Grand Island Independent building in Grand Island
|
|
Type | Daily newspaper |
---|---|
Format | Broadsheet |
Owner(s) | Omaha World-Herald Co. |
Publisher | Don Smith |
Editor | Jim Faddis |
Founded | 1870 |
Language | English |
Headquarters | 422 West First Street Grand Island, NE 68802 United States |
Circulation | 20,500 |
ISSN | 1049-3018 |
Website | http://theindependent.com |
The Grand Island Independent is a newspaper published in Grand Island, Nebraska. The Independent is published every day of the year but Christmas Day. Its daily circulation is 20,500 in eleven counties of central Nebraska. The newspaper is owned by the Omaha World-Herald Co.
In 1869, Maggie Eberhart and Seth Mobley founded the Platte Valley Independent in North Platte. Eberhart, whose parents had immigrated from Ireland in her infancy, had been a teacher; Mobley had begun working in a newspaper office in Iowa at the age of 10, and had briefly published the Fort Kearney Herald while stationed at Fort Kearny, Nebraska in 1865. In 1870, Eberhart moved the Independent to Grand Island; she married Mobley the following year. The newspaper, described as "decidedly Republican", was published daily for a short time in late 1873, in connection with a political campaign of that year, but resumed weekly publication after the election.
In 1883, the Mobleys, who had alienated most of their advertisers, sold the newspaper to J. A. McMurphy; a week later, McMurphy sold it to Friedrich (Fred) Hedde. Hedde had been a lawyer and journalist in his native Holstein. After immigrating to the United States in 1854, he was one of the original settlers of Grand Island in 1857. He had served as County Judge and as a member of the Nebraska Territorial Legislature. Beside the Independent, he owned a lumberyard and a general store. Hedde converted the Independent from a weekly to a daily in 1884; in 1885, he changed its name to the Grand Island Daily Independent.
In 1900, the octogenarian Hedde's health was failing, prompting him to turn the newspaper over to a group of Grand Island businessmen, who formed the Independent Publishing Company. A. F. Buechler served as president of the company and editor of the newspaper until 1930, when it was sold to Oscar S. Stauffer; he continued as editor until 1939.
Stauffer Communications owned the Independent from 1930 to 1994. In 1974, the newspaper made the conversion from letterpress to offset printing. In 1979, it began printing a Sunday edition, initiating seven-day publication. In 1989, the "Daily" was dropped, leaving the newspaper with its present name.