In today’s edition of Tuesday’s Time Warp, we go back to 1911 when El Paso’s city leaders decreed that women convicts serving their sentences at the city jail would now be required to “clean up the city jail instead of resting.” The September 16, 1931, El Paso Herald-Post reminded their readers about the new requirement introduced 20 years before.
The Tuesday Time Warp Series
The El Paso Herald Post Tuesday Time Warp series takes you back to the news headlines making in the El Paso Herald Post. The El Paso Herald Post began life as the El Paso Herald in 1881. From 1901 through 1931, the newspaper changed its masthead from the El Paso Herald Post, to the El Paso Daily Herald until it settled on the El Paso Herald again. Through a merger for survival with Scripps-Howard in 1931, the newspaper became the El Paso Herald-Post. It ceased publishing its print edition on October 11, 1997, when it printed its last edition.
It remained in the history books until Chris Babcock brought it back as an online edition newspaper in 2015, until shuttering for a second time in 2021…