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Albert Walter Merrick (December 24, 1840 – February 26, 1902) was an American journalist who published the first newspaper in Deadwood, South Dakota, the Black Hills Weekly Pioneer, along with W. A. Laughlin. The newspaper continues to be published today, but has moved its offices to Spearfish, South Dakota.
Aberdeen American News - Aberdeen, Daily [1] Alcester Union & Hudsonite - Alcester/Hudson, Weekly [1] Argus Leader - Sioux Falls, Daily [1] Arlington Sun - Arlington, South Dakota [2] Bennett County Booster II - Martin; Beresford Republic - Beresford; Bison Courier - Bison; Black Hills Pioneer - Spearfish; Brandon Valley Challenger - Brandon ...
Founded by A. W. Merrick and W. A. Laughlin, it was the first newspaper in Deadwood, located in what was then Dakota Territory. The Black Hills Pioneer is the flagship publication of Seaton Publishing Company, Inc. South Dakota. It is part of a family owned newspaper and digital media company providing local journalism to western South Dakota.
A South Dakota death row inmate told the family members of his murder victim that he forgives them before dying by lethal injection Monday.
The Aberdeen Saturday Pioneer was a weekly newspaper edited and published by L. Frank Baum between 1890 and 1891. [1] The first issue of the weekly appeared on January 25, 1890, and the paper was based in Aberdeen, South Dakota. [1] [2] Baum bought a local paper, The Dakota Pioneer, from John H. Drake and renamed it as The Aberdeen Saturday ...
The fire chief of the Killbuck Township Fire & EMS died Monday in a traffic accident while vacationing in South Dakota. Kashuba dedicated 22 years to the community of Killbuck Township.
The South Dakota Attorney General’s office filed an official notice Wednesday announcing it will seek the penalty for Joseph Gene Hoek, 40, in the death of Moody County Chief Deputy Ken Prorok ...
On the morning of April 12, 2011, the date of his 63rd birthday, corrections officer Ronald Johnson, who had been on the job for 23 years and was close to retiring, was working in the Pheasantland Industries, a print shop building located within the prison compound of South Dakota State Penitentiary, where inmates work on upholstery, signs, furniture, and other projects.