List of Newspapers in Alabama - Daily Newspapers (currently Published)

Daily Newspapers (currently Published)

Larger newspapers (listed by total average paid daily circulation):

  • Birmingham News (148,827) (web site) – Birmingham
  • Press-Register (99,306) (web site) – Mobile
  • Huntsville Times (72,388) (web site) – Huntsville
  • Montgomery Advertiser (50,703) (web site) – Montgomery
  • Tuscaloosa News (34,781) (web site) – Tuscaloosa
  • Dothan Eagle (33,592) (web site) – Dothan
  • TimesDaily (31,180) (web site) – Florence
  • Cullman Times, The (27,000) (web site) – Cullman
  • Anniston Star, The (26,747) (web site) – Anniston
  • Gadsden Times (22,491) (web site) – Gadsden
  • Decatur Daily, The (22,014) (web site) – Decatur
  • Southern Star, The (14,000) – Ozark

Smaller papers (listed by location):

  • Sand Mountain Reporter (web site) – Albertville
  • Alexander City Outlook (web site) – Alexander City
  • Andalusia Star-News (web site) – Andalusia
  • News-Courier (7,473) (web site) – Athens
  • Atmore Advance (19,000) (web site) – Atmore
  • Birmingham Times (web site) – Birmingham
  • Brewton Standard (web site) – Brewton
  • Clanton Advertiser (5,000) (web site) – Clanton
  • Demopolis Times (2,400) (web site) – Demopolis
  • Enterprise Ledger (10,372) (web site) – Enterprise
  • Times-Journal (6,500) (web site) – Fort Payne
  • Daily Mountain Eagle (11,157) (web site) – Jasper
  • Valley Times-News (web site) – Lanett
  • Opelika-Auburn News (14,968) (web site) – Opelika
  • Daily Sentinel (web site) – Scottsboro
  • Selma Times-Journal (7,181) (web site) – Selma
  • Daily Home (web site) – Talladega
  • Troy Messenger (3,200) (web site) – Troy

Read more about this topic:  List Of Newspapers In Alabama

Famous quotes containing the words daily and/or newspapers:

    The daily lesson of slum life, visualised, reiterated, of low standards, vile living, obscenity, profanity, impurity, is bound to be dwarfing and debasing to the children who are in the midst of it.
    Albion Fellows Bacon (1865–1933)

    The basis of our governments being the opinion of the people, the very first object should be to keep that right; and were it left to me to decide whether we should have a government without newspapers, or newspapers without a government, I should not hesitate a moment to prefer the latter.
    Thomas Jefferson (1743–1826)