The Zion Herald

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Title: The Zion Herald IIIF collection link
City: Zion, Ill.
County: Lake
Frequency: Weekly
History: Zion Herald (1907-1910).
Available online: 8 May 1907 - 29 June 1910 (145 issues)

Zion City was a utopian religious community founded in July 1901 by John Alexander Dowie, an evangelical minister, and pioneer of Pentecostalism in the United States. Dowie emigrated from Australia in 1888 and eventually settled in Chicago where, in 1893, he established a ministry near the World's Columbian Exposition. Central to Dowie's ministry was the practice of faith healing, and it proved enormously popular. He soon formed a publishing company to issue his sizable output of periodicals, books, and pamphlets. In 1896 he began planning a utopian religious community, to be named Zion City, which would serve as a refuge from the many social problems troubling American cities at the time, the same problems attracting the attention of contemporary Progressive Era reformers. Whereas most Progressive Era reformers viewed these problems as evidence of social, economic, and political dysfunction, Dowie saw them as evidence of religious and moral decay. He believed that only complete subordination to religious authority could solve the problems of modernity, and Zion City was planned as a church-state, or theocracy.

The Zion Herald began publication in 1907. It was a local news and weekly publication that changed from weekly on Wednesday to weekly on Saturday on June 8th, 1907. The Zion Herald contains local news, classified advertisements for Zion City, and religious rhetoric and opinion pieces, it also includes frequent mention and referral of the Leaves of Healing, the Christian Catholic Apostolic Church’s theological publication (Which Voliva was also editing and publishing for most of the Herald’s run.)

The editor and publisher was initially Theodore Forey and then changed on June 29th, 1907 to Wilbur Glenn Voliva (who was the overseer and successor of Dowie). Foray moved to the business office of the publication until he later broke with the Christian Catholic Apostolic Church due to disagreeing with Voliva’s assertion of the Earth’s flatness.

Its last issue was June 29, 1910, at which point it was consolidated with the Leaves of Healing (which was expanded to include elements from the Zion Herald). The Leaves of Healing was an ongoing publication founded by Dowie, who began it prior to the city’s founding, Voliva then took it over as part of his assumption of power in Zion City.

Zion City was a utopian religious community founded in July 1901 by John Alexander Dowie, an evangelical minister and pioneer of Pentecostalism in the United States. Dowie emigrated from Australia in 1888, and eventually settled in Chicago where, in 1893, he established a ministry near the World's Columbian Exposition. Central to Dowie's ministry was the practice of faith healing, and it proved enormously popular. He soon formed a publishing company to issue his sizable output of periodicals, books, and pamphlets. In 1896 he began planning a utopian religious community, to be named Zion City, which would serve as a refuge from the many social problems troubling American cities at the time, the same problems attracting the attention of contemporary Progressive Era reformers. Whereas most Progressive Era reformers viewed these problems as evidence of social, economic, and political dysfunction, Dowie saw them as evidence of religious and moral decay. He believed that only complete subordination to religious authority could solve the problems of modernity, and Zion City was planned as a church-state, or theocracy, which is why the newspaper was called the Zion City Theocrat [LCCN sn 94054571].

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1 Sunday, 1 September 1907
2 Monday, 2 September 1907
3 Tuesday, 3 September 1907
4 Wednesday, 4 September 1907
5 Thursday, 5 September 1907
6 Friday, 6 September 1907
1 issue
7 Saturday, 7 September 1907
8 Sunday, 8 September 1907
9 Monday, 9 September 1907
10 Tuesday, 10 September 1907
11 Wednesday, 11 September 1907
12 Thursday, 12 September 1907
13 Friday, 13 September 1907
1 issue
14 Saturday, 14 September 1907
15 Sunday, 15 September 1907
16 Monday, 16 September 1907
17 Tuesday, 17 September 1907
18 Wednesday, 18 September 1907
19 Thursday, 19 September 1907
20 Friday, 20 September 1907
1 issue
21 Saturday, 21 September 1907
22 Sunday, 22 September 1907
23 Monday, 23 September 1907
24 Tuesday, 24 September 1907
25 Wednesday, 25 September 1907
26 Thursday, 26 September 1907
27 Friday, 27 September 1907
1 issue
28 Saturday, 28 September 1907
29 Sunday, 29 September 1907
30 Monday, 30 September 1907