For more than three decades, John L. Smith was a daily columnist for the state’s largest newspaper, the Las Vegas Review-Journal, where he was considered a must read by R-J readers. Born and reared in Southern Nevada, John’s deep roots in the Silver State provided context that no other columnist could …
Read More »Hall of Fame
The Nevada Newspaper Hall of Fame honors men and women who have had a significant impact on journalism in the state. Members are elected each year by vote of the Nevada Press Association board of directors.
Laura Myers
October 2, 2015 Contest, Hall of Fame Comments Off on Laura Myers
Laura Myers, a longtime Associated Press reporter and editor and the Las Vegas Review-Journal’s political reporter, bounced between humanitarian work and journalism, both careers taking her all over the world. She was born in Las Vegas on Aug. 26, 1961, and mostly raised and educated in Northern Nevada, graduating from …
Read More »Mark Twain
September 25, 2015 Hall of Fame 0
After trying his luck at prospecting, Mark Twain began his literary career in earnest while writing stories for the Territorial Enterprise in Virginia City. He developed and polished his writing style while on the staff of the famous newspaper. Twain believed that people, not facts, make news, and he always …
Read More »Sally Lyda
September 24, 2015 Hall of Fame Comments Off on Sally Lyda
Lyda was editor of The Record-Courier in the late 1970s when the Gardnerville newspaper grew in size and achieved critical acclaim. She began working part-time at the newspaper and later reluctantly accepted editorship. Although she didn’t possess the temperament of a hard-bitten journalist, she took tough editorial stands.
Read More »Dan De Quille
September 24, 2015 Hall of Fame 0
Dan De Quille’s employment at the Territorial Enterprise in Virginia City for 31 years during the later half of the 19th century made him the most prolific journalist in that newspaper’s history. Known as the Washoe giant, De Quille was best at penning “quaints” — short fictitious stories. His book …
Read More »Samuel Davis
September 23, 2015 Hall of Fame 0
Samuel Davis became one of the most famous early newspaperman in Nevada through his work on the Territorial Enterprise and the Carson City Appeal. After working as a reporter in Virginia City, Davis became editor of the Appeal in 1879 and later managed the paper. The paper, so well known …
Read More »Robert H. Davis
September 23, 2015 Hall of Fame Comments Off on Robert H. Davis
Robert Davis started his life-long and illustrious journalism career as an 18-year-old compositor for the Carson City Appeal in 1887. The acclaimed writer eventually went on a tour of the world as a columnist for the old New York Sun. For an interview with Mussolini in Rome in 1926, Davis …
Read More »Paul Gardner
September 23, 2015 Hall of Fame Comments Off on Paul Gardner
Born in Iowa, Gardner was publisher of the Lovelock Review-Miner from 1931-1966. He later wrote a gardening column for the Nevada Appeal. A former school superintendent, he worked his way through Drake University using his stenographic and typing skills.
Read More »Delbert E. Williams
September 23, 2015 Hall of Fame Comments Off on Delbert E. Williams
Delbert Williams began his newspaper career as a printer’s apprentice with the Genoa Courier. In 1884, Williams managed the Genoa Courier for his uncle, and under his leadership the paper prospered. He bought the Fallon Eagle in 1907 and over the next 30 years built it into one of the …
Read More »Walter Cox
September 23, 2015 Hall of Fame Comments Off on Walter Cox
The Sage of Pizen Switch, his homespun humor tickled readers for decades. He invented the famous Mason Valley News slogan: “The Only Newspaper in the World That Gives a Damn About Yerington.” A former state assemblyman, Cox wrote his columns on a 1924 Underwood. Here’s the Nevada Senate resolution in …
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