette, was a daily newspaper published in Baltimore, Maryland between 1862 and 1875. It broke some high-profile stories including the fact that The Turk, allegedly a chess playing machine, worked because a human chess master was operating it from the inside. The paper was associated with several high-profile figures in publishing and politics, including William Hinson Cole and William Wilkins Glenn. In 2016, the name was revived in the form of a fake news website.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 3058
xsd:date 1862-10-07

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