The Journal Review is a newspaper based in Crawfordsville, Indiana, USA with a circulation of 6,000. It is a daily except Sunday paper and reports national news and news for the surrounding Montgomery County area in print and online. The paper was founded in 1929 as an independent daily from the merger of the Journal and the Review. This small town newspaper has chronicled multiple notable events.
In 1879 The Crawfordsville Journal named its only nineteenth century female associate editor, Mary Hannah Krout. She was associate editor for 3 years.
The Crawfordsville Weekly Journal published in 1890 an obituary for Fisher Dougherty, an Abolitionist whose home was a station on the Underground Railroad in Crawfordsville.
In 1891 The Crawfordsville Journal reported on the phenomenon known as the Crawfordsville Monster
In 1910 The Crawfordsville Daily Journal reported on Theodore Roosevelt stopping to campaign in Crawfordsville.
In 1918 The Crawfordsville Daily Journal reported on a city-wide parade ex-president William H. Taft lead to officially open a local Bank.
Crawfordsville Journal History
Crawfordsville Review History
Daily Argus History
New Review History