Mountain Statesman
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The ''Mountain Statesman'' is a thrice-weekly newspaper serving the
Grafton, West Virginia Grafton is a city in Taylor County, West Virginia, United States, and its county seat. The population was 4,729 at the 2020 census. Located along the Tygart Valley River, it originally developed as a junction point for the Baltimore and Ohio ...
area. Its 2016 circulation was 1,710.


History

The ''Statesman'' began its life as the ''Grafton Sentinel'', a publication that was only weeks old when editor and publisher James W. Holt took it over in 1870. Holt, a 21 year old who had previously worked at the Preston County Journal, went through a series of partners but, aside from a short period of divestment from the paper in 1875, remained editor and publisher of the paper until 1893, and returned to the management of the paper after a short tenure as the county's postmaster. As a staunchly Republican paper in a majority Democratic county, Holt's publication found surprising success. In 1903 Holt introduced the ''Daily Sentinel'', an eight-page six column evening paper, to serve the growing city of Grafton. Holt continued as publisher and editor until three years before his death, handing control of the paper to his son Howard H. Holt in 1915. The younger son in turn passed it to his son, James F. Holt, on his death in 1936. James left the paper in 1948, selling it to Joseph Abey, a Pennsylvania publisher, after deciding to embark on a career in law. In 1946, at the age of just 20,
Eldora Nuzum Eldora Marie Nuzum ( Bolyard; 1926–2004) was an American newspaper editor and journalist who interviewed several United States presidents. She was born in Grafton, West Virginia to Roy Everett Bolyard (1901–1983) and Georgia Ellen (Deavers) Bo ...
became editor of the ''Sentinel.'' At the time of her death, multiple local sources identified her as the first female editor of a daily newspaper in West Virginia. In the 1960s, the paper (and one of its reporters) were known for the Grafton Monster sighting. In 1975 the Sentinel ceased its daily publication schedule, changed its name to the ''Mountain Statesman,'' and moved to the three times a week schedule it uses today. The newspaper was bought by News Media Corporation in the early 1970s. The company sold the newspaper in 2022 to NCWV Media.


Resources

*
List of newspapers in West Virginia This is a list of newspapers in West Virginia, sorted by location. Daily and nondaily newspapers College newspapers Marshall University, Huntington *'' The Parthenon'' West Virginia University, Morgantown *'' The Athenaeum'' Shepherd Unive ...


References

{{Reflist Newspapers published in West Virginia Newspapers established in 1870 1870 establishments in West Virginia