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Title:
The Salt Lake herald. [volume] : (Salt Lake City [Utah]) 1870-1909
Alternative Titles:
  • Salt Lake daily herald
  • Sunday herald
Place of publication:
Salt Lake City [Utah]
Geographic coverage:
  • Salt Lake City, Salt Lake, Utah  |  View more titles from this: City County, State
Publisher:
[W.C. Dunbar & E.L. Sloan]
Dates of publication:
1870-1909
Description:
  • Vol. 1, no. 1 (June 5, 1870)-[v. 156, no. 69] (Aug. 13, 1909).
Frequency:
Daily Oct. 23, 1893-1909
Language:
  • English
Subjects:
  • Salt Lake City (Utah)--Newspapers.
  • Salt Lake County (Utah)--Newspapers.
  • Utah--Salt Lake City.--fast--(OCoLC)fst01205314
  • Utah--Salt Lake County.--fast--(OCoLC)fst01207106
Notes:
  • Archived issues are available in digital format as part of the Library of Congress Chronicling America online collection.
  • Published as: Salt Lake daily herald, Aug. 13, 1870-Mar. 2, 1889.
  • Published on Sunday as: Sunday herald, Mar. 3, 1889-Apr. 21, 1895.
  • Semiweekly eds.: Salt Lake semi-weekly herald, 1870-1889; Semi-weekly herald (Salt Lake City, Utah), 1889-1895; and Salt Lake herald (Salt Lake City, Utah : Semiweekly), 1895-1909.
  • Weekly eds.: Salt Lake weekly herald, 1880-188u; Salt Lake herald (Salt Lake City, Utah : Weekly), 1895-1896.
LCCN:
sn 85058130
OCLC:
11987624
ISSN:
1941-3033
Succeeding Titles:
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Holdings:
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The Salt Lake herald. [volume] January 1, 1880 , Image 1

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Salt Lake Herald and Salt Lake Herald-Republican

On Sunday, June 5, 1870, publishers William C. Dunbar and Edward L. Sloan, elders in the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS), released the first issue of the Salt Lake Herald. The men promoted their newspaper as independent and neutral. The newspaper was sympathetic to but separate from the Mormon Church, while providing advertising opportunities for the growing numbers of non-Mormon merchants in the city. Their new paper, however, consistently reflected the views of the Deseret News, the official organ of the Church. Dunbar and Sloan were veteran newspapermen, having edited and managed the short-lived Salt Lake City Daily Telegraph. On September 1, 1870, John T. Caine bought an interest in the Herald. Caine, who later was a six-term delegate to the U.S. House of Representatives, became the paper’s managing editor. Dunbar assumed the role as business manager, while Sloan served as general editor.

Sloan’s editorials reflected the Mormon values of the day, for he thought it important to explain his faith’s beliefs to the reading public. “When the people of Utah, their faith and institutions are aspersed, maligned and unjustly attacked,” he wrote, “we shall esteem it our solemn duty to present the truth in reply, when the source is worthy a rejoinder.” Sloan had personal reasons for providing such rejoinders, for he was a devout convert to Mormonism and, with three wives of his own, a confirmed polygamist.

The four-page morning daily was in many respects typical of western newspapers of the day. There were articles on agriculture, mining, religious and domestic interests as well as entertainment news. Articles on crime, vice, and natural disasters also appeared. Politically, the Salt Lake Herald was Democratic. Because it gave considerable space to controversial religious topics, however, editors of secular papers sometimes mocked the Herald as a mere proponent of the LDS Church. The Salt Lake Tribune’s pet name for the Herald, for example, was the “Mormon Herald,” while the daily Salt Lake Democrat called it the “Church Echo.” Sloan aggressively responded to such slurs with strong counter editorials, a strategy not available to the publishers of the Deseret News, which endeavored to avoid any controversy that could harm the Church.

When forty-four-year-old Sloan died in August 1874, a succession of editors followed. Charles W. Penrose, who spent most of his journalistic life with the Deseret News, was Herald editor from 1892 to 1899. Horace G. Whitney got his start with the Herald as city editor and manager, and it was the only time the newspaper made a profit according to Heber J. Grant, former Herald president. Whitney became music and drama critic, then business manager, for the Deseret News, where he won wide acclaim.

Senator William A. Clark, a Democrat from Montana, bought the paper in 1898, tripling revenues over the next 11 years. In 1909, however, prominent Utah Republicans assumed control, dramatically changing the paper’s political focus. The Salt Lake Herald-Republican suspended publication in July 1920, unable to compete with other papers for scarce advertising revenues.

Provided by: University of Utah, Marriott Library