Wiregrass farmer
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The Wiregrass Farmer is reported to be the second newspaper created by Irish immigrant Joe Lawrence.
Mr. Lawrence, a devout Christian, moved his family from Ireland to the United States in the latter part of the 1800s. After arriving in New York, he began a journey south, eventually settling in South Central Georgia in the community which later became Ashburn. Mr. Lawrence's first attempt at a newspaper was a religious publication, according to subsequent stories told about him by his daughter Nora Lawrence Smith. No copies of Mr. Lawrence's first paper, if it ever existed, have surfaced.
There is reason to doubt the stories of Miz Nora, as she was called, because among other stories she would tell, she led her family's covered wagon through the woods at night with lantern. The time frame she gave for this would have her being about two or three years old at most, considering her stated birthday. Miz Nora, for reasons no one really knows, postdated the first edition of The Wiregrass Farmer and Stockman to 1899. It is believed Mr. Lawrence's religious paper was published in 1899 and she included those editions as part of The Wiregrass Farmer.
The first actual Wiregrass Farmer and Stockman was published on the last Saturday in March 1902. It has remained in business, continually publishing an issue each week, ever since then. The newspaper serves as the official Legal Organ for Turner County and the cities. The University of Georgia has microfilmed copies of extant editions on file at the Athens campus in the Newspaper Project archives. These records are often sought out by geneology hounds researching their families. Most of the microfilmed editions at the UGA Athens Campus may also be viewed at the Victoria Evans Memorial Library in Ashburn. Bound volumes of the newspaper begin in the 1940s with significant gaps which grow smaller as the bound volumes approach more recent times.