Tuckahoe Record

Tuckahoe Record logo
Title:
Tuckahoe Record (17 December 1925 - 12 November 1931)
Also published as:
The Daily Record (Oct 1- Dec 31, 1929)
Available online:
Dec. 17, 1925-Dec. 8, 1927;
Jan. 3, 1929-Sept. 26, 1929;
Jun. 12, 1930-Nov. 12, 1931
(220 issues)
Region:
Westchester
Copyright Status:
Public Domain
See Also:
See Also:
Contributing Organization:
Eastchester Town Hall
LCCN:
sn88075835

The Tuckahoe Record began publication in Tuckahoe, NY in 1925 as “Republican in principal: independent in policy.” The weekly focused on news of the Waverly and Tuckahoe sections of Eastchester and also covered events in Bronxville. It featured news of the marble quarries, industries such as Hodgman Rubber, the Tuckahoe and Eastchester School Districts, sporting events such as golf tournaments and high school athletics, Eastchester Town and Tuckahoe Village government, and Irish, Italian and African-American immigrants.

The year 1925 also saw a group of Bronxville and Tuckahoe businessmen establish a competing weekly newspaper, The Bronxville Press, which within a few years would become entwined with The Tuckahoe Record. The Bronxville Press was touted as an “independent, non-political newspaper” serving Bronxville, the town of Eastchester and adjoining areas. Later in 1925 The Bronxville Press purchased another competitor, The Eastchester Citizen-Bulletin, and in April 1927 the two papers were merged to form an ambitious new semi-weekly, The Press of Bronxville, Crestwood, Tuckahoe, Fleetwood, Scarsdale. This experiment was not well received, and after only five months the paper reverted to two separate weeklies: The Bronxville Press (to cover Bronxville and Fleetwood) and The Tuckahoe Press (“in which the Eastchester Citizen-Bulletin continued”).

In 1928 the Tuckahoe Record purchased The Tuckahoe Press and the following year the Tuckahoe Record absorbed it and the already subsumed Eastchester Citizen-Bulletin. On Oct. 1, 1929, days after the 1929 Stock Market Crash, all three titles were replaced by The Daily Record, an ill-timed daily newspaper that added some national news and features to its local coverage. It lasted only three months, ceasing publication at the end of 1929, and the Tuckahoe Record resumed weekly publication.

Sun
Mon
Tue
Wed
Thu
Fri
Sat
1 Sunday, 1 September 1929
2 Monday, 2 September 1929
3 Tuesday, 3 September 1929
4 Wednesday, 4 September 1929
5 Thursday, 5 September 1929
1 issue
6 Friday, 6 September 1929
7 Saturday, 7 September 1929
8 Sunday, 8 September 1929
9 Monday, 9 September 1929
10 Tuesday, 10 September 1929
11 Wednesday, 11 September 1929
12 Thursday, 12 September 1929
1 issue
13 Friday, 13 September 1929
14 Saturday, 14 September 1929
15 Sunday, 15 September 1929
16 Monday, 16 September 1929
17 Tuesday, 17 September 1929
18 Wednesday, 18 September 1929
19 Thursday, 19 September 1929
1 issue
20 Friday, 20 September 1929
21 Saturday, 21 September 1929
22 Sunday, 22 September 1929
23 Monday, 23 September 1929
24 Tuesday, 24 September 1929
25 Wednesday, 25 September 1929
26 Thursday, 26 September 1929
1 issue
27 Friday, 27 September 1929
28 Saturday, 28 September 1929
29 Sunday, 29 September 1929
30 Monday, 30 September 1929