Tag: Platte

North Platte’s Keith Blackledge Lessons from a Community Journalist


Free Download Carol Lomicky, Chuck Salestrom, "North Platte’s Keith Blackledge: Lessons from a Community Journalist"
English | 2021 | ISBN: 1467148040 | EPUB | pages: 160 | 3.7 mb
Popular culture glorified newspapers in the 1970s, creating a kind of mythical community newspaperman-like Keith Blackledge, longtime editor of the North Platte Telegraph. In his editorials and columns he praised, scolded, cajoled, teased and encouraged readers. He provided a civic connection while, mostly behind the scenes, he worked to make the town better. Blackledge’s story resonates today because it’s also about the evolution of newspapers. The editor’s career spanned a time when the industry was hit by a tsunami of change, including shrinking circulations and advertising revenues, and new technologies altering forever the way news is produced and consumed. Author Carol Lomicky chronicles the life of this remarkable newspaperman.

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Platte County


Free Download Starley Talbott, "Platte County"
English | 2009 | pages: 128 | ISBN: 0738570389, 1531646182 | EPUB | 48,0 mb
The North Platte River that flows through a portion of Platte County, Wyoming, lent its name to the new county carved from Laramie County in 1911. Prior to the late 1800s, with the exception of Native Americans, trappers, and some ranchers, few people chose to remain in the territory. Travelers who crossed the windswept prairies followed trails headed for the lush farmlands of Oregon or the goldfields of California and the Black Hills. In 1883, the Wyoming Development Company began an irrigation project that brought an influx of farmers to the promising new acreages around Wheatland, the town that became the county seat. The arrival of the railroad in the late 1800s brought more farmers, ranchers, and miners to the area that would become Platte County. New residents established dozens of communities with schools, churches, and businesses. The remaining viable towns are Wheatland, Glendo, Hartville, Guernsey, and Chugwater. This book covers the history of these towns, and the vanished ones, along with the rural areas of Platte County.

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