The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's
talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
As
Cxbrx noted on the article talk page last year, this one doesn't look notable. The Nevada Place Names source is just a single sentence saying it was a non-agency rail station. Searching brings up passing mentions, an announcement issued when the station was closed, and references to a college basketball player,
William F. Herrin, and
Herrin, Illinois. This doesn't appear to meet
WP:GEOLAND or
WP:GNG.
Hog FarmTalk03:44, 25 September 2021 (UTC)reply
Delete As per my comments in
Talk: Herrin, Nevada: "Carlson states that
Herrin was a railroad station. Herrin is not listed in Nevada Post Offices nor in Nevada Ghost Towns & Mining Camps. So, it would seem that
WP:STATION applies. Herrin, Nevada had no good hits in GBooks, there there were hits for a person associated with SPRR with the last name of Herrin. BTW - there is also nearby Herrin Slough, which has a GNIS entry:
Herrin Slough and a trivial mention in
Nevada Historical Society Quarterly, Spring 1992, p. 46"
Taking a further look, the 1932 1:250K Sonoma Range topo shows 3 buildings labeled "Herrin" adjacent to the tracks. The buildings never appear in the Winnemucca 1:250k map nor the early Knight 1:24k topos. The 2011 Knight 1:24k has a label of Herrin, but no buildings, my guess is that they got the info from the GNIS. Searchin Newspapers.com replicated
User:Hog Farm's results (basketball player,
William F. Herrin, and
Herrin, Illinois). Newspapers.com did come up with
a 1903 article about a cutoff that excluded Herrin and prompted a station named "New Herrin" to be created. "Raho" and "Stonehouse" were also on the cutoff. (Stonehouse could be associated with
Stone House, Nevada). (Raho is a new name to me, GBooks found
a shipper's guide that mentions Raho and that's about it). I checked GBooks again for Herrin and came up with nothing. Herrin is not listed in the index of
Humboldt County 1905 As this location is not legally recognized and has virtually no coverage, trivial or not, neither #1 nor #2 of
WP:GEOLAND are met. This location does not meet anything in
WP:STATION nor
WP:GNG.
Cxbrx (
talk)
04:42, 25 September 2021 (UTC)reply
Delete. My searches pulled up similar results as Cxbrx. NewspaperArchive searches pull up
a 1906 article about an unknown man killed by a train "at Herrin". I found nothing to suggest there was a community here. Herrin isn't listed in Cram's 1887/1890 Atlas; it's also not listed in Cram's 1900/1902 Atlas. It's listed in Rand McNally's 1925 Premiere Atlas, with a population of "---", indicating a rail-only site. PostalHistory.com searches show there was never a Herrin post office. There isn't enough here to write an article, and all evidence I can find suggests there was never a population here.
Firsfron of Ronchester05:48, 25 September 2021 (UTC)reply
Delete. Nothing on topos, no sources that anyone's been able to come up with, and my own newspaper searches turn up nothing but crap. jp×g01:56, 30 September 2021 (UTC)reply
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's
talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
The following discussion is an archived debate of the proposed deletion of the article below. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's
talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.
As
Cxbrx noted on the article talk page last year, this one doesn't look notable. The Nevada Place Names source is just a single sentence saying it was a non-agency rail station. Searching brings up passing mentions, an announcement issued when the station was closed, and references to a college basketball player,
William F. Herrin, and
Herrin, Illinois. This doesn't appear to meet
WP:GEOLAND or
WP:GNG.
Hog FarmTalk03:44, 25 September 2021 (UTC)reply
Delete As per my comments in
Talk: Herrin, Nevada: "Carlson states that
Herrin was a railroad station. Herrin is not listed in Nevada Post Offices nor in Nevada Ghost Towns & Mining Camps. So, it would seem that
WP:STATION applies. Herrin, Nevada had no good hits in GBooks, there there were hits for a person associated with SPRR with the last name of Herrin. BTW - there is also nearby Herrin Slough, which has a GNIS entry:
Herrin Slough and a trivial mention in
Nevada Historical Society Quarterly, Spring 1992, p. 46"
Taking a further look, the 1932 1:250K Sonoma Range topo shows 3 buildings labeled "Herrin" adjacent to the tracks. The buildings never appear in the Winnemucca 1:250k map nor the early Knight 1:24k topos. The 2011 Knight 1:24k has a label of Herrin, but no buildings, my guess is that they got the info from the GNIS. Searchin Newspapers.com replicated
User:Hog Farm's results (basketball player,
William F. Herrin, and
Herrin, Illinois). Newspapers.com did come up with
a 1903 article about a cutoff that excluded Herrin and prompted a station named "New Herrin" to be created. "Raho" and "Stonehouse" were also on the cutoff. (Stonehouse could be associated with
Stone House, Nevada). (Raho is a new name to me, GBooks found
a shipper's guide that mentions Raho and that's about it). I checked GBooks again for Herrin and came up with nothing. Herrin is not listed in the index of
Humboldt County 1905 As this location is not legally recognized and has virtually no coverage, trivial or not, neither #1 nor #2 of
WP:GEOLAND are met. This location does not meet anything in
WP:STATION nor
WP:GNG.
Cxbrx (
talk)
04:42, 25 September 2021 (UTC)reply
Delete. My searches pulled up similar results as Cxbrx. NewspaperArchive searches pull up
a 1906 article about an unknown man killed by a train "at Herrin". I found nothing to suggest there was a community here. Herrin isn't listed in Cram's 1887/1890 Atlas; it's also not listed in Cram's 1900/1902 Atlas. It's listed in Rand McNally's 1925 Premiere Atlas, with a population of "---", indicating a rail-only site. PostalHistory.com searches show there was never a Herrin post office. There isn't enough here to write an article, and all evidence I can find suggests there was never a population here.
Firsfron of Ronchester05:48, 25 September 2021 (UTC)reply
Delete. Nothing on topos, no sources that anyone's been able to come up with, and my own newspaper searches turn up nothing but crap. jp×g01:56, 30 September 2021 (UTC)reply
The above discussion is preserved as an archive of the debate. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as the article's
talk page or in a
deletion review). No further edits should be made to this page.