Minden Press-Herald

Minden Press-Herald
The Minden Press-Herald building on Gleason Street in downtown Minden, Louisiana, is housed in a former grocery store.

The Minden Press-Herald is a Monday-Friday daily newspaper published in Minden, the seat of Webster Parish in northwestern Louisiana, by Specht Newspapers, Inc. It serves the Minden and south Webster Parish circulation area with mostly local news.

Contents

The original Minden Herald

The earliest use of the name Minden Herald dates to 1895, when publisher/printer/editor William Jasper Blackburn, an Arkansas native, arrived in Minden, then a part of Claiborne Parish. He was a Democrat, a supporter of the Union, and opposed slavery. He was mayor of Minden too for a single one-year term from May 1855 – May 1856. Blackburn’s Minden Herald was published for about six years. It was not the first newspaper in Minden. That distinction went to the former Minden Iris, which emerged in the founding of neighboring Bienville Parish in 1848.[1]

The Minden political climate shifted to favor the Know Nothing Party, which repudiated "non-native" ideas, and Blackburn moved to Homer to establish his Homer Iliad. During the American Civil War, Blackburn published in opposition to the Confederate States of America. Tried in Confederate District Court in Shreveport, Blackburn survived conviction by a single vote on charges of having produced counterfeit Confederate currency. Had the verdict been unanimous, he would have been hanged.[1] Blackburn remained in Homer during Reconstruction and served in the United States House of Representatives as a Republican from 1868-1869. Thereafter, he was a member of the Louisiana State Senate until he was defeated in 1878 by the emerging Redeemer Democratic government. Blackburn relocated to Little Rock, where he published the Arkansas Republican.[2]

Harper Brothers and Lowe

The name Minden Herald was revived briefly during Reconstruction, but few, if any, issues of the newspaper are extant. A quotation from the Shreveport Times, which began publication in 1871, refers in 1872 to the existence of the Minden Herald. A later Minden Herald appeared in 1924 under the direction of printer Clifton Harper (1902–1982), explained John Agan, Minden’s official city historian. Harper attended Minden High School and worked at another publication called the Webster Signal, published by Thomas Wafer Fuller, a member of the Louisiana State Senate from 1896 to 1900 and a Webster Parish school superintendent from 1908 to 1920. After Fuller's death in 1920, his widow, the former Alma Bright, continued publishing for several years thereafter The Signal. Clifton Harper studied printing under the direction of his brother, William Harper. He worked for a competitor of the Webster Signal, the new Minden Tribune, edited for a time by J. Frank Colbert, a member of the Louisiana House of Representatives from 1920–1925 and the mayor of Minden from 1944-1946.[3]

Clifton Harper left Minden in 1924 to attend Baylor University in Waco, Texas. He and his wife, the former Myrtle Buckley (1904–1990), both completed their degrees in business administration and journalism and returned to Minden, where Clifton’s brothers, William Harper (1894–1971) and Clinton Harper (1904–1978), along with Prentiss Lowe, began their Webster Sentinel in October 1928. Clifton Harper joined the paper as editor.[1]

On November 14, 1929, the name Minden Herald was restored; therefore, the Harper brothers and Prentiss Lowe were the fathers of the "Herald" half of the Minden Press-Herald. At the time, the Webster Sentinel explained that the resumption of the name Minden Herald was intended to clear up confusion over another journal, the Webster Signal-Tribune, which had begun in 1926, when the Webster Signal merged with the Minden Tribune.[1]

The Spivas’ Webster Printing Company

Under Harper’s leadership, the weekly Minden Herald was published on Friday. His editorials called for economic growth and modernization. Harper Brothers and Lowe acquired ownership of the other local paper, the Signal-Tribune, published on Tuesday. In February 1932, the Minden Herald purchased the Webster News and changed its name to the Minden Herald and Webster News published as a single newspaper. This arrangement continued until April 1937, when the Harper Brothers left the local newspaper market, and the papers were sold to the Webster Printing Company, owned by Hubert Spiva and Lilla Stewart Spiva. Hubert Spiva was a veteran newspaperman and his wife, Lilla, daughter of Daniel W. Stewart of Minden, had experience in journalism. The new company ceased publication of the Signal-Tribune and instead issued the Webster News as a separate paper on Tuesday.[1]

Through the 1940s, Webster Printing and the Spivas had sole control of the Minden newspaper market. After Hubert Spiva's death, his widow, Lilla, continued to run the corporation. In 1949, she was the only woman representative from Louisiana at the annual meeting of the National Editorial Association in Chicago, Illinois.[4]

The Spivas had a son, Tam Spiva, a script writer for such television programs as The Brady Bunch on ABC.

