Sunday Mercury (New York)

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Sunday_Mercury_(New_York) an entity of type: Thing

The Sunday Mercury (1839–1896) (sometimes referred to as the New York Sunday Mercury) was a weekly Sunday newspaper published in New York City that grew to become the highest-circulation weekly newspaper (at least by its own claims) in the United States at its peak. It was known for publishing and popularizing the work of many notable 19th-century writers, including Charles Farrar Browne and Robert Henry Newell, and was the first Eastern paper to publish Mark Twain. It was also the first newspaper to provide regular coverage of baseball, and was popular for the extensive war correspondence from soldiers it published during the Civil War. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Sunday Mercury (New York)
rdf:langString Sunday Mercury
rdf:langString Sunday Mercury
xsd:integer 29378637
xsd:integer 1061992993
xsd:integer 1896
xsd:integer 145000
xsd:integer 1839
xsd:integer 9588307
rdf:langString Daily
rdf:langString Weekly newspaper
rdf:langString The Sunday Mercury (1839–1896) (sometimes referred to as the New York Sunday Mercury) was a weekly Sunday newspaper published in New York City that grew to become the highest-circulation weekly newspaper (at least by its own claims) in the United States at its peak. It was known for publishing and popularizing the work of many notable 19th-century writers, including Charles Farrar Browne and Robert Henry Newell, and was the first Eastern paper to publish Mark Twain. It was also the first newspaper to provide regular coverage of baseball, and was popular for the extensive war correspondence from soldiers it published during the Civil War.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 36845
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 145000

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