Anzeiger des Westens

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TypeDaily German-language newspaper
PublisherHenry Boernstein (1850–1861)
Editor-in-chiefCarl Daenzer (1851–1857, 1862–1898)
FoundedJune 1835
Anzeiger des Westens
Anzeiger des Westens building,
in a woodcut from 1887
TypeDaily German-language newspaper
PublisherHenry Boernstein (1850–1861)
Editor-in-chiefCarl Daenzer (1851–1857, 1862–1898)
FoundedJune 1835
Ceased publicationApril 30, 1912
LanguageGerman
HeadquartersSt. Louis
Circulation37,500 (1912)[1]

The Anzeiger des Westens (literally "Gazette of the West"), which operated from 1835 to 1912, was the first German-language newspaper in St. Louis, Missouri, United States. Alongside the Westliche Post and the Illinois Staats-Zeitung, it became one of the three most prominent German-language papers in the Midwestern United States, serving the German-American population with news and features. During the 1840s, it is believed to have had the largest circulation of any newspaper in Missouri, regardless of language.[2]

Early years

See also

References

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