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About The Farmville herald. (Farmville, Va.) 1957-current
Farmville, Va. (1957-current)
- Title:
- The Farmville herald. : (Farmville, Va.) 1957-current
- Place of publication:
- Farmville, Va.
- Geographic coverage:
- Publisher:
- J.B. Wall
- Dates of publication:
- 1957-current
- Description:
-
- Vol. 66, no. 65 (May 7, 1957)-
- Frequency:
- Semiweekly Apr. 18, 1997-
- Language:
-
-
- English
-
- Subjects:
-
- Farmville (Va.)--Newspapers.
- Virginia--Farmville.--fast--(OCoLC)fst01226898
- Notes:
-
- Also available online.
- Between Oct. 1979 and Apr. 1997, t.v. guide issue published as separate issue.
- In 1972 and 1973 commemorative first pages of earlier titles (c.1890-1930s)--published with regular issue.
- Microfilm available from Bell and Howell.
- LCCN:
- sn 98068396
- OCLC:
- 39696600
- Preceding Titles:
- Related Links:
- Holdings:
- View complete holdings information
- View
- First Issue Last Issue
The Farmville herald. May 7, 1957 , Image 1
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The Farmville Herald and The Farmville Herald and Farmer-Leader
Located in Prince Edward County on the Appomattox River, 68 miles west of Petersburg, Farmville was the fourth largest tobacco market in Virginia by 1836. During the Civil War, tobacco warehouses were converted into military hospitals and production sites for war-related materials, but the town remained relatively unscathed during the conflict. By the 1870s, Farmville had regained much of its pre-war prosperity, thanks in large part to the tobacco industry and to an influx of both white- and black-owned businesses.
Originally published on the first floor of the old Opera House, the Farmville Herald was established on November 14, 1890 "in conjunction with the Farmville Coal and Iron Company" and under the leadership of Colonel R. B. Berkeley. The weekly served Buckingham, Cumberland, and Prince Edward counties and by 1900 had reached a circulation of 750--within a town of 2,404.
James L. Hart purchased the Herald in 1893. Born in Farmville in 1863, Hart published the Herald for 30 years until his death in 1921. Described as "a born newspaper writer," Hart also served as secretary of the Virginia Press Association from 1889 to 1915. He took an active interest in community affairs and served as postmaster during Woodrow Wilson's administration. A lengthy remembrance printed in the Herald stated, "By his energy and ability, [Hart] made [the Farmville Herald] one of the leading weekly papers of Southside Virginia, and of the state; and under his control, it has always stood for the progress and welfare of his community, his state, and the country at large."
Front-page content often included vivid stories and intensely emotional poems related to the Civil War--works such "A Dark Secret: The Story of a Tragic Life Drama," or "A Southern War Story, How an Aged Judge Saved His Scanty Supply of Meat from the Soldiers." The newspaper's second page included editorial comment and "Local Briefs," with dispatches from such papers as the Lynchburg Daily Advance, the Petersburg Index-Appeal, the Staunton Spectator, the Virginia Citizen, the Spirit of the Valley, and the Richmond Dispatch. Also published were "Washington Letters," primarily notes and opinions on national politics. Columns such as "News of Old Virginia," "Buckingham Notes," and "Briefs and Personals" were popular, too. There were also frequent notes on Farmville's State Female Normal School (later Longwood College) and nearby Hampden-Sydney College. Fourth-page space was regularly given to advertisements and farm-related topics such as "Draft Horse Points," "Erecting a Barn," and "Facts for Farmers." For the most part, the news was local and highly relevant to its rural readers.
Although it called itself "Independent," the Farmville Herald routinely endorsed Democratic candidates for public office. The Richmond Dispatch once described the Herald as "one of the brightest, newsiest, and brainiest of our State exchanges, and…Democratic to the Hart's core." In 1934, the Farmville Herald merged with the Farmer-Leader to form the Farmville Herald and Farmer-Leader, published until 1957 when it became, once again, the Farmville Herald.
Editor J. Barrye Wall was at the helm of the Herald when the Supreme Court gave its ruling on Brown v. the Board of Education, the landmark 1954 decision declaring segregation unconstitutional. Wall immediately led the charge against integration with a barrage of editorials warning of its potentially disastrous effects. He wrote, "This newspaper continues its firm belief in the principles of segregation in the public schools of Southside Virginia. … We believe it is in the best interest of all our people." Wall's segregationist writings undoubtedly contributed to the closing of Prince Edward public schools from 1959-1964. Throughout the five years the county's schools were closed, the Herald regularly encouraged its readers to "stand steady" against integration, regardless the cost. The shutdowns left the legacy of the "Lost Generation," a name given to the children denied a public education at that time, many of whom never returned to finish their schooling.
Provided by: Library of Virginia; Richmond, VA