Examines early national journalism in the U.S. through the case of Joseph Dennie, who published/edited the Farmer's Weekly Museum of Walpole, New Hampshire, during the 1790s. It was short lived (1793-1799)and produced "an unusually large quantity of original and sometimes controversial content." Dennie is introduced as "a character worth dwelling on."
He did not become a public name by virtue of publishing exclusively under pseudonyms.
Agricultural Communications Documentation Center, Funk Library, University of Illinois Box: 149 Document Number: D06715
Notes:
Report of theses and other research projects. Presented by the Department of Agricultural Journalism, University of Wisconsin-Madison at the North Central Region-90 meeting, Winrock International, Arkansas, October 28-30, 1987. 10 pages.
Agricultural Communications Documentation Center, Funk Library, University of Illinois Box: 149 Document Number: D06742
Notes:
Online via ProQuest Digital Dissertations. PhD dissertation at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, Wisconsin. Publication No. AAT 9009561. Source: DAI-A 50/11, p. 3396, May 1990. 2 psges.
Agricultural Communications Documentation Center, Funk Library, University of Illinois Box: 151 Document Number: D06791
Notes:
121 pages., Unpublished manual for an introductory communications course taught by the author at Shippensburg State College, Shippensburg, Pennsylvania, and in an agricultural communications course at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.