The
Langston City Herald debuted on May 2, 1891, as a
weekly newspaper for Langston's African American community. Eagleson served as its editor, and McCabe was its founder (and, for a time, also edited). The paper's primary purpose was to increasingly settle the Oklahoma Territory by African Americans. Following the
Land Run of 1891 – spurred by the opening of
Sac and Fox Nation lands – several black settlers entered the region, and the paper wrote that it was responsible. It implored people to leave the
Southern United States to the
Cherokee Outlet, and a significant number settled there. It was a strong proponent of Langston becoming a vibrant black city of opportunity. It warned those living in the South that relocating to the territory "may be your last chance for a free home", and it argued that the region's geography was superior in quality to others. Though it sought black settlers entering the Oklahoma Territory and establishing communities, it was primarily concerned with the economy of the territory. It was
Republican in political orientation (though it warned Republicans that black voters may flee the party if it did not meet their needs), and it advocated for black
suffrage. It denounced
the violent race riot that occurred in
Spring Valley, Illinois, in 1895, calling that city's Italian population "a band of lousy, dirty, despicable, low bred, treacherous dago miners". The paper was commercially successful, and it had around 4,000 subscriptions in its first year.
Lee J. Meriwether became the editor of the paper around 1893. It dissolved in 1898. One of the paper's mottos – "COME PREPARED OR NOT AT ALL" – is featured in
Toni Morrison's 1993 novel
Paradise. == References ==