The Library, located in Rusk, received a Tocker Foundation grant. Rusk was established by an act of the Texas legislature on April 11, 1846, which defined the boundaries of Cherokee County and called for the county seat to be named for Gen. Thomas Jefferson Rusk, one of the signers of the Texas Declaration of Independence.
Weekly newspaper from Rusk, Texas that includes local, state and national news along with extensive advertising.
Physical Description
sixteen pages : ill.
Notes
"Texas' Oldest Continuously Published Weekly Newspaper. Established as the Cherokee Sentinel, Feb. 27, 1850. Consolidation of The Cherokeean, The Alto Herald and the Wells News [and] Views." January 4, 2006, pg. 2A.
This issue is part of the following collections of related materials.
Texas Digital Newspaper Program
The Texas Digital Newspaper Program (TDNP) partners with communities, publishers, and institutions to promote standards-based digitization of Texas newspapers and to make them freely accessible.
A state historical marker designates the Rusk newspaper as the state's oldest, continuously published weekly. Its rich roots planted in 1850, when Texas was a young state. Funded by a Tocker Foundation grant.
Collections funded by the Tocker Foundation, which distributes funds principally for the support, encouragement, and assistance to small rural libraries in Texas.
Whitehead, Marie.Cherokeean Herald (Rusk, Tex.), Vol. 156, No. 52, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 15, 2006,
newspaper,
February 15, 2006;
Rusk, Texas.
(texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth152718/:
accessed February 16, 2019),
University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, texashistory.unt.edu;
crediting Singletary Memorial Library.