In 1949, Clifton Harper returned to the local newspaper scene with his new Minden Press. He engaged in an aggressive marketing campaign and moved his publication to Thursday to have a day’s advantage on the Minden Herald. For a time, Minden was again served by three local papers: the Minden News on Monday, the Minden Press on Thursday, and the Minden Herald on Friday.[1]

Emergence of the Press-Herald

In January 1953, the Webster News was renamed the Webster Review and then, in October 1954, the Webster Review and the Minden Herald were consolidated into a single publication issued on Thursday in competition with the Minden Press on Monday. This change came at the same time that Major (not a military title) dePingre (1928–2007), a Leesville native and a Louisiana State University graduate, was hired as editor of the latest Minden Herald. In December 1955, Webster Newspapers Corporation was formed under the direction of Tom Colten (1922–2004), a Detroit native, who arrived in Minden from Bogalusa, where he had been business manager of the Bogalusa Daily News. Webster Newspapers purchased the Minden Press from Harper and the Minden Herald from Mrs. Spiva and combined the newspapers under the long-anticipated Minden Press-Herald name. DePingre was named editor of both the Minden Press (Monday) and the Minden Herald (Thursday). Colten served as publisher of both papers beginning with the January 1956 issues.[1]

Specht Newspapers, Inc.

In 1965, Colten sold the newspapers to Richard Hill. Colten became the executive director of the Minden Chamber of Commerce and was elected the next year as mayor, having served two consecutive four-year terms. While Colten had hoped to establish a daily newspaper, that change did not occur until July 18, 1966, when the current Minden Press-Herald made its debut. The Press-Herald was sold to Specht Newspapers, Inc., which publishes the newspaper at 203 Gleason Street in Minden, the site of a former grocery store, along with the Bossier Press-Tribune in Bossier City.[1] Chipley Newspapers of Pensacola, Florida, is a subsidiary of Spect Newspapers.[5]

Specht Newspapers was headed by David Arthur Specht, Sr. (October 29, 1945–April 14, 2011), a native of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Specht, Sr., a son of the late Arthur and Mary Specht, moved to Minden in 1968 and became the publisher and eventually owner of the Press-Herald. Specht thereafter spent several years publishing newspapers in Alabama, Kentucky, and Florida, before he founded Specht Newspapers, Inc., in 1983.[6]

Specht also owned Webster Printing Company in Minden. He died at the age of sixty-five after a lengthy illness. Specht was survived by his wife, the former Cheryl Milford of Minden; a son, newspaper officer David Specht, Jr., of Minden, and his wife, Tina Specht; two grandsons, Zachary and Joshua Specht; sister, Melanie Montgomery of Tallahassee, Florida, and brother, William Specht of Shreveport.[6]

Divisions of the Press-Herald

The Minden Press-Herald is divided into these sections:

Local News

Community News

Opinion

Sports

Obituaries

Good News (includes religion)

Classified

The Press Herald shares the website nwlanews.com with its sister publication, the Bossier Press-Tribune.

