The Herald of Randolph
P.O. Box 309, Randolph, Vermont
05060
(802) 728-3232
FAX (802) 728-9275
E Mail: editor@OurHerald.com
Web Site: www.ourherald.com
History of the Herald of
Randolph
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The Herald office was built
on a pleasant, tree-lined street in 1899 for the newspaper. It has
been added on to only once since.
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The Herald of Randolph has been the voice of the towns in the beautiful
White River Valley of Vermont since its founding in 1874. During that time it
has had only four publishers and is considered one of the premiere weekly
newspapers in Vermont. The Herald routinely wins awards for news and editorial
writing and photography from the Vermont Press Association and the New England
Press Association.
The Herald's philosophy is to depict the
lives of Central Vermont's wonderfully varied people, to celebrate with them their
triumphs and successes and to carefully point out where improvements could be
made. Would you like to feel connected to small town life in Central Vermont? Log
on to Our Herald.com or better yet, subscribe to The Herald, using the link
on this web page.
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Receptionist Kyle Southworth
greets you as you enter the front door. The historical nature of the
office and staircase once led to this room being used as the setting
for a movie based on a Mark Twain story.
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The Herald of Randolph was established in 1874 by L.P. Thayer when he
purchased the Green Mountain Herald, published in Randolph. In fact, Randolph's
newspaper can be traced back to 1801, when the Weekly Wanderer was published in
Randolph Center. The Green Mountain Aegis was the first newspaper actually
published in West Randolph (now the present-day Randolph). The Orange County
Eagle was started in Randolph in 1865 and its name was changed to the Green
Mountain Herald in 1873.
The Herald began its regional focus in
1874 when the Randolph Herald printed editions for the White River Valley towns.
This is the date that we consider to be the foundng of The Herald. The newspaper
was purchased by L.B. Johnson in 1894, and our current offices were built in
1899. In 1941 Johnson changed the name to The White River Valley
Herald.
John Drysdale bought the paper in 1945
and continued its regional emphasis and independent viewpoint. In 1960 he
introduced the offset printing method to The Herald making it the first
newspaper in Vermont to do so.
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The spacious composing room
upstairs in The Herald, along with some of our wonderful staff.
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Only the fourth publisher since 1874, M. Dickey Drysdale took over in
1973. Since then circulation has expanded from 4000 to 6000, and the size of the
paper has doubled. In 1989, the paper was re-designed and re-named The Herald of
Randolph. The on-line edition was created in June of
2000.
Circulation
Circulation is 6000 copies weekly, including saturation coverage of central
and western Orange County and northern Windsor County.
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The publisher of The Herald
for the 51 years from 1894 to 1945 was L. B. Johnson, at left. In
1945, when this photograph was taken, leadership passed to John
Drysdale, who was publisher until 1971.
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Established 1874 (see History)
Published weekly on Thursdays
Subscriptions: one year $29 in Vt. &
N.H., $34 elsewhere. Six months $19 everywhere, three months $11
everywhere
Single copy price 75
Subscription sales
are 54%, single copy newsstand sales, 46%
Areas of Circulation (% of total): Addison
County 2%, Orange County 43%, Rutland County 2%, Washington County 2%, Windsor
County 32%, Other Vermont Counties 3%.
Vermont towns reached by County: Addison:
Hancock, Granville; Orange: Brookfield, Chelsea, Post Mills, Randolph,
Strafford, Thetford, Tunbridge, Williamstown; Rutland: Pittsfield; Washington:
Barre, Montpelier, Northfield, Roxbury; Windsor:
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Typesetters create The
Herald one letter at a time in this superb old photograph taken in
1899 just after the building was built.
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Barnard, Bethel,
Norwich, Rochester, Sharon, South Royalton, White River Junction, Woodstock,
Stockbridge.
 | M. Dickey Drysdale has been publisher of The Herald of Randolph since 1971.
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