Newark’s Star-Ledger will stop printing on Feb. 2 after closing its Montville production facility. The move impacts other ...
It is one of the first major papers to completely do away with print, after years of the industry edging more and more toward ...
Ledger, as well as multiple other local newspapers around New Jersey, will cease publication of print papers after February ...
After nearly 200 years in publication, The Star-Ledger announced today that it will stop publishing printed newspapers in ...
The newspaper's origins date to the 19th century. It acquired its current name in 1939, when the Newark Star-Eagle was merged with the Newark Ledger.
Newark’s Star-Ledger will publish its final newspaper on Feb. 2. Newark Morning Ledger Co., which owns the Star-Ledger, cited rising costs, decreasing circulation and reduced demand for print as ...
In 1939, SI Newhouse bought Newark’s first daily newspaper, the Star-Eagle and merged it with the Newark Ledger to become the Newark Star-Ledger. Newark was dropped from the title in the Seventies.
The Star-Ledger, New Jersey's largest daily newspaper, announced it will discontinue its print edition early next year, citing rising production costs and falling demand. This shift is part of a ...
The Newark Morning Ledger Co., owners of The Star-Ledger, said print circulation has been continued on a steady decline, ...