Showing posts with label Cherry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cherry. Show all posts

Saturday, January 6, 2024

NEWSPAPERS OF SANPETE COUNTY ~~~ Eleanor P. Madsen Ephraim, Utah~~~ Saga of the Sanpitch Volume 12

 Professional Division First Place Historical Essay 



Eleanor Peterson Kjar Madsen







“When the last editorial is written And the ink is smoothly dried;

 When the papers have been folded And addressed and wrapped and tied; 

When these two who stood together, Though days were dull or bright,

 Will have closed the office door at last For the long, eternal night; 

May the thoughts and words and phrases Of the things they dared to say

 Be their unquestioned ‘press card’ In that land of endless day.” 

  This poem might well be a eulogy to all the editors of early Sanpete newspapers. We picture two toiling together with laborious hand methods, the only available tools in those early days before the turn of the century, when every letter was set separately, all the inking done by hand, and the press operated by hand or foot power. 

The old print shops are now forgotten as newer and faster methods have replaced the archaic ones. 

Even the Linotype is now becoming obsolete as more modern, electric machinery performs many tasks with minimum effort for the editor and his staff. Survey after survey has proven that no other medium is so thoroughly read or listened to as the hometown paper.

 Indeed, since April 24, 1885, when the Home Sentinel, the first newspaper published in Manti by James T. Jakeman,  residents have eagerly scanned local publications for personal and social items, odd bits of national and state happenings, and other copyrighted material.

 Three items taken from the first editions have a bit of humor for the reader today. “Salt Lakers are having strawberries and cream and our Manti, more rain.” 

Ft. Green Items: “The stores of this burg are paying 6 cents per dozen for eggs and 42 cents per bushel for wheat.”

 “Wide-brimmed hats are very fine as substitutes for umbrellas in the sun’ but people do say they are out of place on the front seats of the theatre. He (she) whom the coat fits let him put it on.   

Within five years two other local papers appeared. In June, 1890-, 

James T. Jakeman issued the County Register in Ephraim 4 , and in November, 1890, A.B.

 Williams and J.M. Boyden published the Mt. Pleasant Pyramid. 5 in 1891 the Ephraim plant was purchased by M. F. Murray and Company. The name was changed to the Enterprise by which it was known through the management of ten editors, Ward Stephensen, John Christiansen, Fred Jorgensen, W.E. Thorpe, Oscar Neilsen, a. E. Britsch, Nephi Christensen, Curtis Mitchelson, and Roscoe C. Cox.  

Mr. Cox began publication in 1925 and was editor and manager for 35 years, the longest period for any of the publishers.   The plant was located first in a building at 30 East Center Street. It was later moved to the basement of the Ephraim Bank building and then to 56 North Main (Roscoe Cox Home). 

The Mt. Pleasant Pyramid was purchased from Mr. Williams and Mr. Boyden by Burke McArthur in 1911. Mr. McArthur bought the first Linotype machine in Sanpete County and continued to make improvements in the plant until it was modernized throughout. About this same time, he also purchased a permanent home for the paper, the building which it now occupies. (the Mt. Pleasant Pyramid is now published in Springville).

 “The price of the local paper was combined with the needs of those concerned in Sanpete; it was printed in kind; in terms of so much hay, so many potatoes or so many cords of firewood.”  

 Rates of subscription listed in the Mt. Pleasant Pyramid Friday morning December 29, 1912, were: one year - $1.50; six months - $.75; three months - $.50. 

Editorials played an important role in the early newspapers, serving to arouse interest and to motivate the people to action on local issues. They also helped shape policies and form public opinion on vital matters, proving that the ‘pen is mightier than the sword.” 

Mt. Pleasant also had a small newspaper called The Call, which was edited and published by Christian N. Lund, Jr., in a plant on the south side of the street at about 270 West Main. Mr. Lund operated his plant first in Salina, then in Mt. Pleasant for a total of about ten years before moving to Salt Lake City, where he continued in the newspaper business with a paper entitled The Progressive Opinion, which maintained a circulation in Sanpete County for many years. 

The Home Sentinel in Manti with J. T. Jakeman, Manager, and Dan Harrington, Editor, was re-named The Sentinel in 1890 when H. H. Felt leased it. On October 13, 1893, under lease to Joel Shomaker, the paper acquired the title of the Manti Messenger, which has continued since that time.   

