Albany Democrat-Herald

Albany Democrat-Herald

The Albany Democrat-Herald is the daily newspaper serving Albany, Oregon, in the United States. It is owned by Lee Enterprises, which also owns the Corvallis Gazette-Times. Together, these two newspapers release a combined Sunday edition called the Mid-Valley Sunday. The Democrat-Herald reports on news and events in Albany, as well as surrounding areas such as Lebanon, Jefferson, Halsey, Tangent, Harrisburg, Brownsville, Shedd, and Sweet Home.

Local
English
Newspaper

Outlet metrics

Domain Authority
69
Ranking

Global

#441179

United States

#98606

News and Media

#3768

Traffic sources
Monthly visitors

Articles

  • 16 hours ago | democratherald.com | Dylan Jacobs

    Skip to main contentSkip to main content You are the owner of this video. You have permission to edit this video.

  • 19 hours ago | democratherald.com | Dylan Jacobs

    With the bases loaded and nobody out in the 10th inning, Trent Caraway hit a dribbler that was picked up by the catcher and ran back to home plate for the first out. A missed opportunity to win the game. As he walked back to the dugout, he and AJ Singer made eye contact, each pounding their chest with the message being “We got each other.”Singer had his teammate's back, and delivered.

  • 1 day ago | democratherald.com | Hector Amezcua

    Skip to main contentSkip to main content You have permission to edit this image. You don't have any notifications. Get up-to-the-minute news sent straight to your device. Topics News Alert Subscribe Breaking News Subscribe Secure transaction. Cancel anytime. Have an account?

  • 1 day ago | democratherald.com | Hector Amezcua

    Skip to main contentSkip to main content You have permission to edit this image. You don't have any notifications. Get up-to-the-minute news sent straight to your device. Topics News Alert Subscribe Breaking News Subscribe Secure transaction. Cancel anytime. Have an account?

  • 2 days ago | democratherald.com | Eileen Ogintz

    Let’s hear it for ambitious kids!A 12-year-old boy named Hussein was desperate to get a job on Englishman Howard Carter’s archaeological dig in Luxor, Egypt. It was 1922 and Carter was struggling. For years, he’d been searching unsuccessfully for the tomb of Pharaoh Tutankhamun, the “boy king,” who died as a teenager. His patron, George Herbert, the fifth Earl of Carnarvon, and an avid collector of Egyptian antiquities, told Carter he was cutting off his funding after the season.

Albany Democrat-Herald journalists