Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Rapid City Journal began on January 5, 1878, as the Black Hills Journal. Publisher Joseph P. Gossage produced the first edition of the Black Hills Journal, which was four pages and had 250 subscribers. Printed in a log cabin on Rapid Street, the first newspaper was laboriously cranked out on a Washington hand printing press.
Potter County News - Gettysburg; Prairie Pioneer - Pollock; Rapid City Journal - Rapid City; Redfield Press - Redfield; Sioux Valley News - Canton; Sisseton Courier - Sisseton; Sota Iya Ye Yapi - Wilmot; South Dakota Messenger - Pierre (1912-1914, defunct) Southern Union County Leader-Courier - Elk Point; Timber Lake Topic - Timber Lake; Todd ...
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Rapid_City_Journal&oldid=855502288"https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=The_Rapid_City_Journal&oldid
She worked as a typesetter for the Mitchell Daily Republic [2] and was an early contributor to the formation of the South Dakota Press Association. [6] The Gossages were the sole owners of the Rapid City Journal until 1922, when they sold a one-fourth share to Journal Publishing Company. They decided to sell the newspaper to the Lusk-Mitchell ...
In January 2003, a fourth federal grand jury was called in Rapid City to hear testimony about the murder of Aquash. She was known to have been given a ride from the home of Troy Lynn Yellow Wood of Denver on December 10, 1975, by AIM members Arlo Looking Cloud, John Graham and Theda Nelson Clarke, who transported her to Rapid City, South Dakota ...
Camela Catherine Theeler (born 1975) [2] is an American lawyer who has served as a United States district judge of the United States District Court for the District of South Dakota since 2024.
The fire started on July 10, 1939, [4] about 7 miles (11 km) northwest of Hill City, South Dakota. [2] The cause was later determined to have been a lightning strike. Two post cutters working nearby noticed the fire and attempted to put it out but failed and fled to avoid the growing fire; they were initially suspected of arson but were later cleared.
He grew up in Rapid City, South Dakota, where he did editorial cartoons for Central High School's school newspaper. [1] He attended The Art Institute of Colorado, then took jobs at KOTA-TV, the Rapid City Journal, and the Argus Leader. He completed an art degree at the Institute of American Indian Arts once his children matured.