Skip to main content

Shenandoah Herald Archive

  • Woodstock, Virginia
  • 18661925

About

The paper under several different titles dates back to 1817, beginning as Democratic, swinging to Republican in the 1890s, and back to Democratic—closely reflecting political developments in its northern Shenandoah Valley community. By the early 1900s, the Shenandoah Herald’s circulation within the county seat of Woodstock (population 1,069) and throughout the 507-square-mile Shenandoah County (population 20,253) had reached at least 1,300, or approximately 25 percent of households. John H. Grabill, a former Confederate cavalry captain, acquired the Herald soon after the Civil War and continued as editor of the weekly until his death in 1922—“through the columns of his paper . . . habitually promot[ing] the uplifting forces of the community and seiz[ing] every opportunity to preserve and disseminate” its history.

Archive Info

  • 11,492
  • Woodstock, Virginia
  • 18661925
0

Source Information

Shenandoah Herald, 1866–1925 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2024. Last updated: 17 November 2022

Recent Article Clippings

See All
Shockey - Vaughn Marriage

Shockey - Vaughn Marriage

Shenandoah Herald
Woodstock, Virginia
 • Page 3
Clipped 

Shenandoah Herald
Woodstock, Virginia
 • Page 3
Clipped 
Shenandoah Herald February 23, 1923

Shenandoah Herald February 23, 1923

Shenandoah Herald
Woodstock, Virginia
 • Page 2
Clipped 

Shenandoah Herald
Woodstock, Virginia
 • Page 2
Clipped 
Obituary for Casper Burner

Obituary for Casper Burner

Shenandoah Herald
Woodstock, Virginia
 • Page 3
Clipped 

Archive Info

  • 11,492
  • Woodstock, Virginia
  • 18661925
0

Source Information

Shenandoah Herald, 1866–1925 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2024. Last updated: 17 November 2022