Skip to main content

The Parker Post Archive

  • Parker, Arizona
  • 19111918

About

J. B. Flanagan started The Parker Post in Parker, Arizona, in May 1910. Originally established within the Colorado River Indian Reservation in western Arizona, the town of Parker was named after Ely Parker (Donehogawa), a Seneca Indian who was confidante to Ulysses S. Grant and later appointed by Grant as Commissioner of Indian Affairs. The Parker Post was published weekly from 1910 to 1918. In heralding the new newspaper, the Arizona Republican, noted that the Post had a "linotype machine, a Hoe press and a job printing plant, the machinery being operated with a gasoline engine." Two earlier newspapers, the Parker News and the Parker Herald had been distributed in Parker but printed in Phoenix, Arizona.

Archive Info

  • 1,472
  • Parker, Arizona
  • 19111918
0

Source Information

The Parker Post, 1911–1918 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2024. Last updated: December 15, 2022

Recent Article Clippings

See All

The Parker Post
Parker, Arizona
 • Page 1
Clipped 

The Parker Post
Parker, Arizona
 • Page 2
Clipped 

The Parker Post
Parker, Arizona
 • Page 1
Clipped 
Hayward short Nellie Morse marriage

Hayward short Nellie Morse marriage

The Parker Post
Parker, Arizona
 • Page 1
Clipped 

The Parker Post
Parker, Arizona
 • Page 1
Clipped 

The Parker Post
Parker, Arizona
 • Page 1
Clipped 

Archive Info

  • 1,472
  • Parker, Arizona
  • 19111918
0

Source Information

The Parker Post, 1911–1918 [database on-line]. Lehi, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2024. Last updated: December 15, 2022