Current and former Press-Herald staffers

  • John Agan writes "Echoes of the Past", a periodic column for the Press-Herald on local history, much of it from the 19th century. He is a professor at Bossier Parish Community College in Bossier City and the official Webster Parish historian.
  • Juanita Agan (1923–2008) wrote a periodic column "Cameos", which focuses on "older times" of "Americana".
  • Josh Beavers is the publisher and editor of the Press-Herald. A native of Claiborne Parish, he was born to Dwight Alan Beavers (1948–2008; drowning victim) and the former Sheila McKenzie.
  • Barbara Colley, romance and mystery novelist based in the New Orleans metro area, once edited the advertising section of the Press-Herald.
  • Gene Clark (born 1935), originally from Franklin Parish, became managing editor in February 1974, having previously been at the Denham Springs News in Denham Springs in Livingston Parish. He had earlier worked at the Press-Herald sports desk.[7]
  • Wayne E. Dring (born June 22, 1940),[8] former advertising director and managing editor of the Press-Herald during the early 1970s; formerly edited the weekly Bienville Democrat in Arcadia, the seat of Bienville Parish.
  • David Kidd (born 1951), sports editor in 1973, was a champion track runner at Westlake High School in Westlake in Calcasieu Parish and at Louisiana Tech University[9]
  • Charles E. Maple (1932-2006), news editor of weekly Minden Press and Minden Herald, 1960-1966, later chamber of commerce executive director
  • Marilyn Miller, a former Press-Herald executive director, is an industry public relations representative and the author of Sons of Darkness, Sons of Light: A True Crime Story based on a crime in Webster Parish which occurred on Christmas 1916.[10]
  • Nody Parker (1943–2007) was sports editor of the Press-Herald in the early 1970s and an area baseball coach. He had a second career in education in Texas.
  • Stanley R. Tiner, the executive editor of the The Sun Herald in Biloxi-Gulfport, Mississippi. Tiner, a Shreveport native and graduate of the journalism department at Louisiana Tech University, was the managing editor of the Press-Herald from September 1969 to March 1970.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Profile 2007 | Minden Press-Herald | MPH story goes back more than 150 years
  2. ^ BLACKBURN, William Jasper - Biographical Information
  3. ^ "Official Returns Given for Minden Primary Election", Minden Herald, April 14, 1944, p. 1
  4. ^ "Minden Publisher Attends National Press Convention," Minden Herald and Webster News, November 11, 1949, p. 1
  5. ^ https://intranet.freedom.com/freedom_admin/images/pdf/Pensacola%20News%20Journal_Florida.pdf
  6. ^ a b "David A. Specht, Sr.". Shreveport Times. http://www.legacy.com/obituaries/shreveporttimes/obituary.aspx?n=david-specht&pid=150316655. Retrieved April 18, 2011. 
  7. ^ "Press-Herald" Appoints Clark Managing Editor", Minden Press-Herald, February 5, 1974, p. 1
  8. ^ Net Detective, People Search
  9. ^ "Press-Herald Names Sports Editor", Minden Press-Herald, June 12, 1973, p. 1
  10. ^ Marilyn Miller, Sons of Darkness, Sons of Light, a True Crime Story, Many, Louisiana: Sweet Dreams Publishing Company, 2000 ISBN 1-893693-09-0

Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужна курсовая?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Minden, Louisiana — Coordinates: 32°37′0″N 93°17′0″W / 32.616667°N 93.283333°W / 32.616667; 93.283333 …   Wikipedia

  • Minden High School (Minden, Louisiana) — Traditional entrance to Minden High School on Richardson Street (renovated August 2007) …   Wikipedia

  • Minden Cemetery — The Minden Cemetery Entrance to Minden Cemetery at Goodwill Street. Details Year established Before 1843 Country …   Wikipedia

  • Minden Times — Type Weekly newspaper Format Tabloid Owner Quebecor Inc. Editor Jenn Watt Founded January 30, 1963 Language English …   Wikipedia

  • Tom Colten — Infobox Officeholder name=Arthur Thomas Tom Colten caption=Tom Colten as mayor of Minden, Louisiana nationality=American office= Mayor of Minden, Louisiana, USA party=Republican Party term start=1966 term end=1974 preceded=Frank T. Norman… …   Wikipedia

  • Frank T. Norman — Infobox Officeholder name=Francis Toadvin Norman nationality=American office= Mayor of Minden, Louisiana, USA party=Democratic Party term start=1958 term end=1966 preceded=Jasper Goodwill succeeded=Tom Colten office2=Minden City Council member… …   Wikipedia

  • Charles E. Maple — Charles Edward Maple Born June 9, 1932(1932 06 09) Oklahoma City Oklahoma, USA Died November 22, 2006(2006 11 22) (aged 74) Pearsall, Frio County, Texas …   Wikipedia

  • Parey Branton — Infobox State Representative name= Parey Pershing Branton, Sr. caption= Parey Branton office= Louisiana State Representative from Webster Parish term start=1960 term end=1972 preceded=Mary Smith Gleason succeeded=R. Harmon Drew, Sr. office2=Mayor …   Wikipedia

  • Harold Montgomery — Infobox State Senator name= A. Harold Montgomery, Sr. caption= Harold Montgomery office= Louisiana State Senate District 36 (Bossier and Webster parishes) term start=1960 term end=1968 preceded=Herman Wimpy Jones succeeded=John Willard Jack… …   Wikipedia

  • R. Harmon Drew, Sr. — Infobox Officeholder name = Richard Harmon Drew, Sr. caption = office=Minden City Judge term start=1948 term end=1954 preceded=Robert Rob Watkins succeeded=Cecil Lowe office2=Minden City Judge term start2=1978 term end2=1984 preceded2=Graydon K.… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”