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Title:
Pioche daily record. [volume] : (Pioche, Nev.) 1872-1876
Place of publication:
Pioche, Nev.
Geographic coverage:
  • Pioche, Lincoln, Nevada  |  View more titles from this: City County, State
Publisher:
Pat Holland
Dates of publication:
1872-1876
Description:
  • Vol. 5, no. 1 (Sept. 17, 1872)-v. 13, no. 49 (Nov. 12, 1876).
Frequency:
Daily (except Mon.)
Language:
  • English
Subjects:
  • Nevada--Pioche.--fast--(OCoLC)fst01237640
  • Pioche (Nev.)--Newspapers.
Notes:
  • "Democratic." Cf. Lingenfelter, R.E. Newspapers of Nev.
  • Archived issues are available in digital format from the Library of Congress Chronicling America online collection.
  • Editor: A.D. Jones, 1870.
  • Index to the Pioche Record, card file at Southern office of Nev. Hist. Soc.
  • Publishers: Taylor & Holland, 1872; Holland & Co., 1872-1873; Holland, Berry & Booth, 1873-1874; Pat Holland, 1874-1875; Record Publishing Co., 1875-1876.
LCCN:
sn 84022048
OCLC:
10267581
ISSN:
2472-1662
Preceding Titles:
Succeeding Titles:
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Pioche daily record. [volume] September 17, 1872 , Image 1

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The Ely Record, Pioche Daily Record, The Pioche Weekly Record, Lincoln County Record, Lincoln County Record, The Pioche Record and The Pioche Tri-weekly Record

In 1863, Paiutes disclosed to a Mormon missionary the location of silver in return for food and clothing in the vicinity of what later became Pioche, Nevada. Located in the Ely Mining District, the town was developed by San Francisco financier Francois Louis Alfred Pioche in 1868, who bought several mining claims and erected a smelter. In September of 1871, H.R. Pitchford started printing the city's first newspaper, the Ely Record, from a tent. The most prosperous mining camp in the new Lincoln County, Pioche became the county seat in 1871. Within two years, the paper expanded from a weekly, to a triweekly, and finally, to the Pioche Daily Record, although by 1877 after a year of recession, it had been reduced to a weekly (the Pioche Weekly Record). When a new owner took over in 1900, he announced "Unlike most papers [the Lincoln County Record (as it was called from 1900 to 1905)] does not start out with the intention of running first in the interest of the public, but will be run in the interest of the Proprietor and what he can make out of it." A prolonged recession from 1892 through 1904 saw most of the area's mines close, and Pioche was virtually abandoned. In 1907, the San Pedro, Los Angeles and Salt Lake Railroad completed a trunk line to Pioche from its freight terminus in Caliente, providing a much needed boost to local mining operations. Pioche proved remarkably resilient, surviving flash floods, fires, and the Great Depression; it became a major lead-zinc producer until those operations closed down by 1958, only to resume production again in the late 1960s. As the town and county's primary newspaper, the Record, although it changed hands, political affiliations, and titles many times, has published continuously, except for a four-month suspension 1900. It was known as the Pioche Weekly Record in 1906-1908 and the Pioche Record in 1908-25. E. L. Nores, who purchased the paper in 1920, ran the Record for almost 40 years, retiring in 1958.

When the Record's main competitor, the Las Vegas Age began publication in 1905 with a larger circulation, the county commissioners decided to award it all county printing and job work. The editor of the Record not surprisingly, was enraged and commenced a series of personal attacks on the Age and the residents of Las Vegas, likening the Age to a mushroom fungi of uncertain life, possessing a readership of "floaters, the shiftless and reckless class." The Record pounced on and mocked every printing error in the Age until the county commissioners reconsidered and rescinded their order. However, the Las Vegas Age ultimately recovered the county printing contract, and to add further insult to injury the county transferred it funds to the First State Bank of Las Vegas, Pioche no longer having a bank. The sectionalism dividing Lincoln County, fueled by Las Vegas’ growing political and business clout, made a division inevitable. When Pioche had recovered sufficiently to support its own bank in 1906, the deposit of county funds and the office of County Treasurer became the focal point for the debate. The Record maintained its hostility toward Las Vegas, seeking to keep the county’s government and treasury in Pioche. And when the state legislature finally passed the bill creating Clark County in July 1909 (most voters and politicians supported county division for simple logistical and fiscal reasons), the Record kept up its volleys, promoting Searchlight as the new seat of Clark County over its old nemesis Las Vegas.

With the county split a fait accompli, Lincoln County and its paper looked to its own interests again. With the resurgence of Pioche and the emergence of Caliente as an important rail terminus on the Salt Lake Line, the Record settled into its long life as the county newspaper, which continues to this day.

Provided by: University of Nevada Las Vegas University Libraries