"An American Newspaper printed in the German Language" | |
Type | Weekly newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Broadsheet |
Publisher | Wisly-Brooks Company, Inc.[a] |
Founded | 1883[b] |
Language | German (Upper Saxon German) |
Ceased publication | 1942 |
Headquarters | 80 Hitchcock Street, Holyoke, Massachusetts 01040 United States[1] |
Circulation | 4,500 (1921)[2] |
OCLC number | 27673926 |
The Neu England Rundschau (New England Review) was a weekly German language newspaper published by The German-American Publishing Company, Wisly Lithograph Company, and subsequently the Wisly-Brooks Company, Inc. of Holyoke, Massachusetts from 1883 until 1942, the longest running German newspaper in Massachusetts.[3] A second edition of the paper was also sold in Connecticut under the masthead Connecticut Staats-Zeitung (Connecticut State Newspaper).[4] Following scrutiny by the US Department of Justice and Office of Strategic Services of the broader German American press, as well as declining circulation, the paper ceased publication in 1942 during the Second World War.[5][4]
Holyoke, June—The final issues of the New England Rundschau; a German language paper which has circulated in Western Massachusetts for the past 59 years, and the Staats-Zeitung, a similar paper circulating in Connecticut, are being published this week. They have been published by the Wisly Printing company. Victor Wisly said today that economic forces have worked adversely against the continuance of publication