The Concrete Herald

The Concrete Herald
The Voice of the Upper Skagit Valley
Front page of The Concrete Herald's January 2012 edition
TypeMonthly[note 1]
FormatMonthly Newspaper
Founder(s)F.J. Wilcox[3]
PublisherJason Miller[1]
EditorJason Miller[1][4]
FoundedNovember 23, 1901 (1901-11-23)[3]
Political alignmentRepublican 1901–1919 and 1946–1953; Independent 1920–1945 and 1954–1986[note 2]
LanguageEnglish
Ceased publication1991
Relaunched2009[4]
Headquarters137 Main St.[1]
Concrete, Washington, U.S.
Circulation1,700 (as of 2016)[1]
ReadershipSkagit County
OCLC number14574917
Websiteconcrete-herald.com

The Concrete Herald is a newspaper serving the town of Concrete, Washington, along with other communities in Skagit County in the United States. The newspaper has received multiple awards from the Washington Newspaper Publishers' Association, Washington State Press Club, and various other state and local organizations. The Herald's publications have initiated various public projects in the area and played a key role in fighting industrial pollution in Concrete. The publication serves as a cohesive element for the community of the Upper Skagit Valley. Published as a weekly newspaper from 1901 until its dissolution in 1991, The Concrete Herald was relaunched as a monthly publication in 2009.[note 1]

The Concrete Herald was founded in Hamilton, Washington, in 1901, and moved to Concrete in 1913. After changing owners and editors several times, the newspaper entered a 40-year period of stability beginning in 1929, when it became owned and edited by Charles Dwelley. During this period, as Dwelley's editorials were picked up by other publications and quoted nationwide, the Herald's recognition and subscription base expanded beyond Concrete into the Skagit Valley. After Dwelley's retirement, The Concrete Herald was purchased by Robert and June Fader, both experienced journalists. However, after Robert's premature death in 1985 and June's retirement in late 1989, the Herald was purchased by a local businessman unconnected to the publishing business, leading to the newspaper's demise in 1991. In 2009, after raising money from the local community, local resident Jason Miller revived The Concrete Herald in both paper and electronic form.


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