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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE September 5, 2008
Contact: Molly Dannenmaier, 409-765-7834
Director of Marketing and Public Relations
molly.dannenmaier@galvestonhistory.org
Historian Michael V. Hazel to Present Lecture September 26 on Early Days of Galveston Daily News and Dallas Morning News
Part of Galveston Historical Foundation’s Menard Lecture Series
Galveston Historical Foundation will host another in its popular series of Menard Lectures on Friday, September 26 at 5:30 at Galveston’s oldest residential dwelling, the Michel B. Menard House. The lecture is entitled “First Links in a Chain: The Galveston Daily News and The Dallas Morning News.” It will focus on the early relationship between these two important newspapers, exploring how the Galveston paper founded the Dallas newspaper, inaugurating one of the first "chain" newspapers, and eventually how the Dallas paper became dominant and sold the Daily News in the 1920s.

The speaker, historian Michael V. Hazel, has concentrated on local Dallas history for the past 25 years. In 1992 he began organizing the historical archives for the Belo Corporation. The author of seven books on Dallas history, Dr. Hazel has taught history at SMU and museum studies at the University of North Texas. He recently received the Award for Excellence in Creative Arts from the Dallas Historical Society.
This lecture is one of a two-part fall lecture package focusing on the Belo Corporation’s history and its connection to Galveston. On November 7, former Belo Corporation archivist Judith Garrett Segura will give a lecture entitled “Belo from Newspapers to New Media.”
Segura is the author of a new book, “Belo from Newspapers to New Media,” published by the University of Texas Press, September 2008. It is available for sale online at www.utexas.edu/utpress/books/segbel.html. A full description of that lecture can be found at www.galvestonhistory.org.
The venue for these lectures is the Michel B. Menard House, Galveston’s oldest surviving residential dwelling, recognized by the National Trust for Historic Preservation as one of the finest examples of historic preservation in the United States. The Menard House is furnished with museum-quality 19th-century Empire pieces and is located at 1605 33rd Street in Galveston. The event begins at 5:30 with light refreshments. The lecture begins promptly at 6 p.m.
The ticket price for each Menard Lecture is $10 for GHF members, $12 for non-members. Seating is limited; reservations are required. Tickets can be purchased at Ashton Villa, 2328 Broadway; Custom House, 502 20th Street; or by calling GHF at (409) 765-7834.
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