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  1. L'Union was the first African-American newspaper in the Southern United States. [a] The newspaper was based in New Orleans, Louisiana, and was published from 1862 to 1864. Articles in L'Union were written in the French language, with the newspaper's primary readership being free people of color in the New Orleans area, especially in the ...

  2. You are standing in front of the L’Union and the New Orleans Tribune building, the birthplace of civil rights history in the Crescent City. Here, surrounded by the howling madness of the Civil War, these two radical journals condemned slavery and fought for the rights of all of African descent.

  3. 5 sty 2011 · The New Orleans Tribune was the first African American daily newspaper in the United States. Started in 1864 by Charles Louise Roudanez the Tribune was notable in that it was bilingual.

  4. 2 paź 2024 · Vance and Walz Begin Cordially, End in Heated Clashes Over Trump, Jan. 6, and National Policy Issues. Ultimately, Walz positioned himself as a champion of middle-class families, touting healthcare and affordable housing policies.

  5. After it folded, he cofounded La Tribune de la Nouvelle-Orleans (The New Orleans Tribune) (1864-1870), the nation's first daily Black newspaper, which was also bilingual. Roudanez, who was a Creole of color , founded the paper with his older brother, Jean Baptiste Roudanez.

  6. The New Orleans Tribune / La Tribune de la Nouvelle-Orléans was a newspaper serving the African-American community of New Orleans, Louisiana. [1] It was the first Black daily newspaper in the United States. [2]

  7. For the first time, the hitherto powerless and largely acquiescent black South had to be considered as a civil, societal and free-market economic force, and no Southern community provided as rich a laboratory in the search for a new racial and economic order than the city of New Orleans.

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