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The Arizona Sentinel Archive

  • Yuma, Arizona
  • 18721911

About

Conceived in the minds of David A. Gordon and C. L. Minor in Arizona City in 1871, the weekly independent Arizona Free Press lasted less than a year before changing its masthead to the Arizona Sentinel. In 1873 Arizona City changed its name to Yuma, and, on April 5 of that year, Minor became sole editor of the Sentinel. Minor took the separation of politics and journalism seriously, to the point that a corrupt elected official allegedly shot at Minor while he was working in the Sentinel office. After the incident, Minor declared that "the official character and condition of every man was public property and that it was the duty of every journalist to expose the unfaithful public servant." According to William H. Lyon in Those Old Yellow Dog Days: Frontier Journalism in Arizona, 1859-1912, Minor’s statement typified the uneasy relationship between editors and politicians of the time.

Archive Info

  • 8,720
  • Yuma, Arizona
  • 18721911
0

Source Information

The Arizona Sentinel, 1872–1911 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2024. Last updated: 22 January 2020

Recent Article Clippings

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MAY 1903

MAY 1903

The Arizona Sentinel
Yuma, Arizona
 • Page 3
Clipped 
Jack O'Neil

Jack O'Neil

The Arizona Sentinel
Yuma, Arizona
 • Page 3
Clipped 

The Arizona Sentinel
Yuma, Arizona
 • Page 3
Clipped 

The Arizona Sentinel
Yuma, Arizona
 • Page 3
Clipped 

Archive Info

  • 8,720
  • Yuma, Arizona
  • 18721911
0

Source Information

The Arizona Sentinel, 1872–1911 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2024. Last updated: 22 January 2020