Type | Weekly newspaper |
---|---|
Owner(s) | Atlantic Corporation |
Founder(s) | W. Horace Carter |
Editor | Deuce Niven |
Founded | 1946 |
Headquarters | 102 Avon Street, Tabor City, NC |
Circulation | 1,200 |
ISSN | 2156-2334 |
Website | tabor-loris |
The Tabor-Loris Tribune (formerly The Tabor City Tribune) is a weekly[1] newspaper serving Tabor City, North Carolina and Loris, South Carolina in the southeastern United States. It was founded in 1946 by W. Horace Carter. In 1953 two journalists for the paper won a Pulitzer Prize for Public Service after a series of articles on the Ku Klux Klan that led to an FBI investigation, resulting in 254 convictions of Klansmen. The paper was renamed the Tabor-Loris Tribune in 2010 and has been cited by other organizations for its local news coverage.