Other publishers in the year 1929 year were J. L. Ewing, Peter A. Poulson, M.A. Boyden, and S. Peter Peterson.   An item from the January 26, 1894, issue of the Messenger gives an insight into law enforcement in the city. “Sleigh riding has been the order of the day for some time. Some of the boys were a little too fast to be within the limits of the city ordinances last Sunday and as a result, were fined one dollar each.” 

A rival paper in Manti, the Sanpete Democrat, was first issued in June 1898, 13 and in 1902 was known as the Sanpete Free Press with L. A. Lauber, the publisher. It sold for $1.00 per year.   A local item in the January 7, 1902, edition reads as follows: “The rabbit hunt on Monday between Manti and Ephraim resulted in favor of Ephraim by a score of 186 to 155….”

 In the south end of the county, the Gunnison Valley News recorded this item: “The great event came when a man named Camp came with a press and started a local weekly, which he called the Gunnison Gazette. It was housed in a little building that stood on the north side of Center Street next to the school lot. After a short while, in 1909, he sold it to Nephi Gledhill. It was an old Washington hand press. It took the family to get the paper out. The children would go after school and set type. When the bank building was finished it was moved into that basement.” In 1919 the paper was transferred to Howard W. Cherry, who modernized its operations and changed the name to Gunnison Valley News. Subscription rates were $2.00 a year and $1.00 for six months.   Many issues of the paper that year carried items of soldiers returning from World War I. The paper for July 4, 1919, gave a detailed announcement of a patriotic program followed by foot, auto, and horse races, boxing, baseball, and dancing, saluting the soldiers with the greeting: “Welcome, Soldier boys, the town is yours. Let’er bust.”

 Before the editions of the local papers in the various communities in the County, the readers of early news were able to obtain the Daily Deseret Evening News, which began as a weekly journal in 1867. “It contained a variety of material, including speeches, lectures on scientific subjects, messages from church heads, legal notices, local news, messages from the settlements reporting their progress, etc. It was always part of the settlement. It gave the people a sense of contact with the world, a basis for comparing their lives with those of other settlers, and made them feel part of a large and important body. Everybody read the News.”  In this News, September 22, 1883, there appeared “more than two columns of the full-size newspaper, the names of all the stake presidencies and ward bishops for all the organized stakes of the church.” The Salt Lake Weekly Herald (Tribune) also found ready circulation in Sanpete County,   In listing early-day publications, the Snowdrift, with Roscoe C. Cox as its first editor, provided happenings and literary contributions from students at the College as well as being a media for training and developing of talents in the news field. The local papers were a powerful force in uniting the thoughts and actions of the people in the communities. In giving due credit to the editors and publishers of Sanpete newspapers in the 44 years from 1885 to 1929, we are aware that they put the good of the people before their personal gain. First and foremost was their love of the work, hearts that felt and understood the pulse of the community, men who dared crusade for a better world, sometimes unappreciated, sometimes misunderstood, but never ceasing their efforts for the printed page until that final copy was edited. These hands that set the type, turned the presses, and folded the papers will not be forgotten. Their words will echo and re-echo from the yellowed, brittle pages, reminding us of conflict, tragedy, joy faith and hope, of life, as it was in our Sanpete towns through these years. Sources:  

Christie Lund Coles, “To Mother and Dad”, Newspaper clipping. 

2 These Our Fathers, p. 36 

3 Snow College Film Library, Home Sentinel, 1885. 

4 W. H. Lever, History of Sanpete and Emery Counties, p. 287. 

5 These Our Fathers, p. 103. 

6 W. H. Lever, p. 287. 

7 These Our Fathers, p. 86. 

8 Armanda Cox, Personal information. 

9 These Our Fathers, p. 103. 

10 Albert Antrei, “The Salty Old Press of Sanpete County”, Enterprise, 1979. 

11 Mt. Pleasant Pyramid, December 29, 1912. 

12 Antrei. 

13 Song of a Century, p. 123. 

14 W. H. Lever. 15 Sone of a Century, p. 123. 14 W. H. Lever. 

15 Snow College Film Library, Sanpete Free Press, January 7, 1902. 14 

16 These Our Fathers, pp. 156-157.

 17 Snow College Film Library, Gunnison Valley News, May 2, 1919. 

18 These Our Fathers, pp. 156-157.

Tuesday, February 25, 2020

Judge James William Cherry


March 25, 1949
Mt. Pleasant Pyramid


April 1, 1949
Mt. Pleasant Pyramid 


J.W. Cherry is front row and far right 


Sunday, May 17, 2015

History of Our Dough Boy


"Doughboy"is an informal term for a member of the United States Army or Marine Corps. Today it is especially used to refer to members of the American Expeditionary Forces in World War I. (A popular mass-produced sculpture of the 1920s, the Spirit of the American Doughboy,   
Courtesy of Wikipedia 



