Aliases
Disambiguation
The Atlanta Journal (1883–2001) and Atlanta Journal-Constitution (2001–present) are the same publication under different names. Not to be confused with other Atlanta papers or the earlier Atlanta Daily Opinion.
Stats
Organization
Enrichment
- The Atlanta Journal-Constitution - WikipediaWikipedia▎ high· 2026-05-14
- Founded 1883
- Cox Enterprises ownership since 1939
- Merged 1982/2001
- Digital-only after Dec 31 2025
- Multiple Pulitzer Prizes
- Atlanta Journal-Constitution - New Georgia EncyclopediaNew Georgia Encyclopedia▎ high· 2026-05-14
- Founded Feb 24 1883 by E.F. Hoge
- Hoke Smith acquired 1887
- James M. Cox acquired 1939
- Progressive champion for road infrastructure
- 200+ employees by 1900
ATLANTA JOURNAL
Description (EN)
Stub generated by entity dedup. Will be enriched in Phase 6.
Descrição (PT-BR)
Stub gerado pela deduplicação de entidades. Será enriquecido na Fase 6.
<!-- enrichment:start -->Enrichment (EN)
Disambiguation: The Atlanta Journal (1883–2001) and Atlanta Journal-Constitution (2001–present) are the same publication under different names. Not to be confused with other Atlanta papers or the earlier Atlanta Daily Opinion.
The Atlanta Journal was founded on February 24, 1883, by E. F. Hoge as an afternoon newspaper in Atlanta, Georgia. The publication gained prominence through aggressive reporting and innovation, including introducing early sports coverage (1901) and pioneering programming such as WSB radio (1922). In 1939, media magnate James M. Cox acquired the Journal; it operated alongside the rival Atlanta Constitution until a full newsroom merger in 1982 and final publication merger in 2001, when it became The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Under Cox Enterprises ownership, the publication has won multiple Pulitzer Prizes and served as a major source of journalism in the American South. As of December 31, 2025, the publication ceased all print operations and transitioned to a digital-only format. No specific involvement in UFO/UAP disclosure or investigation has been identified in available sources.
Enriquecimento (PT-BR)
Desambiguação: The Atlanta Journal (1883–2001) and Atlanta Journal-Constitution (2001–present) are the same publication under different names. Not to be confused with other Atlanta papers or the earlier Atlanta Daily Opinion.
O Atlanta Journal foi fundado em 24 de fevereiro de 1883 por E. F. Hoge como um jornal vespertino em Atlanta, Geórgia. A publicação ganhou proeminência através de reportagem agressiva e inovação, incluindo cobertura esportiva pioneira (1901) e programação diferenciada, como a estação de rádio WSB (1922). Em 1939, o magnata da mídia James M. Cox adquiriu o Journal; operou junto ao rival Atlanta Constitution até uma fusão completa de redações em 1982 e fusão final de publicações em 2001, quando se tornou The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Sob a propriedade da Cox Enterprises, a publicação conquistou múltiplos prêmios Pulitzer e serviu como uma importante fonte de jornalismo no Sul americano. A partir de 31 de dezembro de 2025, a publicação cessou todas as operações impressas e fez a transição para um formato exclusivamente digital. Nenhum envolvimento específico em divulgação ou investigação de OVNIs/FAN foi identificado nas fontes disponíveis.
External Sources
- The Atlanta Journal-Constitution - Wikipedia · Wikipedia · reliability:
high— Founded 1883; Cox Enterprises ownership since 1939; Merged 1982/2001; Digital-only after Dec 31 2025; Multiple Pulitzer Prizes - Atlanta Journal-Constitution - New Georgia Encyclopedia · New Georgia Encyclopedia · reliability:
high— Founded Feb 24 1883 by E.F. Hoge; Hoke Smith acquired 1887; James M. Cox acquired 1939; Progressive champion for road infrastructure; 200+ employees by 1900