Commercial Journal
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
TypeDaily and weekly (and sometimes triweekly) newspaper
Founder(s)J. Heron Foster, J. McMillin, J. B. Kennedy
Founded19 April 1843
Political alignment
- Independent
- Whig
- American
- Republican
| Type | Daily and weekly (and sometimes triweekly) newspaper |
|---|---|
| Founder(s) | J. Heron Foster, J. McMillin, J. B. Kennedy |
| Founded | 19 April 1843 |
| Political alignment |
|
| Language | English |
| Ceased publication | 8 May 1861 |
| City | Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania |
| Country | United States |
The Commercial Journal was a mid-19th century newspaper in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States.
The paper was founded as the Spirit of the Age by J. Heron Foster, J. McMillin and J. B. Kennedy on 19 April 1843, with Foster as editor.[1][2] Both daily and weekly editions were published.[3]
R. White Middleton bought the young paper in mid-1844 and edited it for less than a year until "sickness, poverty and oppression" drove him to quit.[4][5] Foster retook the editorship for a short time before moving on and founding the Pittsburgh Dispatch.[6]