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The following comes from History of Mt. Pleasant.










































World War

When the United States entered the World War, the people of Mt. Pleasant loyally responded to every call, and made a record of which it may well be proud. One hundred and eighteen boys enlisted from Mt. Pleasant, and a number of Mt. Pleasant's sons enlisted from other communities. As the boys, one by one or in groups, boarded the train, great crowds, although sad at heart, cheered them as they left for the front. Three of the number died in service. Ralph Braby, while in California, was drowned, Jacob Hafen died of disease, and Henry Merville Zabriskie was killed in action, over seas.

The Sanpete County Council of Defense was organized as follows: J. W. Cherry, chairman; Burke McArthur, secretary; Ed. Johnston, treasurer; Committee chairmen, Finance, N. S. Niel­sen; Publicity, ,Burke McArthur; Legal, J. W. Cherry; Sanitation and Medicine, Ed. Johnston; Food supply and conservation, L. R. Anderson; Industrial survey, Orlando Bradley; Labor, Christian Willardsen; Military affairs, J. Morgan Johnson; State protection, H. R. Thomas; Survey of man power, L. P. Brady; Woman's work, Mrs. G. W. Martin.

In June 1918, there were deposited in the Mt. Pleasant Com­mercial and Savings Bank, by Mr. N. S. Nielsen, county chairman of finance, to the credit of W. G. McAdoo, treasurer of the Nation­al American Red Cross, seven thousand five hundred dollars.



The citizens went over the top in the various other drives conducted. Liberty bonds, postal savings, Soldier's Welfare Re­lief, Christmas boxes, tobacco, conservation of food, etc.

Local committees were organized, among them the local Red Cross. The officers of this organization visited the neighboring cities, Fairview, Fountain Green, Moroni, Wales, Chester and Spring City, and in cooperation with them, purchased material and sewed articles called for. There were checked out something over $3.000, which had been obtained by weekly canvasses made by wo­men and girls, and by other volunteer donations other than the National drives. Mt. Pleasant headquarters were established at about 122 West Main, where the women, some representing differ­ent organizations, met and did sewing, etc., required. Many ship­ments of goods were made. The officers at this time were: C. L. Johns, president; Mrs. Grace Madsen and Miss Irene Nielsen, vice presidents; Miss Hilda Madsen, secretary and treasurer.



Mt. Pleasant History (1939) pp 199-200 by Hilda Madsen Longsdorf






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The original location of the Dough Boy was right in the center of the intersection of State Street and Main Street.





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 Honoring all soldiers in all wars .

"To Honor Those Who Left Our Midst To Fight For Freedom" 

In 2008 the "old armory" now recreation center  was given the artist touch with Soldiers from all wars painted on the south exterior wall. 

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Thursday, July 21, 2011

Mt. Pleasant Deals With Prohibition

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Mayor Winters ~ November 18, 1932


