Jewish Herald-Voice


The Jewish Herald-Voice is a weekly community newspaper serving the Jewish community of Texas' Gulf Coast. It is headquartered in Upper Kirby, Houston. Established in 1908, it bills itself as the longest-running Jewish paper in the Southwest.
Known as the Herald, it is subscribed to by approximately 7,000 households, and claims a readership of more than 30,000. The paper is owned by the Samuels family, but also publishers, and is edited by Michael Duke.
In 2001, a group of volunteers from the Greater Houston Jewish Genealogical Society began indexing all "life-cycle information" — announcements of births, engagements, marriages, deaths, and burials — for use in historical and genealogical projects. As of August, 2011, the index database included all events from the beginning of the paper's publication through June 2011.

History

Joseph Samuels served as the publisher after he and wife Jeanne acquired the publication in 1973. Sequentially two other people/groups of people owned the newspaper before him.

Editions

The paper has an “e-Edition” letting readers view the full newspaper digitally on their smartphone or other electronic device. It is powered by Media Wire Mobile.
Their website has summaries of the top stories. These are usually published at the time of occurrence so breaking news can be distributed sooner than the weekly issue.
They have a biweekly email sent out to their subscribers and some non-subscribers. The emails consist of a newsletter for the top news and ads, and an e-Edition publish notification.
Every year there are numerous magazines mailed out to their magazine subscribers. These magazines are one per year and include special content relating to these occasions. They include Passover, Rosh Hashanah, Bar/Bat mitzvah planner, Weddings to Remember, and their VOICES magazine.