Humboldt Register
The Humboldt Register was a newspaper published in Unionville that contains many interesting articles.
Resources
- About The Humboldt register. volume (Unionville, N.T. (Nev.) 1863-1876 (Library of Congress)
- Libraries that Have It: The Humboldt register. volume (Unionville, N.T. (Nev.)) 1863-1876 (Library of Congress)
- University of Nevada Reno
- Available as: Microfilm Service Copy
- Dates:
- s=<1863:5:2-1869:5:29>
- <1869:11:13-1876:12:1>
- Last updated: 12/1989
- Dates:
- Available as: Original
- Dates:
- <1868:11:27-1870:12:24>
- Last updated: 12/1989
- Dates:
- Available as: Microfilm Service Copy
- University of Nevada Reno
- Libraries that Have It: The Humboldt register. volume (Unionville, N.T. (Nev.)) 1863-1876 (Library of Congress)
- University of Nevada, Reno Knowledge Center
- Available , Microforms ; Microfilm N0012
- Summary holdings:
- Microfilm: v.1(1863)-v.6(1869)
- University of Nevada, Reno Knowledge Center
- Available , Microforms ; Microfilm N0012
- Summary holdings:
- Microfilm: v.7(1869) v.1(1869)-v.14(1876)
- The Humboldt Register(1866-1870) 579 Pages (Pershing County Library)
1865
- Trego: Fairfield p. 372 discusses the Granite Creek murders and states "Charles Kyle and family with their stock and all other settlers thereabouts left their homes and came this way." (source: The Humboldt Register Published at Unionville Nevada of April 15, 1865)
- Black Rock Tom includes a quote from Fairfield of the December 30, 1865 Humboldt Register
1866
- February 24 (Pershing County Library)
- March 3, 1866 (Pershing County Library)
- Another Gallant Fight, Humboldt Register March 17, 1866 (Scan of one article, local copy)
- March 24, 1866 (Pershing County Library)
- May 5, 1866 (Pershing County Library)
- September 1, 1866 (Pershing County Library)
- September 8, 1866 (Pershing County Library)
- November 3, 1866 (Pershing County Library)
- December 29, 1866 (Pershing County Library)
1867
Humbold Register 1867 (167 pages) (Pershing County Library)
- On May 5, 1867, the Humboldt Register published a citizen's petition that declared that Old Winnemucca was a traitor to his tribe and that Captain Sou would be known as the New Winnemucca.[1]
- ↑ "Sarah Winnemucca of the Northern Paiutes,"Gae Whitney Canfield, p. 48, 1983.