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The Rusk Cherokeean, 618 N. Main
St.
The first newspaper in Rusk was the short-lived Rusk
Pioneer, which began in 1848 and moved to Palestine the
following year. On February 27, 1850, the first issue of the
Cherokee Sentinel was published. This is the publication to
which the current Cherokeean/Herald can trace its origin.
After the Civil War, the name of the weekly paper was
changed to the Texas Observer, and it was at this paper, as
a typesetter, that Texas' first native governor, James
Stephen Hogg, began his work in the newspaper business. This
weekly publication underwent a series of name changes and
consolidations over the years but remained in continuous
operation. Among its significant publishers have been:
Samuel A. Willson, a noted judge, who was appointed by
Governor Richard Coke to help codify the laws of Texas under
the 1876 Constitution; John Benjamin Long, a U.S.
Congressman, state legislator and mayor of Rusk; and state
representative Wallace M. Ellis. They and other publishers
and editors have kept the citizens of Rusk and Cherokee
County informed of news and events throughout the years. The
Rusk Cherokeean published its first issue in 1919 and
purchased the Press Journal (a successor to the Cherokee
Sentinel) in 1923. In 1959, the paper's name was shortened
to the Cherokeean. It has been known as the Cherokeean/Herald
since a merger with the Alto Herald in 1989. At the
beginning of the 21st century, the publication could lay
claim as the oldest, continuously operated, weekly newspaper
in Texas. (2001) Text of supplemental plate: June 1, 1950,
Emmett and Marie Whitehead bought this newspaper from Frank
and Marie Main. They and their family have owned it since.
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