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Prairie Farmer
Prairie Farmer, February 1 1841
Type Weekly newspaper
Owner(s) Farm Progress Company
PublisherUnion Agricultural Society
Founded1841
Language American English
Headquarters St. Charles, Illinois
City Chicago, Illinois
CountryUnited States
ISSN 0032-6615
OCLC number 1714067
Website www.prairiefarmer.com

Prairie Farmer is a weekly newspaper which covers agricultural and rural news in the state of Illinois. It was first published in 1841 in Chicago, Illinois by John Stephen Wright and was called The Union Agriculturist and Western Prairie Farmer. [1] Its original masthead proclaimed that it was devoted to "western agriculture, mechanics, and education." [2] [3] Prairie Farmer is owned by Farm Progress, a subsidiary of British publisher Informa.

History

During his time as editor, Wright set up Prairie Farmer Warehouse at 112 Lake Street in Chicago where farmers could study samples of seed, plants, and farm machinery, as well as exhibit their own products. Upon its formation, Wright (not a farmer himself) proclaimed:

Upon you we must rely for the matter that is to make this paper interesting and valuable. No editorial skill can make it what the West demands; but if every practical farmer only feels an interest in the cause . . . . we may expect certain success. What we wish is this -- as soon as anyone obtains valuable agricultural information, a recipe a plan or any other matter....that he would sit down and communicate it immediately. [4]

In January 1843, the name of the paper was shortened to Prairie Farmer [5] by Wright.

Burridge and Holt
John Stephen Wright, 1841

References

  1. ^ "Prairie Farmer". Illinois Digital Newspaper Collections. Retrieved 29 October 2014.
  2. ^ The Prairie Farmer Collection. 1816.
  3. ^ "About Prairie farmer. [volume] (Chicago, Ill.) 1841-current". Library of Congress. Retrieved March 10, 2020.
  4. ^ Butler, Burridge (January 11, 1941). "Prairie Farmer--Its Beginnings". Retrieved 9 July 2015.
  5. ^ Butler, Burridge (January 11, 1941). "Prairie Farmer--Its Beginnings". Retrieved 9 July 2015.