Our Mineral Wealth
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''Mohave County Miner'' was a newspaper, founded by Anson H. Smith, which began operations on November 5, 1882, in
Mineral Park, Arizona The Mineral Park mine is a large open pit copper mine located in the Cerbat Mountains 14 miles northwest of Kingman, Arizona, in the southwestern United States. A 2013 report said that Mineral Park represented one of the largest copper reserves ...
, 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 consisted of seven columns. Smith won enough money playing faro from Judge James Reed Russell to erect the newspaper's building on Beale Street. In 1885, Smith moved to
Kingman, Arizona Kingman is a city in, and the county seat of, Mohave County, Arizona, United States. It is named after Lewis Kingman, an engineer for the Atlantic and Pacific Railroad. It is located southeast of Las Vegas, Nevada, and northwest of Arizona's ...
and started another paper, the ''Walapai Tribune''. He sold his interest in the ''Miner'' to James J. Hyde in 1886. Hyde was editor in 1886 and 1887, when the paper moved operations to Kingman. Smith repurchased the paper in 1891, and took over both as editor and publisher. While remaining the publisher of the paper, Minnie A. Sawyer became the editor in 1895. She remained editor until 1917, when Smith once again resumed those duties. In 1918, the paper merged with ''Our Mineral Wealth'', which had been established in 1893 in Kingman by Kean St. Charles. He remained editor and publisher until 1916, when Samuel N. Whitaker became editor, and the paper was bought by Kingman Publishing Company, although St. Charles would remain affiliated with the paper until 1922. In 1917, the year before the merger with the ''Miner'', Edward S. Hanson became the editor of the ''Our Mineral Wealth''. Once the two papers merged, the new name became ''Mohave County Miner and Our Mineral Wealth'', and continued as a weekly paper with Smith as the editor. In 1922, the paper returned to being called the ''Mohave County Miner'', and remained under that name until its closure in 1974. Smith remained at the paper until his death in 1935.


References

{{Reflist Newspapers published in Arizona Publications established in 1882 Weekly newspapers published in the United States Publications disestablished in 1974 1882 establishments in Arizona Territory 1970s disestablishments in Arizona