Yakima County Newspapers
North Yakima*
Washington
Farmer, established on September 20, 1884, by the
Capital Publishing Company, Legh R. Freeman, managing editor.
Yakima Democrat issued on October 3, 1888. Edwin
N. Fuller says: "Memorandum on the margin of the first number,
"Stopped by Mr. Reed January, '89'." (Washington Press
Association Proceedings, 1887-1890, page 86.)
Yakima Herald,
established in 1889 by Messrs. Reed & Co., as a seven-column
folio and Democratic in sentiment. (Charles Prosch in Washington
Press Association Proceedings, 1887-1890, page 42.) In 1890, it
was listed by Lord & Thomas as an independent weekly. (Newspaper
Directory.)
Yakima Republic,
before the founding of North Yakima, this paper was established
as the Yakima Record on September 6, 1879, by Richard T. Chadd.
It was the first paper published in Yakima County. In May, 1883,
Mr. Chadd sold the paper to Charles M. Holton, the new firm
being known as C. M. Holton & Son. "It is a Republican journal
of the stalwart kind." (Charles Prosch in Washington Press
Association Proceedings, 1887-1890, page 42.) No files of the
paper have been reported.
Yakima Signal,
founded on January 6, 1883, by Mr. J. M. and Mrs. P. D. Adams.
In 1885, this paper joined in the removal from Yakima (now Union
Gap) to North Yakima (now Yakima) and three years later, 1888,
the paper suspended. (Edward N. Fuller, Washington Press
Association Proceedings, 1887-1890, page 81.) No files of the
paper have been reported.
Footnotes:
* By an act of the State Legislature,
approved January 30, 1917 and to go into effect on January 1,
1918, this city was permitted to drop the word "South" from the
name it had worn from the winter of 1884-1885. During those
years an older town, four miles distant had been known as
Yakima. By act of the same recent Legislature, that name was
changed to Union Gap. The territorial papers are here listed
under North Yakima, the Territorial named of the town.
The place of publication was Yakima,
the name of which place was changed to Union Gap by act of the
State Legislature, approved March 10, 1917. In the winter of
1884-1885 most of the buildings and citizens were moved from
Yakima four miles to North Yakima and the Washington Farmer went
with them. In 1889, the paper was again moved to Gibraltar
(since changed to Dewey), Skagit County. (Charles Prosch,
Washington Press Association Proceeding, 1887-1890, page 42.)
Washington AHGP |
County Newspapers

Source: Washington Historical Quarterly,
Volume 13-14, 1923
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