Page History: Walla Walla Evening Statesman
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Page Revision: 2011/01/11 11:50
Title
- Ayer Annual1
- Publish day: Evenings, except Sunday; There is also a weekly edition published Saturday
- Content: Democratic
- Established: 1861 (weekly); 1880 (daily)
- Pages: 8
- Size: 15x22 in.
- Editor: none listed
- Publisher: Statesman Publishing Co.
- Ayer Annual2
- Publish day: Evenings, except Sunday; There is also a weekly edition published Saturday
- Content: Independent
- Established: 1858 (weekly); 1880 (daily)
- Pages: 8
- Size: 17x24 in
- Editor: Seth Maxwell
- Publisher: E. E. Fall
- Frequency: daily
- Coverage
- Region: Southeast
- County: Walla Walla
- Unique ids
- SN: sn88085421
- OCLC: ocm17397533
Digitization plan
2008-2010 grant
- Text not converted this grant cycle
- Digitized 1903-1910 (22 reels)
TopHistory
Essay Draft
The
Evening Statesman was founded in 1861 as an independent weekly newspaper. The first issue was published on November 29, 1861. In 1878, the Statesman became the Inland Empire’s first daily newspaper, although daily editions were not published continuously until 1880. Other titles of the Statesman were:
Washington Statesman,
Walla Walla Statesman,
The statesman, and finally, the
Evening statesman from 1903-1910.
The original owners of the
Statesman were R.B. Smith, N. Northrop, and R.R. Rees. Smith retired in January 1862, and Northrop died in 1863, leaving R.R. Rees and his brother, S.G. Rees as owners. William H. Newell became proprietor in 1865, and the paper became more Democratic, ardently supporting President Andrew Johnson. In 1878, Newell tried to make the Statesman a daily, but it was soon discontinued after Newell died later that year. In 1880, daily editions were tried again, with more success. After Newell’s death, his son-in-law, Frank J. Parker took over the paper until 1900, when it transferred to the Statesman Publishing Co., led by Dr. E.E. Fall. In 1907, the
Statesman was consolidated with the
Walla Walla Union [LCCN: sn 88085406], with the
Union as a morning paper and the
Statesman remaining an evening paper. In 1910, the
Evening Statesman was discontinued.
Essay Notes
- 1878-12-14 - editor Wm. H. Newell dies at 56 and his wife takes over the paper. See Walla Walla Statesman
- Evening statesman uses content from Scripps-McRae Press Service
Research
- N.W. Ayer & Son's American newspaper annual -- 1903 -- 888
- N.W. Ayer & Son's American newspaper annual -- 1909 -- 921
- NDNP Candidate Title List (Appendix A1.2)
- Chronicling America record (LOC) - Evening Statesman
- WorldCat record - Evening statesman
- WSL record - Evening Statesman
- UW record - Evening Statesman
TopReel
- Filmed by: WSL
- Positives held by: WSL
- Negatives held by: Proquest
Notes
- Film eval notes 1903-02-25 1903-05-26: The first 88 images or so are for another title and should be skipped. Start scanning at 1903-02-25.
- Film eval notes 1903-05-26 1903-09-12: The first issue on this reel 1903-05-26 is recorded in the metadata as a duplicate of the same issue that appears on the previous reel.
- Film eval notes 1903-09-12 1903-12-31: The first issue on this reel 1903-09-12 is recorded in the metadata as a duplicate of the same issue that appears on the previous reel.
TopEvaluation
See
The Evening statesman (Walla Walla) eval spreadsheets (Google)Totals
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