Shame I couldn't find any of the Spanish language editions. As editor of the Lumberjack, Hall called for the formation of timber workers’ unions in western Louisiana and east Texas and reported at length on the activities of the Industrial Workers of the World (I.W.W. I hope that you won't mind that we copied them here: Vol. As editor of the Lumberjack, Hall called for the formation of timber workers’ unions in western Louisiana and east Texas and reported at length on the activities of the Industrial Workers of the World (I.W.W. in Merryville, Louisiana. Publication resumed in New Orleans under a new title, the Voice of the People. Initially published bi-weekly, the newspaper alternated between a monthly, weekly, and semi-weekly publication over the years, as the Normal School grew into the Arizona State Teachers' College and then into Northern Arizona University. The Lumberjack’s motto, “An Injury To One Is An Injury To All,” was retained, as was its four-page, three-column format. The libcom library contains nearly 20,000 articles. This was on my 'to-do' list.I hope that you won't mind that we copied them here: That's fine, after all I copied them from the Library of Congress no that's cool, we want people to duplicate stuff on libcom as many places as possible!
If it's your first time on the site, or you're looking for something specific, it can be difficult to know where to start. The newspaper is produced by students in the HSU Journalism and Mass Communication Department. Luckily, there's a range of ways you can filter the library content to suit your needs, from casual browsing to researching a particular topic. The newspaper has been known as The H.S.T.C. It has received numerous awards from the California Newspaper Publishers Association and the California College Media Association. If you have an ebook reader or a Kindle, check out our If you'd like to upload content to the library which is in line with the had affiliated itself at its annual convention in Alexandria, Louisiana, in 1912. If you have an ebook reader or a Kindle, check out our If you'd like to upload content to the library which is in line with the It ran for the first half of 1913 before being revived as The Voice of the People .
Also of interest is Hall’s original poetry on labor-related subjects.In July 1913, timber industry leaders persuaded the Lumberjack’s printer in Alexandria to stop printing the paper. Publication resumed in New Orleans under a new title, the Voice of the People. ), with which the B.T.W. BOX 6000, Flagstaff, Arizona, United States. Rooter (1929-1930), The Humboldt Lumberjack (1930-1951) and The Lumberjack (1951-present). If it's your first time on the site, or you're looking for something specific, it can be difficult to know where to start. In 1914, a group of students at what was then called Northern Arizona Normal School launched a weekly newspaper at their then 15-year-old institution. In July 1914, lack of support in the South finally led Hall to transfer publication of the paper in full to Portland, where he served as editor for two months before turning the job over to B. E. Nilsson and returning to New Orleans. The Lumberjack is the student-run weekly newspaper at Humboldt State University, serving the campus and community since 1929. An archive of a Wobbly Weekly Newspaper covering New Orleans, Orleans, Louisiana and focussing (at first) on the Lumberjacks of which it was named. The first issue of The Pine, as they called their new publication, appeared that October. The website had some cryptic talk of later issues of Voice but given that the printing had moved to Oregon and the last few issues kept appealing for more support I suspect it to be either reissuing a few copies or an in name only revival, Voice of the People is a pretty generic name for a Radical paper after all.Thanks for doing this! The Lumberjack newspaper The Lumberjack was founded in January 1913 in the midst of a protracted labor strike by the Brotherhood of Timber Workers (B.T.W.) 2, no. The focus of reporting initially remained the same; by 1914, however, having grown frustrated with largely unsuccessful efforts to organize southern timber workers, Hall was devoting greater attention to the logging industry in the Pacific Northwest and Montana, as well as to labor disputes associated with the United Fruit Company in Central America and the Caribbean.Vol. The Voice of the People appears to have found no more of an audience in the Northwest than in the South, and its last issue was published on December 3, 1914.This and the other one are amazing, thanks for posting!Shame I couldn't find any of the Spanish language editions.