Bonners Ferry Herald

Bonners Ferry Herald (also known as Kootenai Herald) is a U.S. weekly newspaper based out of Bonners Ferry, Idaho. It is owned by the Hagadone Media Group and part of the North Idaho Hagadone News Network. The Kootenai Herald was founded in 1891. Edited and published by Stephen D. Taylor, the Herald was headquartered in the town of Kootenai on the north shore of Lake Pend Oreille for its first six months of publication. In 1892, The Herald moved north to the town of Bonners Ferry along the banks of the Kootenay River. The weekly eight-page, five-column paper was published on Saturdays and covered news from the communities of Sandpoint, Eaton, Eatonville, Fry, Bonners Ferry, and Hope.

Bonners Ferry Herald
TypeWeekly newspaper
FormatBroadsheet
Owner(s)Hagadone Media Group
PublisherClint Schroeder, President & Corporate Publisher
EditorCaroline Lobsinger
LanguageEnglish
Headquarters6811 Main Street
PO Box 539
Bonners Ferry, Idaho 83808
Websitebonnersferryherald.com

The Herald covered the development and construction of the Great Northern Railway through Idaho's panhandle, as well as the Coeur d'Alene mining wars. The paper also chronicled anti-Chinese sentiment in Idaho and the U.S., including the Chinese Exclusion Act and the forced expulsion of Chinese workers from Bonners Ferry in 1892. In the 20th century, the farming and lumber industries sustained the community. The Kootenai Herald published in Bonners Ferry until 1904, when the editor changed the newspaper's name to the Bonners Ferry Herald. The paper's original editor, Stephen D. Taylor, edited the Herald until 1911 when Bert Hall took over as editor for a short time.

In 1912 Charles W. King became the Herald's editor. King sold the Herald in the 1950s. Information courtesy of the Idaho State Historical Society. The Bonners Ferry Herald continues to publish to this day, and its target market primarily includes Boundary County.[1][2][3]

References

  1. "The The Bonners Ferry Herald". Bonners Ferry Herald. Retrieved June 28, 2022.
  2. "Library of Congress". Library of Congress. Retrieved June 28, 2022.
  3. "Idaho State Historical Society". Idaho State Historical Society. Retrieved June 28, 2022.


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