Joseph E. Johnson and the Huntsman’s Echo

In April 1860 Joseph E. Johnson, a Mormon, established a road ranche at Wood River Center, today’s Shelton, and began publishing The Huntsman’s Echo, the first newspaper in Nebraska west of Omaha. He had earlier edited papers in Council Bluffs, Iowa, and Omaha. Johnson was a keen observer of the Nebraska scene, which he discussed in a vigorous and breeze style suggested by his paper’s motto, “Independent in Everything, Neutral in Nothing.”

Johnson’s Ranch was an important supply point serving Mormons and other travelers on the Council Bluffs Road (Mormon Trail). It included a general store, blacksmith shop, post office, mill, and a farm that grew crops and vegetables. Buffalo and elk roamed the area and the Pawnee Tribe lived nearby.

Johnson strongly favored preserving the Union and was appalled by the coming bloodshed of the Civil War. On the grounds that “this Republican reign of terror...is too much for our democratic style of free thought, free speech, and freedom,” he decided to move west to join his fellow Mormons in Utah. The last issue of The Huntsman’s Echo was published August 1, 1861.

Wood River Valley Historical Society

Nebraska State Historical Society.

Marker is at the intersection of U.S. 30 and South D Street, on the right when traveling west on U.S. 30.

Courtesy hmdb.org

Credits and Sources:

HMDB