The Sanford Herald was preceded by The Sanford Journal. Past publishers include W.E. Horner Sr., William E. Horner Jr. and Bill Horner III. Current publisher is Jeff Ayers. The current editor is F.T. Norton.
In August 2007, The Herald launched a redesign of its newspaper with the intent on better highlighting local content and adding cosmetic improvements. The redesign included more local coverage in its news section and the addition of a daily features section titled "Carolina." The redesign coincided with the newspaper's switch from using Quark XPress design software to Adobe InDesign.
Pay Wall
On Aug. 24, 2010, The Herald instituted a pay wall on its website. As of that date, no one could read the stories, archives and most of the other content without subscribing. Online-only subscriptions were offered at $2 per day or $16 per month. Customers with home delivery of the print edition had full access to the website for no additional charge.
Awards
The Sanford Herald won the North Carolina Press Association's highest honor, General Excellence, for its division for three consecutive years between 2010 and 2012. In 2012, The Sanford Herald won 17 North Carolina Press Association Awards in Division D including first in:
In 2011, The Sanford Herald won 30 North Carolina Press Association Awards in Division D including first in
General News Reporting
Deadline News Reporting
Online Breaking News
Education Reporting
News Enterprise Reporting
Sports Feature Writing
General News Photography
Sports Photography
Multimedia Project
Headline Writing
General Excellence for Websites
Appearance and Design
News Section Design
Special Section
Best Niche Publication
General Excellence for Newspapers
In 2010, The Sanford Herald won 25 North Carolina Press Association Awards in Division D including first in
General News Reporting
Deadline News Reporting
Education Reporting
News Enterprise Reporting
General News Photography
Photo Illustration
Best Video
Criticism
Appearance and Design
Content
The Herald covers several topics, including local government, state government, education, arts and entertainment, religion, business and crime. The daily news section ranges from 10-16 pages. The sports section covers the local high schools, Central Carolina Community College athletics, local golf tournaments, other youth sports, Campbell University athletics and more. Local football coach Jody Stouffer writes a column keeping track of former high school athletes and their college sports achievements. The Herald utilizes weekly syndicated columns from writers such as George Will, Walter Williams, John Hood, Chris Fitzsimmons, D.G. Martin, Michelle Singletary and more. The editorial page also features local editorials and columns and editorial cartoons. The Herald's social media footprint includes a Facebook, Twitter and Instagram. Reporters will also often run their own individual social media accounts, reporting on the news of the day and live-tweeting from government meetings and other events.