Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Mohave County Miner was a newspaper, founded by Anson H. Smith, which began operations on November 5, 1882, in Mineral Park, Arizona, in the back room of Hyde's Drug Store. It replaced The Alta Arizona, a magazine which had begun the preceding year. The paper was printed on one of the first Chicago stop-cylinder presses ever manufactured, and ...
Mohave County Miner (Mineral Park, Arizona, 1882-1887; Kingman, Arizona, 1887-1974), called Mohave County Miner and Our Mineral Wealth between 1918 (after merger with Our Mineral Wealth) and 1922. [45] [46] [47] Our Mineral Wealth (Kingman, Arizona, 1893-1918), merged with Mohave County Miner in 1918. [48] Phoenix Gazette (1881–1997) [49]
Mineral Park was a mining town, now a ghost town in the Mineral Park valley of the Cerbat Mountains in Mohave County, Arizona. [6] Its ruins and cemetery are now located within the property of the mine. [7] Mining in the area began in 1871 and a camp was established soon after. The mines produced primarily silver, gold, copper, lead and zinc.
Mohave County Miner (Mineral Park, Arizona, 1882-1887; Kingman, Arizona, 1887-1974), called Mohave County Miner and Our Mineral Wealth between 1918 (after merger with Our Mineral Wealth) and 1922. [12] [13] [14] Our Mineral Wealth (Kingman, Arizona, 1893-1918), merged with Mohave County Miner in 1918. [12] Phoenix Gazette (1881–1997) [15] The Rep
News Media Corporation (NMC) is an American family-owned newspaper corporation that publishes 25 [2] different newspaper titles in five [3] states across the United States. Currently, it operates in smaller cities and towns with populations between 5,000 and 50,000 in the states of Arizona , Illinois , Nebraska , South Dakota , and Wyoming .
Jul. 1—HOWARD — For the first time in the building's 86-year history, the Miner County Courthouse is getting some serious improvements. The county's headquarters at 401 N. Main St. in Howard ...
The Mineral News and Tribune is an American newspaper published in Keyser, West Virginia. The News Tribune publishes four days a week: Tuesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. It is the newspaper of record for " Mineral County and the Potomac Highlands ", [ 3 ] in the Cumberland metropolitan area .
Louisville was originally named Louiseville, and was established as a mining camp along Cedar Creek in Mineral County, Montana circa 1869. [3] The settlement was named for miner Louis Barrette's wife, Louise. [4] The town's construction was "rushed" and its design not well-planned, exhibiting as "a town built overnight."