hidden pixel

Adelaide Advertiser Information

The Advertiser is a daily tabloid-format newspaper published in the city of Adelaide, South Australia. First published as a broadsheet named The South Australian Advertiser on 12 July 1858,[1] it is currently printed daily from Monday to Saturday. A Sunday edition exists under the name of the Sunday Mail. The Advertiser is a publication of News Limited. Both The Advertiser and the Sunday Mail are available for purchase throughout South Australia and some towns and regions in New South Wales, Victoria and the Northern Territory located near or adjacent to the South Australia state border such as Broken Hill, Mildura, Nhill and Alice Springs.

According to The Advertiser's website, the newspaper is read by over 580,000 people each weekday, and by more than 740,000 people each Saturday. The head office of The Advertiser has relocated from premises in King William Street, to a new office complex - known as Keith Murdoch House - at 31 Waymouth Street Adelaide.

Contents

History

The office of The Advertiser in Waymouth St, Adelaide
This section requires expansion.

The South Australian Advertiser and The South Australian Weekly Chronicle were founded in 1858 by the Reverend John Henry Barrow, a former editor of a competing newspaper, the South Australian Register.[2][3] The South Australian Advertiser was published from 12 July 1858 (Vol 1, no 1) to 22 March 1889 (Vol 31, no 9493). It continued from 1889 as The Advertiser[1]

Between 1893 and 1929, Sir John Langdon Bonython[4] was the sole proprietor of The Advertiser. As well as being a talented newspaper editor, he also supported the movement towards the Federation of Australia. The Canberra suburb of Bonython, and the now abolished South Australian electoral division of Bonython, were named in his honour.

On Langdon Bonython's retirement, his son Sir John Lavington Bonython,[5] also Mayor and later Lord Mayor of Adelaide, became editor.

The Herald and Weekly Times took a controlling stake in The Advertiser in 1929. Through the 20th century, The Advertiser was the morning broadsheet, and The News the afternoon tabloid. On the death of Sir Keith Murdoch in 1952, ownership of The News passed to his son Rupert, who subsequently established News Limited and News Corporation. When Murdoch acquired The Herald and Weekly Times in 1987, he also acquired the remaining shares of The Advertiser. He sold The News in 1987. The News closed in 1992. He changed the format of The Advertiser from a broadsheet to a smaller tabloid format in November 1997.

See also

Adelaide portal
Journalism portal

References

  1. ^ a b The South Australian Advertiser, published 1858-1889, National Library of Australia, digital newspaper library.
  2. ^ C. M. Sinclair, 'Barrow, John Henry (1817 - 1874)', Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 3, MUP, 1969, pp 104-105.
  3. ^ "NLA - Australian Newspaper Plan - Australia's most significant 'at risk' newspapers". National Library of Australia. http://www.nla.gov.au/anplan/extras/newspapers_at_risk.html#_chronicle. Retrieved 2008-08-24.
  4. ^ W. B. Pitcher, Bonython, Sir John Langdon (1848 - 1939), Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 7, Melbourne University Press, 1979, pp 339-341
  5. ^ W. B. Pitcher, Bonython, Sir John Lavington (1875 - 1960), Australian Dictionary of Biography, Volume 7, Melbourne University Press, 1979, pp 341-342.

External links

News Corporation
Percentages indicate percentage ownership
Corporate directors
Dow Jones & Company
National consumer products
Dow Jones Local Media Group
Enterprise products
Fox Entertainment Group
Fox Filmed Entertainment
Fox Broadcasting Company
Fox Television Stations
Fox Cable Networks
Fox News Network
Fox International Channels
National Geographic International Channels (52%)4
STAR TV
Fox Sports International
News Corp. Digital Media
Investments
Other
HarperCollins
USA
UK
Australia
  • Angus & Robertson
News International
News Limited
Metropolitan newspapers
Community newspapers
Regional newspapers
Sports
Other properties
Sky Italia
Channels
Defunct channels
Joint ventures (Radio stations)
  • Sky Music
  • 50 Songs
  • Yesterjay '90
  • Yesterjay '80
  • Capital '70
  • Vintage '60
  • Rock Classic
  • Rock Shock
  • Soulsista
  • Hit Italia
  • ItalianVintage
  • Livetime
  • Heart 'n Song
  • B-Side
  • Ritmo Latino
  • Dance
  • Yesterday 2000
  • Jazz & Fusion
  • Jazz Gold
  • Soul Train
  • Extrabeat
  • Sinfonia
  • Opera
  • Cinema Deejay
  • Baby Mix
  • Disc Joker
See also
STAR Group
India
China
Star Select
  • 18 With Tata Group
US newspapers
Satellite investments
Other assets
  1. REDIRECT

Categories:

 

The above information uses material from Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Some facts may not have been fully verified for accuracy. [Disclaimers]
This page was last archived by our server on Tue May 29 18:26:11 2012.
Displaying this page or its contents does not use any Wikimedia Foundation's resources.
The owners of this site proudly support the Wikimedia Foundation.