The Herald Newspaper and E.W. Stephens

On January 1, 1871, the Columbia, Missouri Herald newspaper was first published by Edwin William Stephens. Less than a year earlier, the twenty-one-year-old Stephens had purchased a half stake in the fledgling Boone County Journal, which he renamed; by 1873 he would acquire full ownership. The Herald would develop a national reputation as the “Model American Weekly.” In 1889, Walter Williams was hired as editor, and in 1892 Stephens erected a new headquarters building and printing plant at the corner of Hitt and Broadway which still stands in 2022. In addition to the newspapers, thousands of books would be printed and bound here in the ensuing decades. In 1904, it was Columbia’s largest commercial enterprise and employed one hundred people. Stephens and Williams shared a lifelong commitment to education, and a belief that journalists should be professionally trained. Their long devotion to these journalistic high ideals would, in 1908, lead to the creation of the world’s first degree-granting School of Journalism at the University of Missouri, with Williams as its first dean.

1020 East Broadway and Hitt Street showing Herald Building, home of E.W. Stephens Publishing Company

As depicted on page 7 of the 1895 Herald Historical Edition: Twenty-Fifth Anniversary, from the private collection of Matthew Fetterly


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Matt Fetterly

Matt was born in Columbia, Missouri and is an 8th generation Boone Countian. He is an alumni of Hickman High School and the University of Missouri. Since 2011 he has worked for Shakespeares Pizza, as a truck driver and distribution manager, visiting and selling locally produced frozen pizza in all 115 Missouri counties, as well as Kansas, Illinois, and Nebraska. He is also a professional percussionist, working at the Arrow Rock Lyceum Theatre since 2012, and has performed with the Maples Repertory Theatre, Central Methodist Theater, University of Missouri Theater, Columbia Entertainment Company, Talking Horse Productions, Maplewood Barn Theater, Columbia Community Band, Columbia Jazz Orchestra, Columbia Civic Orchestra, Columbia Chorale, The Tipper Gores, Columbia Handbell Ensemble, and the 9th Street Philharmonic. A lifelong love of Columbia inspired him to preserve a growing collection of over 170 books about Columbia and Boone County. A related project is preserving and cataloguing books and ephemera manufactured by the E.W. Stephens Publishing Company, once Columbia’s largest business. He specializes in local natural history, black history, indigenous history, lgbtq+ history, and cultural history more generally (particularly architecture, music, art, theater, and cemeteries). When not playing music or writing about local history, he enjoys hiking, caving, camping, and floating, in the forest and prairies of Mid-Missouri.

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