From Utah History to Go:
Prohibition Failed to Stop the Liquor Flow in Utah
by W. Paul Reeve
History Blazer, February 1995
Nationally in 1893 a group of moral reformers organized the Anti-Saloon League. It joined forces with the Women's Christian Temperance Union to intensify the long-standing campaign against drunkenness and its harmful effects on society. These organizations advocated government intervention to regulate drinking. In response to such lobbying many state, county, town, and city officials began restricting the sale and consumption of liquor. In fact, by the turn of the century nearly one-fourth of America's population lived in "dry" communities that prohibited the sale of liquor.
Even before Utah finally enacted statewide prohibition in 1917 many small towns had already adopted their own anti-liquor laws. On October 21, 1911, St. George passed an ordinance prohibiting the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors. Yet, as St. George and other communities found, regulating people's drinking habits was no easy task. Less than two months after the bill's enactment several young men secured a five-gallon keg of wine and sneaked west of the city to indulge. After enjoying much of the illegal liquid one young man, for no apparent reason, shot and wounded one of his drinking buddies. News of the incident traveled fast, and soon the whole group was arrested and tried for drunkenness. One pled guilty and was fined $7.  Four others were acquitted due to lack of evidence, and two more were found guilty and fined $10 each.
Not only was regulating drinking difficult, but, as Grand County officers discovered, stopping its illegal sale was also challenging. In 1911 Sheriff Bliss of Moab, acting on information that John Tescher was selling liquor from his home, searched the residence and seized about three quarts of whiskey and numerous empty kegs. Tescher pled guilty to owning and keeping whiskey for sale and was fined $250. In another Grand County case Warren J. Gardner was found guilty of selling a gallon of wine to five minors. His attorney tried to establish that the wine was actually unfermented pure grape juice, but two of the boys testified to the contrary. They told the court that they became intoxicated after drinking it. The jury believed the boys, and the judge sentenced Gardner to ninety days in the county jail.
These experiences were only precursors of what lay ahead. After the ratification of the Eighteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution in 1919, which instituted nationwide prohibition, the illegal production and sale of liquor increased dramatically in Utah and across America. Large-scale regulation proved even more challenging than enforcing state and local ordinances.
In 1923 Utah's attorney general claimed that drinking in the larger cities was just as bad as before prohibition. Huge profits from the manufacture and sale of liquor made it impossible to stop. In Milford, Beaver County, officials alleged that the chief bootlegger was the city marshal's sister. In Sanpete County one bootlegger loaded whiskey in the pack saddle of his trained horse and sent it home over twenty miles of mountainous road. He returned in his car, and when officers stopped him on suspicion of bootlegging they found no liquor in his vehicle. One Salt Lake City mother kept a still going in the basement of her house while her husband was serving an eighteen-month sentence for bootlegging. More shocking, raids on speakeasies in Utah often netted off-duty policemen among the criminal drinkers. Overall, from 1925 to 1932 federal agents in Utah seized over 400 distilleries, 25,000 gallons of spirits, 8,000 gallons of malt liquors, 13,000 gallons of wine, and 332,000 gallons of mash.
Local authorities did their part to ensure that their respective towns remained dry. In Utah's Dixie, when one local drugstore began selling "tonic beverages," a question arose over the definition of "intoxicating liquors." While the town clerk wrote to the state attorney general for clarification, town leaders instructed the marshal to request that the drugstore "promise to stop selling alcoholic tonic." If the store manager refused, the marshal was to threaten nonrenewal of his business license. The scare tactics proved unnecessary when the store owner agreed to remove the offensive liquid from the shelves.
Problems of enforcement and the unpopularity of prohibition led to agitation for its repeal. Following his 1932 election, President Franklin D. Roosevelt kept his campaign pledge and each state soon began voting on the issue in special conventions. Despite the Mormon church's efforts, Utahns voted on November 7, 1933, for repeal of national prohibition and in the same election also repealed the state's liquor law. Utah was the thirty-sixth state to vote for repeal and thus, ironically, delivered prohibition its death blow.
Legal liquor began flowing again in Utah in 1935 when the first state liquor stores in Salt Lake City and Ogden opened their doors. Business was brisk at the new stores as Utahns eagerly purchased the once forbidden liquors; in the first fifteen days of operation receipts totaled $54,866.
For more information see Helen Zeese Papanikolas, "Bootlegging in Zion: Making and Selling the 'Good Stuff,'" Utah Historical Quarterly 53 (summer 1985): 268-91; and Jody Bailey and Robert S. McPherson, "'Practically Free from the Taint of the Bootlegger': A Closer Look at Prohibition in Southeastern Utah," Utah Historical Quarterly 57 (spring 1989): 150-64

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Kathy:
The ending of Prohibition is a beautiful example of what Congress can do when it's in a hurry. The 18th Amendment to the Constitution prohibited the sale, manufacture, and transportation of alcohol.  
In the 1932 election, both parties campaigned to amend the Constitution.  But amending the constitution takes time and we wanted our beer now.  When Roosevelt took office the 3rd of March 1933, one of his first acts was to change the definition of "alcoholic beverage" and Congress defined 3.2 beer as non alcoholic.
3.2 beer was legal by April 1933, the 18 Amendment was not eliminated until December of 1933.  To celebrate the April event those Clydesdale horses,  still promenient in Bud adds, delivered a wagon load of 3.2 beer to the White House.  Lee

Friday, September 3, 2010

Hamilton Poets ~ from the Betty Gunderson Woodbury and David Gunderson Collection

Poetry by the Children of Mt. Pleasant – Printed circa 1908 by the Mt. Pleasant Pyramid. The original copy is from the archives of Betty G. Woodbury & restoration work has been done by David Gunderson. As you read these delightful verses, you will get a glimpse of an era gone by and you might find a verse written by one of your ancestors.