Choose a Menu

The Waumadee Herald

The Waumadee herald (Read's Landing, Minn.) 1857 Browse the title

In the early spring of 1857 the McMaster family settled in Read’s Landing, Minnesota. Thomas A. McMaster made arrangements along with his two brothers who were printers—William J. and Joseph McMaster—to publish a newspaper there. At that time it was proposed that the village of Read’s Landing be called Waumadee. So the McMaster brothers named the newspaper the Waumadee Herald. The first issue bore the date May 9, 1857, but it is believed that the actual printing of the paper was on Monday, May 11. It was a seven-column, four-page paper.

Later in the afternoon of May 11, Joseph and Thomas McMaster drowned when their sailboat capsized on the Mississippi River. The youngest brother William didn’t have sufficient experience to continue the newspaper on his own and the Waumadee Herald ceased publication. A few months later the publishing equipment was bought by Norman E. Stevens who began publishing the Wabashaw Weekly County Herald in August 1857.

Sources

Curtiss-Wedge, Franklyn, comp. History of Wabasha County Minnesota. Winona, MN: H.C. Cooper, Jr. & Co., 1920.

History of Wabasha County. Chicago: H.H. Hill & Co. Publishers, 1884.

Johnston, Daniel S.B. "Minnesota Journalism in the Territorial Period." Collections of the Minnesota Historical Society, Vol. 10, pt. 1. St. Paul, MN: MHS, 1905.

"Historical Letter Early Day Relic." Wabasha County Herald, August 4, 1921, pg. 5.

"Wabasha, Minnesota" at http://www.placeography.org/index.php/Wabasha,_Minnesota

Wabasha County Minnesota website at http://www.co.wabasha.mn.us/

Minnesota Digital Newspaper Hub

The Minnesota Digital Newspaper Hub is a searchable website from the Minnesota Historical Society that makes millions of pages of Minnesota newspapers available online.

The Hub contains geographically and culturally diverse newspapers published between 1849 and today. Due to potential copyright restrictions most issues published after 1977 can only be accessed from the Gale Family Library at the Minnesota History Center.

Content statement

Content in the Minnesota Digital Newspaper Hub is presented as part of the historical record. Some content may be difficult and harmful to view, including graphic images, offensive language, and negative stereotypes that reflect the culture and biases of an earlier time period.

The Minnesota Historical Society's newspaper digitization program is made possible through support from the National Endowment for the Humanities and the National Digital Newspaper Program (NDNP), the Legacy Amendment's Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund through the vote of Minnesotans on Nov. 4, 2008, and many other organizations and individual donors.

Material in the Digital Newspaper Hub may be protected by copyright law (U.S. Code Title 17).

About the titles

Frequently Asked Questions

Search the Newspapers

Looking for more information on MNHS digital newspaper collections? Visit Digital Newspapers at MNHS

Section on the Red Lake News newspaper and its historical significance.